Chishû Ryû – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Sat, 10 Jan 2026 17:03:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Chishû Ryû – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Minoru Shibuya – Daikon to ninjin AKA The Radish and the Carrot (1965) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/05/minoru-shibuya-daikon-to-ninjin-aka-the-radish-and-the-carrot-1965/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/05/minoru-shibuya-daikon-to-ninjin-aka-the-radish-and-the-carrot-1965/#respond Sat, 31 May 2025 05:08:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=246859 One day a company executive learns that his younger brother, whom he recommended, embezzled company funds. To save the situation he withdraws his life savings and gives money to his younger brother. He then suddenly disappears… his was intended to be the next project of Yasujiro Ozu after “An Autumn Afternoon” because of his death …

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One day a company executive learns that his younger brother, whom he recommended, embezzled company funds. To save the situation he withdraws his life savings and gives money to his younger brother. He then suddenly disappears…

his was intended to be the next project of Yasujiro Ozu after “An Autumn Afternoon”
because of his death Shochiku gave it to Shibuya, Ozu’s assistant on “What Did the Lady Forget?” as a memorial to its greatest director



1965 Radishes and Carrots - Shibuya.mkv

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Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1 h 45 min
Size: 2.27 GiB
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Resolution: 1440x1080 ~> 1920x1080
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https://nitro.download/view/C6AFA112A2BC7FD/Radishes_and_Carrots_(1965)_English_02.srt

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

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Keisuke Kinoshita – Nogiku no gotoki kimi nariki aka She Was Like a Wild Chrysanthemum (1955) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/04/keisuke-kinoshita-nogiku-no-gotoki-kimi-nariki-aka-she-was-like-a-wild-chrysanthemum-1955/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/04/keisuke-kinoshita-nogiku-no-gotoki-kimi-nariki-aka-she-was-like-a-wild-chrysanthemum-1955/#comments Thu, 10 Apr 2025 22:40:08 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=243186 Criterion’s title for this film is “You Were Like a Wild Chrysanthemum.” From the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s “Films of Keisuke Kinoshita” program notes: Quote: Masao (Ozu regular Chishu Ryu) returns to his hometown after a successful career in business; the visit prompt memories of the time right before he left to study, when …

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Criterion’s title for this film is “You Were Like a Wild Chrysanthemum.”

From the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s “Films of Keisuke Kinoshita” program notes:

Quote:
Masao (Ozu regular Chishu Ryu) returns to his hometown after a successful career in business; the visit prompt memories of the time right before he left to study, when as a young man he fell in love with Tamiko, a beautiful, high-spirited young woman who also loved him but whom he was forbidden to marry as his family—and especially his mother—already had plans for him. Kinoshita brilliantly captures the flush of young love, played out against stunning landscapes—a love made all the more poignant as we know it will remain unrequited. Film scholar Donald Richie called it “one of the most nostalgically beautiful of Kinoshita’s films.”



You.Were.Like.a.Wild.Chrysanthemum.1955.720p.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1h 32mn
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Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:Hard-coded English subtitles.

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Yasujirô Ozu – Bakushû aka Early summer (1951) (HD) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/08/yasujiro-ozu-bakushu-aka-early-summer-1951-hd/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/08/yasujiro-ozu-bakushu-aka-early-summer-1951-hd/#respond Thu, 08 Aug 2024 23:24:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=229621 Quote:Noriko, 28, is a secretary in a small company in Tokyo. She is a modern young woman but she still lives with her parents, just like her brother, his wife and their two children. She is under great pressure from her family; in fact, it is not reasonable at this age not to have yet …

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Quote:
Noriko, 28, is a secretary in a small company in Tokyo. She is a modern young woman but she still lives with her parents, just like her brother, his wife and their two children. She is under great pressure from her family; in fact, it is not reasonable at this age not to have yet married. But the young girl rejoices in her independence. Her boss offers her a good deal of his knowledge but Noriko hesitates until a sort of illumination solves the problem for her, at least…



Bakushu - Yasujiro Ozu (1951) 1080p + commentary.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 2 h 5 min
Size: 12.8 GiB
Video
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Resolution: 1480x1080
Aspect ratio: 1.370
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Bit rate: 14.2 Mb/s
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#1: Japanese 1.0ch FLAC @ 161 kb/s
#2: English 1.0ch AC-3 @ 192 kb/s (Commentary by Donald Richie)

https://nitro.download/view/57844721D5BA3BE/Bakushu_-_Yasujiro_Ozu_(1951)_1080p_+_commentary.mkv

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English, French, Portuguese

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Yasujirô Ozu – Banshun AKA Late Spring (1949) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/banshun-1949/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/banshun-1949/#respond Tue, 14 Nov 2023 18:12:37 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=209880 Banshun (1949) Quote:Shukichi is a professor, a widower, absorbed in his work. His unmarried daughter, Noriko, runs his household for him. Both are perfectly content with this arrangement until the old man’s sister declares that her niece should get married. Noriko is, after all, in her mid-20s; in Japan in 1949, a single woman that …

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Banshun (1949)
Banshun (1949)

Quote:
Shukichi is a professor, a widower, absorbed in his work. His unmarried daughter, Noriko, runs his household for him. Both are perfectly content with this arrangement until the old man’s sister declares that her niece should get married. Noriko is, after all, in her mid-20s; in Japan in 1949, a single woman that old is approaching the end of her shelf life. His sister warns the professor that after his death Noriko will be left alone in the world; it is his duty to push her out of the nest and find a husband who can support her. The professor reluctantly agrees. When his daughter opposes any idea of marriage, he tells her he is also going to remarry. That is a lie, but he will sacrifice his own comfort for his daughter’s future. She marries.

And that, essentially, is what happens on the surface in Yasujiro Ozu’s “Late Spring” (1949). What happens at deeper levels is angry, passionate and — wrong, we feel, because the father and the daughter are forced to do something neither one of them wants to do, and the result will be resentment and unhappiness. Only the aunt will emerge satisfied, and Noriko’s husband, perhaps, although we never see him. “He looks like Gary Cooper, around the mouth, but not the top part,” the aunt tells her.

It is typical of Ozu that he never shows us the man Noriko will marry. In his next film, “Early Summer” (1951), the would-be bride in an arranged marriage sees the groom only in a golfing photo that obscures his face. Ozu is not telling traditional romantic stories. He is intently watching families where the status quo is threatened by an outsider; what matters to the brides is not what they are beginning but what they are ending.

The women in both films are named Noriko, and they are both played by Setsuko Hara, a great star who would drop everything to work with Ozu. When the studio asked Ozu to consider a different actress for the second film, he refused to make it without Hara.

In “Early Summer,” Noriko lives with her brother, his family, and their aged parents. She has no desire to marry — at least, not the golfer. The same actor, Chishu Ryu (1904-1993) plays the professor in the first film and the brother in the second; in Ozu’s “Tokyo Story” (1953), he plays the grandfather and Hara is his daughter-in-law. In all three films he looks the correct age for his character; how he did that so convincingly between the ages of 45 and 49 is beyond my ability to explain.

“Late Spring” began a cycle of Ozu films about families; the seasons in the title refer to the times in the lives of the characters, as in his final film, “An Autumn Afternoon” (1962). Did he make the same film again and again? Not at all. “Late Spring” and “Early Summer” are startlingly different. In the second, Noriko takes advantage of a conversational opening to overturn the entire plot; to avoid marrying the golfer, she accepts a man she has known for a long time — a widower with a child, whose mother’s dearest wish is that her son marry Noriko. The man goes along with his mother’s plan, indeed is pleased once he absorbs it; the meddling woman in this case has made two people happier.

“Late Spring” tells a story that becomes sadder the more you think about it. There is a tension in the film between Noriko’s smile and her feelings. Her smile is often a mask. She smiles brightly during a strange early scene where she talks with a family friend, Onodera, who has remarried after the death of his wife. Such a second marriage is “filthy and foul,” she says, and it disgusts her. She smiles, he laughs. Yet she is very serious.

Onodera tells the professor it’s his duty to marry off Noriko, and suggests an excellent prospect: Hattori, the professor’s assistant. Noriko and Hattori take a bicycle trip to the beach, and later have dinner; we think perhaps such a match will work. But when Shukichi suggests it to his daughter, she laughs and tells him Hattori is already engaged. How and when she learned that is left offscreen; what we do see is Hattori inviting her to a concert, her telling him she doesn’t want to make “trouble,” and Hattori at the concert with his hat on an empty seat. There is the possibility that Noriko could have married Hattori after all; she likes him, he likes her, he might leave his fiancee; the concert invitation is crucial, but she will not leave her father. This is her sacrifice, to match his later in the film.

Now Masa (Haruko Sugimura), her aunt, comes up with a new candidate, the Gary Cooper look-alike named Satake. Noriko tells her friend, “I think he looks more like the local electrician.” Realizing that Noriko will not willingly leave her father, Masa proposes to the professor that he marry a younger widow, Mrs. Miwa. The professor is as happy as his daughter to remain single, but understands Masa’s scheme to deceive Noriko.

Ozu brings everything to a head during an extraordinary scene at a Noh performance, where Noriko sits next to her father. The professor nods across the room to Mrs. Miwa, who smiles and nods back. Noriko observes this and loses all interest in the play; her head bows in sadness, and afterward she tells her father, “I have to go away somewhere,” and all but flees from his side.

There’s a later scene of uncomfortable confrontation. “Will you marry?” Noriko asks him. “Um,” he says, with the slightest nod. She asks him three or four different ways. “Um.” Finally, “that woman we saw today?” “Um.” He defends arranged marriages: “Your mother wasn’t happy at first. I found her weeping in the kitchen many times.” Not the best argument for a father trying to convince his daughter to marry.

Masa the aunt, having proposed the new groom, now acts as if it is a settled thing, and begins to plan the approaching marriage. Noriko goes along, smiling as always. We see her beautiful but sad in her traditional wedding dress, but we do not see her wedding or meet her husband. Instead, we come home alone with the professor, who admits his own marriage plans were “the biggest lie I ever told.” In one of the saddest scenes ever filmed by Ozu, he sits alone in his room and begins to peel an apple. The peel grows longer and longer until his hand stops and it falls to the floor and he bows his head in grief.

The professor’s decision is often described as his “sacrifice” of her. And so it is, but not one he wants to make. Nor does she want to leave. “I love helping you,” she says, “Marriage wouldn’t make me any happier. You can remarry, but I want to be at your side.” There is an academic paper exploring the possibility of repressed incest in “Late Spring,” but I doubt that occurred to Ozu; Noriko has a hidden well of disgust about sex, I believe, which is revealed in her strong feelings about remarriage — once is bad enough. She wants to stay safe in her home with her father, forever.

“Late Spring” is one of the best two or three films Ozu ever made, with “Early Summer” deserving comparison. Both films use his distinctive later visual style, which includes precise compositions for a camera that almost never moves, a point of view often representing the eye-level of a person sitting on a tatami mat, and punctuation through cutaways to unrelated exteriors. He almost always used only one lens, a 50mm, which he said was the closest to the human eye.

Here he wordlessly uses time and space to establish the routine and serenity of the household arrangements between father and daughter, in a sequence showing them coming and going, upstairs and down, through the rooms and central corridors of their house. They know their way around each other. Late in the film, threatened by the marriage, Noriko keeps picking things up and putting them on a table, compulsively acting out her domestic happiness.

So much happens out of sight in the film, implied but not shown. Noriko smiles but is not happy. Her father passively accepts what he hates is happening. The aunt is complacent, implacable, maddening. She gets her way. It is universally believed, just as in a Jane Austen novel, that a woman of a certain age is in want of a husband. “Late Spring” is a film about two people who desperately do not believe this, and about how they are undone by their tact, their concern for each other, and their need to make others comfortable by seeming to agree with them.

Banshun (1949)
Banshun (1949)
Banshun (1949)
Late.Spring.1949.720p.Blu-ray.AAC2.0.x264-!.mkv

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Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

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Yasujirô Ozu – Tôkyô monogatari aka Tokyo story (1953) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/tokyo-monogatari-1953/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/tokyo-monogatari-1953/#respond Tue, 14 Nov 2023 17:39:56 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=209873 Tôkyô monogatari (1953) 東京物語 They one hot beautiful summer day joyfully left homeShe one hot sad day stumbled sidewaysHe strangely found himself back homeone of those so beautiful noisy hot summer days one says Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote:The consistent use of a low, eye-level camera angle in the later works makes one realize that the eye …

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Tôkyô monogatari (1953)
Tôkyô monogatari (1953)

東京物語

They one hot beautiful summer day joyfully left home
She one hot sad day stumbled sideways
He strangely found himself back home
one of those so beautiful noisy hot summer days one says

Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote:
The consistent use of a low, eye-level camera angle in the later works makes one realize that the eye level of most films is that of a standing spectator. But Ozu’s acknowledgment and use of the fact that we watch movies while seated is only one of his subtle strategies for drawing us into his tight family circles. Perhaps most striking of all is the absolutely equal distribution of love and generosity towards all of his characters — implicit in HEN IN THE WIND, but triumphant in such later masterpieces as LATE SPRING, EARLY SUMMER, and TOKYO STORY (1953).

Tôkyô monogatari (1953)
Tôkyô monogatari (1953)
Tôkyô monogatari (1953)
Tokyo monogatari - Yasujiro Ozu (1953).mkv

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Runtime: 	2h 16mn
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https://nitro.download/view/5F6976D5568BA37/Tokyo_monogatari_-_Yasujiro_Ozu_(1953).mkv

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English, Japanese

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Yasujiro Ozu – Ohayô aka Good Morning (1959) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/ohayo-1959/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/ohayo-1959/#respond Tue, 14 Nov 2023 15:56:57 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=209858 Ohayô (1959) Quote:“Sooner or later, everyone who loves movies comes to Ozu. He is the quietest and gentlest of directors, the most humanistic, the most serene.” — Roger Ebert It took long enough, but I sampled my first Yasujiro Ozu film, Good Morning (Ohayo), and will soon indulge myself with as many of his works …

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Ohayô (1959)
Ohayô (1959)

Quote:
“Sooner or later, everyone who loves movies comes to Ozu. He is the quietest and gentlest of directors, the most humanistic, the most serene.” — Roger Ebert

It took long enough, but I sampled my first Yasujiro Ozu film, Good Morning (Ohayo), and will soon indulge myself with as many of his works as I can locate. At one time, his films were thought to be “too Japanese” and weren’t available in the West, but if Good Morning is any indication of his craft and appeal, Ozu deserves a much wider audience. It’s a film that works at multiple levels, and only artistic geniuses like Shakespeare have been able to pull off such a universal work that works with both down to earth people and with the upper levels of critical audiences equally.

Seen at the surface, Good Morning comes across as a comedy, filled with mistaken assumptions and long running flatulence jokes and memorable characters. Set in 1950’s suburban Tokyo in a tightly knit housing complex that brings forth remembrances of Malvina Reynolds’ “Little Boxes,” the plot weaves four household stories together without misstep. The women are embroiled in a “who-dunit” intrigue about missing club dues, suspecting the woman who has just purchased a washing machine, an unemployed English teacher can only speak banalities to the woman he loves, an older retired man on meager means habitually gets humorously drunk and can’t find his own home (they all look alike), and two young boys stage a tantrum and practice a stubborn “vow of silence” when their parents refuse to buy a television set.

Painting his cinematic palate with bright colors to create a light-hearted and joyful film, Ozu offers well paced vignettes of each of the ensemble cast that are as pointedly direct as are his consistent straight on shots. Each character receives ample medium and close-up shots that give the impression of their sincerity—the emotions are outspoken and nothing hidden.

The central story revolving around the television set that brothers Minoru (Koji Shigaragi, age 13) and Isamu (Masahiko Shimazu, age 7) so adamantly desire expose character and thinking in transitional Japan of the 1950s, an era when “made in Japan” was a running joke about cheaply made products. All the neighborhood boys gather daily at a young couple’s apartment to watch Sumo wrestling, and the parents have discovered that their sons have been lying about doing their homework and ban them from visiting the neighbors with the TV. Minoru and Isamu’s middle class parents can afford a TV, but the father doesn’t want a TV because it will “produce 100 million idiots.”

Minoru demands that they join the “modern age” and get a TV so they won’t have to watch at the neighbors and childishly cries and throws a massive tantrum, which his younger copy cat brother parallels. Their motives are simple to understand, as is the mother’s natural reaction against the power play and the father’s chauvinistic chiding that they are acting like women and for them to “shut up.”

Adding another dimension are the wide ranging effects the two boys have on the entire little community when they begin their silent strike. Just the act of not greeting the neighbors sets off another series of rumors about the household, concerns at school (they refuse to talk there as well), and inspires their English tutor to reflect on how banal greetings and idle talk act like “lubricant” to keep society flowing properly. Thinking of his love for the boys’ older sister, he muses,

”But important things are difficult to say, whereas meaningless things are easy to say.

His mother totally agrees, and muses how it would be nice for him to marry the girl he loves if he’d just get past the “good mornings” and weather talk. A subsequent scene with the teacher and the sister waiting for the train thus has elements of suspense, causing us to wonder if he can get past talking about the weather and clouds.

Good Morning certainly works as a tightly constructed comedy, but it contains deeper levels of enjoyment. The importance of our automatic communication has never been illuminated as well, yet the film also serves as a social statement about Japan’s entry into the modern world. Traditional ways are reflected with the older characters while the children are eager to adopt modern conveniences, leaving the parents to struggle with the choice of remaining with the old ways or seeing if they can adopt the modern conveniences without losing their way. In hindsight we already know the road that Japan will take, but it’s interesting to see how Ozu uses the “retired” man to ease the transition.

Most of all, it’s simply fun to watch Ozu’s charming and joyful comedy, comparable in spirit to Fellini’s Amarcord with its love of character, humor, and relentless fart jokes. Based on his 1932 silent comedy I Was Born, But… and not considered Ozu’s greatest film, Good Morning serves well as an introduction to the Japanese master’s ouvre and is thankfully available on DVD.

Ohayô (1959)
Ohayô (1959)
Ohayô (1959)
Good.Morning.1959.BluRay.576p.x264.AAC-stairs.mkv

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Container:	Matroska
Runtime:	1h 34mn
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Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

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Minoru Shibuya – Kojin kojitsu AKA A Good Man, A Good Day (1961) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/10/kojin-kojitsu-1961/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/10/kojin-kojitsu-1961/#comments Tue, 31 Oct 2023 05:16:10 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=208468 Kojin kojitsu (1961) The university professor Ozeki Hitoshi is considered by those around him to be an eccentric. When his daughter Tokiko receives a marriage proposal from a colleague, she and her mother are ecstatic. Hitoshi, however, is less than pleased… DVD label: Cinema Classic DVD5 DVD Format: NTSC 4:3 DVD Audio: AC3 2.0 Program(s): …

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Kojin kojitsu (1961)
Kojin kojitsu (1961)

The university professor Ozeki Hitoshi is considered by those around him to be an eccentric. When his daughter Tokiko receives a marriage proposal from a colleague, she and her mother are ecstatic. Hitoshi, however, is less than pleased…

Kojin kojitsu (1961)
Kojin kojitsu (1961)
Kojin kojitsu (1961)
DVD label: Cinema Classic
DVD5
DVD Format: NTSC 4:3
DVD Audio: AC3 2.0
Program(s): PGC Demux, Subtitle Workshop, MuxMan,
VobBlanker, PGC Edit, DVDSub Edit
Menus: Untouched
Video: Untouched
Audio: Untouched
DVD extras: N/A
Extras contain: N/A
DVD runtime(s) (main feature and extras): 01:28:00

https://nitro.download/view/BE00C20050CD4F9/A.Good.Man.A.Good.Day.1961.480p.JPN.DVD.NTSC.DD2.0.DIY-ARiN.rar

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English (Custom)

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