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Learn from Experience, Part I

Kafuku zempen

Japan

1937

78 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
Japanese
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Mikio Naruse

SCR Kan Kikuchi, Fumitaka Iwasaki

DP Mitsuo Miura

CAST Minoru Takada, Takako Irie, Chieko Takehisa, Sadao Maruyama, Yuriko Hanabusa, Setsuko Horikoshi, Akira Ubukata, Kaoru Itô, Ko Mihashi, Tomoko Ito, Yumeko Aizome, Heihachirô Ôkawa, Chizuko Kanda

PROD DES Takeo Kita

MUSIC Takio Niki

Synopsis

This 2-part film romance (clocking in at just a bit under three hours) was based on a story by noted author Kikuchi Kan.

The central character here is Toyomi (played by Takako IRIE, star of Mizoguchi’s "Water Magician), a rich young woman in love with Shintaro (Minoru TAKADA), a rich young man. Unfortunately, Shintaro’s father is in the process of arranging a marriage for him with Yurie (Chieko TAKEHISA), the scion of an even wealthier family. In order to avoid this, the two young lovers flee to Tokyo to live together. When Shintaro comes back to proclaim his intent to marry Toyomi, his father browbeats him into attending the long-arranged marriage meeting with Yurie. While Shintaro is back home, Toyomi goes on a vacation trip with her closest chum, Michiko (Yumeko AIZOME). At a class reunion, Toyomi is to distressed (at not having heard from Shintaro for so long), she doesn’t go out on the town with her classmates. Michiko, however, runs into Shintaro and Yurie (also out on the town), and pulling him aside, demands an explanation. When Toyomi ultimately learns of her betrayal, she flees back home — but getting a less than warm reception from her father, returns to Tokyo, where she takes a job as a junior shop-girl at ritzy dress shop. And this, covers (briefly) just the first half of the story. —IMDb Review

Director

Original

Mikio Naruse

Mikio Naruse is one of the least known of Japan’s early master directors, both in the West and in Japan, yet he created some of the most moving, darkly beautiful works in Japanese cinema. Like Kenji Mizoguchi, Naruse showed an uncanny understanding for the psychology of women. Like Yasujiro Ozu, he preferred subtle shifts of character over broad strokes of plot. Unlike either of these early greats, however, Naruse’s vision of humanity was much darker and more clinical. He stripped all vestiges of hope or acceptance from his films, what remains is only a willful struggle to endure. His relentlessly negative view of human existence has resulted in Naruse’s often being labeled a nihilist.

Born in Tokyo, in 1905, Naruse was the youngest of three sons of a desperately poor embroiderer. Although he excelled in elementary school, his family could not afford to further his education. He was instead enrolled in a two-year technical school. There, he spent virtually all of his free time… read more

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