Screening 35mm & 16mm film prints from studio vaults, film archives, and private collections.

  • A Story of Floating Weeds

    Saturday, July 5 @ 11:30 AM / Music Box Theatre — 3733 N Southport Ave
    Tickets: $12 at the door or purchase in advance

    A STORY OF FLOATING WEEDS
    Directed by Yasujirō Ozu • 1934
    Early in his career, Japanese filmmaker Yasujirō Ozu regularly channelled the snappy verve of American commercial cinema, name-checking Ernst Lubitsch and Harold Lloyd and fashioning transpacific translations of gangster films and melodramas. (In the fanciful world of silent Ozu, everyone is a cinephile with a Hollywood sweet tooth, with posters for Our Dancing Daughters and The Champ hanging in office buildings and apartments.) Even A Story of Floating Weeds, an understated and seemingly culturally-specific account of a kabuki ensemble touring the Japanese countryside, was inspired by the 1928 carnival drama The Barker from American studio First National. In Ozu’s version, Kihachi (Takeshi Sakamoto) leads a band of actors eking out sustenance and little more, cheerfully trouping through provincial theaters with leaky roofs. When they arrive by train at a quiet town in the mountains, Kihachi seeks out Otsune (Chôko Iida), the mother of the son he fathered on a tour many years ago. The son, Shinkichi (Kôji Mitsui), believes that Kihachi is his long-absent but fun-loving uncle, good for a fishing lesson and nothing more. When Kihachi’s lover Otaka (Emiko Yagumo), a fellow actor, learns of his clandestine meetings with Otsune, she orchestrates a plot to smoke out his secret passions. This simple, beautifully spare narrative demonstrated Ozu’s evolving craftsmanship and pointed the way towards a more idiosyncratic style that left familiar genre tropes, Hollywood or otherwise, far behind. The sturdy perfection of Ozu’s new style was confirmed a quarter century later when he remade the film as Floating Weeds, which, despite the addition of sound, color, and a seaside locale, repeated many of the same shots, gestures, and jokes with undiminished impact. (KW)
    86 min • Shochiku Film Group • 35mm from Janus Films

    Live musical accompaniment by the MIYUMI Project Japanese Experimental Ensemble

    Sponsored in part by Asian Improv aRts Midwest.

    NEXT UP: PIERROT LE FOU on July 14 at Music Box

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Upcoming screenings:

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Thu 6/26 at 6:00 PM at Film Center
LightningAdvance Tickets

Sat 7/5 at 11:30 AM at Music Box
A Story of Floating WeedsAdvance Tickets

Mon 7/14 at 7:00 PM at Music Box
Pierrot le FouAdvance Tickets

Thu 7/24 at 6:00 PM at Film Center
Tea and SympathyAdvance Tickets

Sun 8/3 at 7:00 PM at Music Box
EarthAdvance Tickets

Thu 8/7 at 6:00 PM at Film Center
Time and TideAdvance Tickets

Wed 8/13 at 8:00 PM at Constellation
Music of the Spheres: Films by Jordan Belson
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8/22 – 8/24 at Film Center
Technicolor WeekendAdvance Tickets

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