Daily Archives: February 11, 2015

Record of a Tenement Gentleman (1947)

Record of a Tenement Gentleman (“Nagaya shinshiroku”)
Directed by Yasujirô Ozu
Written by Tadao Ikeda and Yasujirô Ozu
1947/Japan
Shôchiku Eiga
First viewing/Hulu Plus

 

[box] Some mothers are kissing mothers and some are scolding mothers, but it is love just the same, and most mothers kiss and scold together. ~Pearl S. Buck[/box]

Ozu sets his first post-War film in a Tokyo where residents live on the margins, scrounging for everyday items like mirrors and garden hoses and waiting for food to become available.

In this atmosphere, a fortune-teller (Chishû Ryô) finds  a lost or abandoned homeless boy who will not stop following him.  He takes him home but his flat mate seems to be beset by romantic difficulties (we overhear this in one of the most bizarre film openings ever) and is unwilling to take the child.  The two dump the boy for “one night” on neighbor Tane (Chôko Iida).  Tane, a childless widow, resists taking the child and is even less impressed when he turns out to be a bedwetter with fleas.

The very next day Tane makes the long walk to the neighborhood where the boy last lived with his father.  The father has moved.  Now Tane curses the father and does all in her power to lose the boy.  But no such luck.  So they continue their fretful co-existence until the day Tane wets the bed again and runs away and Tane finds she will search high and low until she finds him.

This film ends on an uncharacteristically dogmatic note with Tane calling for a return to the old ways, before “modern” self-centeredness took hold.  This somewhat mars the proceedings which are basically light and airy.  Ozu had a special way with children and it is totally evident here.  This would also be worth watching just to see Ryô entertain his neighbors with a recitation from his old days with a peep-show.

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Odd Man Out (1947)

Odd Man Out
Directed by Carol Reed
Written by F.L. Green and R.C. Sherriff
1947/UK
Two Cities Films
Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant
#200 of 1001 Films You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Inspector: In my profession there is neither good nor bad. There is innocence and guilt. That’s all.[/box]

After a lapse of several years, I was only more impressed with this film on repeated viewing.  I think it is almost the equal Reed’s better known The Third Man.

Johnny McQueen (James Mason) is the Chief of “The Organization” (clearly a stand in for the Irish Republican Army) in a North Ireland city.  He has been in hiding for six months in the flat of an old woman and her granddaughter Kathleen.  Kathleen is in love with Johnny but he is devoted only to the cause.  Currently, he is planning the holdup of a mill.  This will mark his return to active duty as a member of the robbery gang.  Neither his henchmen nor Kathleen think he is up to the task.  But Johnny is not deterred.

The heist goes terribly wrong and shots are exchanged.  Johnny kills a guard and is in turn badly wounded,  Then he hesitates entering the getaway car.  A combination of missteps and basic cowardice on the part of the driver result in Johnny being left to run away alone.

The rest of the story follows the encounters of the gang members with the rest of the Northern Irish populace as they struggle to escape the police.  It is a story of betrayal, greed, mercy, and fear.  The last half of the film focuses on Johnny, the lone survivor, as he goes from place to place slowly bleeding to death.   With Robert Newton as a mad painter.

The poster tag line bills this as “the most exciting film ever made.” I wouldn’t go quite that far but it is one of the most beautiful.  For me, this is more a study of human nature than of Johnny’s specific plight.  The members of the organization and the people that they encounter on their flight exhibit most of the faults and some of the virtues we all are heir to. Then again, James Mason is mesmerizing as the hunted Johnny McQueen and it is hard not to focus on him.  Robert Krasker’s camera knows no limit in its Dutch angles and chiaroscuro magic.  Highly recommended.

Odd Man Out was Oscar-nominated for Best Film Editing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SqctI12CBzo

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