Screening 35mm & 16mm film prints from studio vaults, film archives, and private collections.
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Every-Night Dreams
Sunday, November 16 @ 11:30 AM – Music Box Theatre – 3733 N Southport Ave
Tickets: $12 at the door or purchase in advance
EVERY-NIGHT DREAMS
Directed by Mikio Naruse • 1933
Mikio Naruse’s career spanned the 1930s late-silent era up through the time of color film and anamorphic widescreen. His interest in the professional and domestic lives of modern working women in Japan was a constant throughout the dozens of films he worked on, reaching as far back as Every-Night Dreams, one of Naruse’s earliest surviving features. Sumiko Kurishima, one of the first major screen stars in the Japanese film industry, stars as bar hostess Omitsu, toughing out single motherhood after being abandoned by her husband Mizuhara. After a three-year absence, Mizuhara suddenly returns as a supposedly reformed man ready to care for his family, only to create more problems for them through his weak and ineffectual constitution. While the subject is squarely in his wheelhouse, Naruse’s visual style in Every-Night Dreams is unusual in his filmography for its bombastic approach, finding myriad opportunities to echo Omitsu’s tumultuous home life with nervy push-ins and ominous dolly movements. (CW)
65 min • Shochiku Kamata • 35mm from National Film Archive of Japan, permission Janus Films
Preceded by: “Up and Down the Waterfront” (Rudy Burckhart, 1946) – 8 min – 16mm from Canyon CinemaLive musical accompaniment by the MIYUMI Project Japanese Experimental Ensemble. Sponsored by Asian Improv aRts Midwest
NEXT UP: FEAR OF FEAR on Tuesday, November 25 at the Film Center
Upcoming screenings:
View all upcoming screenings & venue info →
11/16 at 11:30 AM at Music Box
Every-Night Dreams • Advance Tickets
11/25 at 6:00 PM at Film Center
Fear of Fear • Advance Tickets
12/1 at 7:00 PM at Music Box
Kwaidan • Advance Tickets
12/10 at 8:00 PM at Constellation
Uncle Nick and the Chicago All-Stars: Films from the Filipino American Historical Society of Chicago
• Advance Tickets
12/16 at 6:00 PM at Film Center
The Unholy Three • Advance Tickets

The Chicago Film Society works to promote the exhibition of analog film prints, to preserve the equipment and skills used to create and exhibit them, and to encourage an approach to film history that positions cinema as part of the broader history of technology and society.
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