An actress returns to Tokyo after a successful stint in Hollywood to reclaim the daughter she abandoned years before—with the help of her gangster brother. Yet the child’s father, and especially her nurturing new stepmother, won’t give in to the mother’s demands so easily. With its mix of maternal melodrama and expressionistic flourish, No Blood Relation is a gripping example of Mikio Naruse’s cinematic boldness, and features a screenplay by Ozu’s famed collaborator Kogo Noda. –The Criterion Collection
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
Naruse's very beautifully structured tale of a young girl with two competing mothers, seems to belong to the classical Ozu melodrama, almost Sirkian, in its weaving of the battle of emotions; but it also has a comedic quality (2 buffoon gangsters), as well as its daring, swooping tracking shots in moments of high emotion, and dizzying editing, along with real locations that give it a very modernist feel.
With a script by Ozu's regular screenwriter Kogo Noda, this silent drama is flamboyantly directed by Naruse. A famous actress returns to Japan after achieving success in Hollywood to reclaim her daughter who she abandoned years before. The child's father, remarried and fallen on hard times, becomes bankrupt and is later imprisoned giving the actress a perfect opportunity to get her daughter back. A superior weepie...
A discussion of five early films by Mikio Naruse.