The Only Son (???? Hitori musuko) is a 1936 film directed by Yasujir? Ozu, starring Ch?ko Iida and Shin'ichi Himori. The film was Ozu's first "talkie" (sound film) feature.
The Only Son | |
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DVD cover | |
Directed by | Yasujir? Ozu |
Produced by | Den Takayama |
Written by | Yasujir? Ozu (as James Maki) (story) Tadao Ikeda Masao Arata (screenplay) |
Starring | Ch?ko Iida Shin'ichi Himori Chish? Ry? |
Music by | Senji It? |
Cinematography | Sh?jir? Sugimoto |
Distributed by | Sh?chiku |
Release date |
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Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Screenplay
The film starts in the rural town of Shinsh? in 1923. A widow, Tsune (O-Tsune) Nonomiya (Ch?ko Iida), works hard at a silk production factory to provide for her only son, Ry?suke. When Ry?suke's teacher ?kubo (Chish? Ry?) persuades her to let her son continue to study beyond elementary school, she decides to support her son's education even until college. Her son promises to become a great man.
Thirteen years later, in 1936, O-Tsune, now in her sixties, visits Ry?suke (Shin'ichi Himori), who is twenty-eight, in Tokyo. She learns that her son, now a night school teacher, has married and even has a one-year-old son. Her daughter-in-law Sugiko is nice and obliging, but Ry?suke's job does not pay much. Ryosuke and O-Tsune visit ?kubo, who is now a father of four and running a tonkatsu restaurant.
The couple keeps the mother entertained but their money is running out. On a trip to an industrial district one day, Ry?suke confides in the mother that he wishes he had never come to Tokyo, and that he is a disappointment to his mother. He later states that Tokyo is not a place where one can succeed easily. O-Tsune chides her son for giving up, telling him she has nothing now left, neither land nor house, and she only wants him to succeed.
Sugiko sells her kimono and raises enough money for the whole family to go out to enjoy themselves. However Tomibo (Tomio Aoki), a neighbor's son, gets injured by a horse and Ry?suke rushes him to the hospital. There he gives their money to Tomibo's mother for her to foot the hospital bill. O-Tsune sees all this, and later tells Ry?suke he has done her proud for his selfless act.
O-Tsune eventually returns to Shinshu, but not before giving the couple some money for her grandson. Ry?suke promises his wife he will obtain a teaching certificate. Back at Shinsh?, O-Tsune tells her friend at the factory her son has become a "great man". But as she retires to the back of the factory after work, her face breaks into an expression of deep grief and pain.
- Choko Iida as Tsune Nonomiya
- Himori Shin'ichi as her son, Ryosuke
- Masao Hayama as young Ryosuke
- Yoshiko Tsubouchi as Sugiko
- Chish? Ry? as Okubo-sensei, Ryosuke's teacher
- Tomoko Naniwa as Okubo's wife
- Bakudan Kozo (Jun Yokoyama) as their son
- Mitsuko Yoshikawa as Otaka, Ryosuke's neighbour
- Tokkan Kozo (Tomio Aoki) as her son, Tomibo
- Eiko Takamatsu as Oshige
Roger Ebert inducted The Only Son into his Great Movies section, writing of its direction, "I really do feel as if Ozu is looking at his films along with me. He isn't throwing them up on the screen for me to see by myself. Together we look at people trying to please, and often failing, and sometimes redeeming." Richard Brody of The New Yorker argued, "Ozu watches with his own stifled fury, as modernity uproots both the best and the worst aspects of tradition."
In 2010, the BFI released a Region 2 DVD of the film as a bonus feature on its Dual Format Edition (Blu-ray + DVD) of Late Spring.