Yasujirō Ozu Films Three and Four: A Story of Floating Weeds (1934) and Floating Weeds (1959)
Yasujuru Ozu's A Story of Floating Weeds (1934) and its remake Floating Weeds (1959) are masterworks in drama. Each tells the story of a traveling kabuki theatre troupe visiting cities on the Seto Inland Sea. The films' primary conflict revolves around the owner's excursions to visit his former mistress and their grownup son, who believes that the actor is his uncle. The lead actress becomes jealous when she finds out. She pays a younger actress to seduce the son, an act that complicates everything. Meanwhile the troupe's fortunes take a downturn as audiences are more interested in newer styles.
Both films include an amazing scene where the kabuki master and his mistress shout across a rainy street while walking back and forth, which reinforces their alienation and disconnection. Like many of Ozu's pillow and low-angle shots, he deftly builds characterization and setting through placement. Perhaps, the character studies and relationships in each are at their must subtle and affecting, although the film is probably also one of his saddest.
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