Tokyo Chorus (1931) Poster

(1931)

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8/10
A charmer of a film - great commentary on life's ups and downs, and ups
Eric-122623 January 2011
Here we follow the tragi-comic story of one Shinji Okajima, a young Japanese man who seems more destined in life for clowning about than being a responsible, productive worker. We meet him early on, in his college years (which some people may mistake for a military training camp), acting pretty much the goof-off or "class clown," basically doing everything he can to diss his exasperated instructor while at the same time hamming it up for his beloved classmates.

Fast forward a few years, and we now find our hero married, with children, and working for an insurance company. One fine day - bonus day, at that - he takes it upon himself to stand up to the boss, who has just fired one of Shinji's older co-worker who seems adept at writing policies for people who promptly die or somehow meet a quick demise, forcing said insurance company to pay out big yen. The boss apparently doesn't have a yen for doing that on a regular basis. Our hero passionately (TOO passionately) sticks up for the older man, which in turn ends up costing him his job as well. The story continues from there, showcasing the travails of our not-so-happy-go-lucky hero and his young family as they soberly tread the muck and mire of Depression-era Tokyo, rife with unemployment, stodgy with traditional Japanese values and honor, treacherous with impending shame if you do the wrong thing in the eyes of your family and peers.

There's a poignant scene in which Shinji, erstwhile white-collar professional, is reduced to plying the streets of Tokyo, carrying an advertising banner and passing out leaflets for a small restaurant run by his former college teacher, whom we met earlier. When his kids and wife become aware of this "degradation," the shame of it all nearly devastates the family.

This movie is a fascinating portrait of a man, of a time, a place, a culture, that all seem so foreign yet so instantly recognizable. Like many silent movies from this era, this movie is NOT in good condition, heavily marred here and there with scratches and "salt and pepper." And yet you sometimes have to remind yourself that the movie was made some 80 years ago in pre-war Japan: in spite of conspicuous examples of an earlier Japan - people wearing kimonos or being transported via rickshaw - there are nevertheless ample scenes of modernization and Westernization. You'll almost do a double take when our hero is served a plate of rice and curried pork chops, and is then given not chopsticks, but a large spoon with which to eat it. In some of the scenes where the men are gathered and dressed in crisp Western-style business suits and ties, you almost expect any one of them could whip out a cell phone and call a client across town…

The point is, the movie is nearly timeless in its keen observations of the human experience, and that's what makes it such a joy to watch. Not to mention that it ends on basically a hopeful and uplifting note. One sad note is that the actor, Tokihiko Okada, who plays our hero, died a mere three years after this film was made. He was only 30! I marvel at what wondrous films director Ozu could have made with him, had he lived on.

Anyway, with this film Ozu has crafted a wonderfully hopeful world, and in so doing gives the viewer a chance to glimpse inside that world and be a part of it for nearly 100 minutes. Those, in my opinion, are 100 very well-spent minutes of your life. See it if you get the chance.
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8/10
Early Ozu. Seems Very Current
crossbow01068 January 2011
An insurance man promises to buy his son a bicycle since it is the day he would get his bonus (the beginning sequence of him being kind of a loser in army drills is funny). A colleague gets fired nd the man sticks up for him nd gets fired also. His son is angry because he can't buy the bicycle. What follows is Ozu at his best: Taking a small situation and making it compelling. There is drama but also some slapstick in this film (and, in the role of the young daughter, the eventual wonderful actress Hideko Takamine) and it works because the story seems so close to home. There are lots of family moments, and your wish throughout the film is that everything will be all right (watch to find if it will be). Not a great film, but well worth your time. Ozu's next film was the excellent "I Was Born, But", and you can get them both on the box set "Silent Ozu", which have English subtitles. Recommended.
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8/10
Early Ozu is worth seeing - mixes slapstick comedy with social commentary
Andy-2965 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This early silent film from Ozu, while not up to the masterpieces of the Japanese director during the 1950s and the 1960s is worth seeing. It deals with the beginning of the Great Depression in Japan, and is an odd but pleasing mixture of slapstick humor with social commentary. A young hothead guy loses his job in an insurance company after arguing with the boss after the unfair firing of an older employee. While he earlier has stated that "Hoover's economics have not reached Japan", he finds himself suddenly unemployed, and he has to make ends meet with demeaning jobs in order to sustain not only his living but that of his long suffering wife and their three young children. At the end, a ray of hope appears, as he gets a job as a high school teacher in a small town - a step down presumably from his early job at the insurance company but better than his awful months enduring as an unemployed or semi employed man holding to crappy jobs. I don't know of any other movie from the era - from Japan or elsewhere - that tackles the Depression and the awful situation of being unemployed as this movie does. Naturally, for a movie that is almost 80 years old, there are parts of it that are a bit dated (and the copy I saw was far from ideal, with a number of scratches on it), but it has aged better than probably 95% of its contemporary movies. Something about Japanese movies of all ages is how they seem to stand the test of time, they have really aged better than movies from other countries and tackle themes that other national cinemas took decades to tackle. Bonus point for fans of Japanese cinema: the infant daughter (whose sudden illness is an important part of the plot) is played by Hideko Takamine, a great Japanese actress that during the 1950s shone as a regular in the movies of the great director Mikio Naruse (she also appeared in some movies of Ozu during that time). She's still alive, according to the IMDb, in her mid 80s, though she has been absent from movies for decades.
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I Worked, But...
alsolikelife13 December 2003
A well-to-do employee of an insurance firm gets a handsome bonus only to get fired for standing up for a laid-off co-worker; his stay-at-home wife, son and daughter (a very young but no less adorable Hideko Takamine) all must contend with the effects of his unemployment. This could very well be re-titled I WORKED, BUT... as it has the same eclectic mix of tones found in that "trilogy", this time ranging from the wistfully ruminative to the starkly violent to the hilariously scatalogical. The film also continues the major theme that preoccupied Ozu at this time, employment as a determinant of social status and self-esteem, while also pointing to the dichotomy of home life vs. office life and how children view their parents which would be explored further in I WAS BORN BUT... It is wonderful to witness the sheer range of devices Ozu employs, from tracking shots to keyhole iris shots, generous helpings of physical slapstick and odd assorted throwaway moments that reveal characters in quirky, intimate ways. With its freewheeling technique examining the foibles and fissures of Japanese society from all angles, this is a major example of the young, robust Ozu at his best.
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7/10
Degradation
boblipton19 November 2019
Tokihiko Okada is a salaryman at an insurance company in Tokyo. He has a wife, Emiko Yagumo, a son, a daughter (played by Hideko Takamine) and a baby. Money is tight, but a bonus is coming his way. Unfortunately for him, a fellow worker is fired in a manner that suggests the boss wants him gone before his pension vests. Okada goes to speak to the boss, gets into a shoving match with him, and is fired himself.

At first it seems that it will be a matter of picking up a new job, but he soon finds himself one of the "Tokyo Chorus" of the unemployed. Matters grow worse and worse...

This movie starts out as a comedy, with Physical Education teacher Tatsuo Saitô terrorizing his students -- including Okada -- like a cop in a Hal Roach comedy writing tickets. As the movie goes on, the tone begins to take on a more serious tone, with outbursts of real problems -- like when Miss Takamine has to go to the hospital -- amidst the comedy, which grows ever more wan. When Okada goes to work for his former teacher, handing out leaflets advertising his restaurant, his wife sees him doing so, and is humiliated; Okada, who starts this movie like Harold Lloyd trying to keep up with the Joneses, has crashed through the floor of the educated middle class, into the lower class; this is not America, where he can be redeemed and restored, but Japan, where appearances are more important than the reality. This is no longer a comedy, but a tragedy.

The print I saw on TCM was certainly not pristine; the titles were worn, and there was extensive chipping. The story was also far more episodic than fluid. This is not the Ozu of the 1950s, but a different one, with slapstick and tracking shots. These last points raise an issue I have been thinking of. Ozu is famous for the way he directed his later movies: long, still takes shot from floor level. Why the change? The late introduction of sound movies into Japan meant that the problems of moving cameras had been solved by the time Ozu made his first sound feature in 1936. He only gradually abandoned tracking shots, and was still using them as late as 1949.

I have concluded that a good movie is composed of story, character, incident and camerawork, and as Ozu entered the 1950s, he settled firmly on character and the interactions between them as his interest. With his often-repeated plots, his people's relationships were the stuff that fascinated him and his audience. Incident (in the form of slapstick comedy) and camera movement were matters that distracted viewers from the people, and made it too easy for them. By removing the overt comedy, Ozu removed the distraction. By removing the camera movement, he made his audience work harder at understanding the characters, which invested them in the process

Anyway, that's my understanding at the moment. What's yours?
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9/10
Ozu's economic exploration of the Depression
agorelik16 January 2005
In "Tokyo Chorus", Ozu interplays two major of his long-standing themes - economic status and the everyday realities of family life.

The plot is simple (warning, spoilers): A young salary-man loses his white-collar insurance job trying to cover for an aging colleague. Unfortunately, it is 1931 and the Great Depression means few other employment opportunities. He has difficulty covering the expenses of his family. After misadventures, he runs into his former professor-now-health-food-café-owner who promises him aid if the young man assists him with the café. Part of that assistance is handing out handbills in the street, a major loss of economic and personal status. Unfortunately, his wife sees him and is greatly shamed by the family's loss of status. Gradually, she accepts the need for sacrifice and also begins to assist in the café. During the large opening banquet at the café (guaranting it's success), the old professor receives word that the young man has been offered a teaching post, albeit one in a small and distant town. The movie ends on this hopeful yet downbeat note.

Ozu does not hesitate to attempt to show us the realities of Great Depression unemployment. Indeed, he is more truthful than any comparable American movie of that time or ours. Ozu is willing to attempt to dig into the nexus between employment, self-identity and status that is prevalent throughout capitalist economies. This was his primary theme at the beginning of the Depression, in this movie along with his early masterpiece "I Was Born, But..." and "Where Now are the Dreams of Youth?" and "Passing Fancy". In addition, Ozu also flexes his unparalleled ability with family scenes. Excellent performances from Ozu regulars Tokihiko Okada, Emiko Yagumo, Tatsuo Saito, as well as a winning child performance from future star Hideko Takamine. Watch out for the world's cutest fat baby!
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7/10
A father being courageous or reckless ... that's the question.
frankde-jong20 November 2020
"Tokyo story" is another silent movie of Yasujiro Ozu, of witch "I was born ... but" (1932) is the most well known.

Just like "I was born ... but" "Tokyo chorus" is about young parents and young children. In later years Ozu would concentrate more on the relationship between adult children and elderly parents. The obvious explanation would be that the stage of life of Ozu himself was leading in the choice of his subject. Given that Ozu was a bachelor all his life this explanation is however not true.

Just like "I was born ... but" "Tokyo chorus" is about shame with the employment of the father. In this case however it are not the children who feel the shame but the wife. Moreover in "Tokyo chorus" the "inferior" employment of the father is the result of his solidarity with an older colleague which was treated unfair. With this solidarity he showed his courage (unlike his other colleagues) but ultimately he only achieved that he was fired as well.

In Western eyes this gives the film a certain social engagement. Not very typical for Ozu! I wonder however if Ozu really meant it this way. In the beginning of the film we see that the main character was a rebel in his student years. In in between shots we see images of laundry drying in the sun. Another (more Japanese?) interptretation is that the main character is immature at the beginning of the film, insufficiently aware of his responsibilities as a father (symbolized by landry drying in the sun). Only through misfortune (of his own making) he finally grows up.

Whatever the interpretation, already in 1931 the style of Ozu was taking form, both regarding subject (family life) as regarding style (the use of in between shots).
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10/10
nope
treywillwest6 November 2016
I enjoyed this as much as any Ozu movie that I've ever seen. I think the silent medium inclined the director more to light-heartedness, not that it was ever absent from his films. Near-slapstick leads to genuine pathos on a much more naturalistic way than it ever would in, say, a Chaplin film. Ozu always recognized and appreciated a great face. In his silent films, however, his reliance on the face is much more active, using lighting and framing to convey expression as much as the performers' inherent ability. Ozu may be unique in that the performances in his silent films seem more like "movie acting" in the western sense than do those in his talkies, in which the actors seem more indebted to the tradition of the Japanese stage. But then again, everything about Ozu's early films seems more western. He had not yet become the mandarin we know him as from his peak years. The director's sense of humanity, however, was fully on display. His silent faces rank with Dreyer's, or Rembrandt's for expressiveness.
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7/10
Very good film. Watched in one breath
sergalpeev27 June 2020
It is reasonable to read about this period in history, because there are quite a lot of Ozu's films from this time about unemployment. When you understand more about Great Depression then the topic looks more clear to you when you watch the film.
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8/10
Oddly, this Ozu film is a bit comedic at times...but it's still very well made.
planktonrules26 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This is a silent film, as talking pictures arrived much later to Japan than they did in the United States and even much of Europe. Also, the print is badly degraded--making this an excellent candidate for future restoration.

The film begins at a college, though you'd never know that based on the way the characters are behaving. The instructor is leading everyone in calisthenics and inspecting their clothing--just like a sergeant at boot camp. One of the students is the biggest problem student--a bit of a slacker.

A few years pass and the story centers on that slacker. He has been working for an insurance company and is anticipating his year-end bonus. However, the same day bonuses are disbursed, one of his older co-workers is fired and he is so incensed that he confronts his boss and he, too, is fired. Much of the film concerns his efforts to find work and the impact on the family. Eventually, like most Ozu films, there is a nice happy ending.

If you are looking for a deep story of great significance, you probably will be a bit disappointed. Now I am not complaining--just making a point of the style of the film. It is meant purely as a slice of life film and as such is quite enjoyable.

Like the later films of director Ozu, this one features the usual stationary camera at lower than usual angles--and a camera that does not follow the people in the scene. While highly unusual and a bit archaic, this was Ozu's style and he managed to make it work well. What is NOT like Ozu's customary style, however, is the occasionally slapstick style of this early film. While some of his other movies have tiny bits of comedy (such as one where two boys badger their father for a TV), this one has lots of funny little tidbits you just wouldn't expect from one of his films--such as the scene where the records are broken, the novel way in which the father sharpens his pencil at work and the way the two kids fight.

While not a great film, I do recommend it--particularly if you like Ozu. If you have not seen his other films, I recommend you perhaps try some of his later films first--as they look a bit nicer and have a bit more polish.
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7/10
Similar in tone to Jean Renoir's "The Southerner"
pontifikator10 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This is a film which is unusual to me. It was directed by Yasujiro Ozu, and starred Tokihiko Okada as the leading man and Emiko Yagumo as his supportive wife. He works for an insurance company and is fired for coming to the too- strenuous support of a co-worker, also fired. It is the height of the depression in Tokyo, and he searches for a long period of time for a job, working for awhile as a person handing out flyers for a restaurant.

For the most part, the movie shows scenes of quiet domesticity which I found remarkably realistic. The couple has three children, a boy and girl about seven or eight and an infant. The play scenes between the older two were very natural and without overt acting. The family faces destitution after he loses his job, but there never is any overt hardship. Apparently handing out flyers was a serious loss of face, because the wife tells her husband that it is humiliating. Their daughter gets food poisoning and the husband sells his wife's kimonos without her permission to pay the bills for her treatment in the hospital. There's a scene of quiet heartbreak as she finds out while the children are happily playing, and she cries as she joins them.

"Tokyo Chorus" reminds me of Jean Renoir's "The Southerner" as the poor family faces hardship after hardship without bickering, anger, or resentment, maintaining a loving relationship among the entire family beyond all bounds that I would call realistic, but still I enjoyed watching the movie.

The man who hired the husband to hand out flyers is a man with contacts in the education department, and he gets our hero a job teaching English at a girls' school in a remote area. It's a job, so the husband and wife agree to take it, hoping that they can return eventually to Tokyo, but the movie ends with the man in tears over leaving.

It's an interesting movie, as I think it offers a view into domestic Japanese life in the early 30s. Now if I could only figure out what the name means.
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8/10
Wonderful film of 1930s Tokyo
elision1016 December 2012
I don't have much to add to the other fine reviews, just two things:

(I) I rarely like silent films, but this one kept me entertained (and moved) throughout. I guess Ozu is just that good.

(2) There's a fascinating reference by the lead character, a salaryman for an insurance company where business has been slow in Depression-era Tokyo, to "Hoover's policies" not helping Japan as yet. I'm not sure if it was ironic or not -- I'd be surprised if it was meant to be an argument for a more Keynesian policy, but I'm not certain. In a way, I suppose the mention shouldn't come as a shock -- the world economy was sufficiently integrated in the 1930s for US economic policy to have a significant impact on Japan. Still, it was a reminder of, well justified or not, the importance of the US in the outlook of the typical Japanese.
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8/10
Despite the time it was made the situations is still relevant now as it was back then
jordondave-280852 July 2023
(1931) Tokyo Chorus/ Tôkyô no kôrasu SILENT DRAMA

Very observant 'slice of life' movie from Yasujirô Ozu which centers on a group of students and how they respond to their instructor, then the film jumps to many years later focusing on one particular student who is now a father of three children working for a firm. And during the time to get his bonus, one of the company's oldest workers was asked to be let go who still had one year left to collect his pension, and as a result of one of his cohorts standing up to him, he gets fired as well! Despite the year in which this film was made, some of the practices that happen to some of the blue collar workers is still happening to people as of right now, which is the reason why this film works and clearly straight forward even though this film is a silent.
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9/10
Another gem from Ozu
jeanmichellavoie29 April 2019
Another great film from Ozu. As always, his characters feel alive and its hard not to feel involved. The writing, the directing and the acting are great. There is a slapstick aspect that is absent from aosu's later works. It only gave the film more charm.
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8/10
Simply Delightful!
net_orders20 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Viewed on DVD. Restoration = one (1) star. Talkies came late to Japan. This film was released in 1931 without a sound track. Being a silent film, though, is no big deal, because it is directed and performed as if it is a sound film. Acting is across-the-board outstanding especially the utterly charming performance delivered by Tokihiko Okada (Okada was doing "Cary Grant" before Cary Grant was doing Cary Grant!). Actors know how to address a camera that is only a few meters away unlike many silent movies where actors (mostly from the stage) often come across as caricatures of themselves, since they feel they need to project to the last row of the theater's balcony! Body language (obvious and subtle) is also a big factor in conveying actors' messages to the audience. Intertitles are a bit sparse. The piano score is outstanding. Restoration seems to be a work in progress. If a sufficient market emerges for this DVD (it is one in a package of three), perhaps there will be a new release that removes the constant distraction of deterioration. Bottom line: This is a captivating film that makes you want to watch it a number of times; so you may have a hard time refraining from running it only once in a sitting--I sure did! WILLIAM FLANIGAN, PhD.
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