A university professor and his wife have two sons with infantile paralysis. Through trial and error, they struggle to open a school for disabled children at their own expense. Based on a true story, it features natural child performances under Hiroshi Shimizu’s skillful direction. At the age of 11, actor Kenzô Kawarasaki is excellent as the older brother. —Tokyo Filmex
Hiroshi Shimizu was born in Shizuoka Prefecture on March 28, 1903 and passed away in Kyoto on June 23, 1966. He dropped out of his studies at Hokkaido University in order to join Shochiku’s Kamata studio as an assistant director 1922. Promoted to the director by the age of 21 with his first film, Toge no Kanata (Beyond the Pass) (1924), he enjoyed a reputation of being a skillful director, particularly for melodramas and comedies. A “trial marriage” to the actress Kinuyo Tanaka in 1927 ended in divorce two years later. Shimizu directed 140 films for Shochiku up to and throughout World War 2.
After the war he established the Hachinosu Eiga studio in collaboration with several colleagues. This allowed him to work independently of the studios, and films such as Children of the Beehive (1948), where he employed homeless children he had taken in and raised himself, resulted. He also directed films for Shin-Toho and Daiei, the last of which, Hana no Omokage (Image… read more
Few filmmakers have ever cared as much about children as Shimizu did. Every frame of this genuinely heartfelt and moving film is infused with the love and affection he had for them.