Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Film / EarlySummer

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/51b297f0_5358_4681_8a6e_4ed8b56e260d.jpeg]]
2
3''Early Summer'' is a 1951 film from Japan, directed by Creator/YasujiroOzu.
4
5Noriko (played by Ozu's regular lead actress, Creator/SetsukoHara) is a 28-year-old woman working as a secretary in Tokyo. She still lives with her whole family, which includes her father Shukiki and her mother Shige, her doctor brother Koichi (another Ozu regular, Chishu Ryu), Koichi's wife Fumiko, and Koichi and Fumiko's young children, Minoru and Isamu.
6
7Noriko being unmarried as she nears her 30th birthday is a concern in the household. Noriko's boss Satake proposes a match with one Mr. Manabe, a bachelor in his early forties. The family eagerly seizes on this idea, but Noriko is reluctant. When Kenkichi, Koichi's partner in practice and an old family friend, pays a visit, Noriko gets an idea of her own.
8
9Compare another Ozu film, ''Film/LateSpring'' (1949), which also starred Setsuko Hara as a character named Noriko (but not the same character), and has very similar story elements, with the Noriko character being pressured by her family into an undesired ArrangedMarriage.
10
11----
12!!Tropes:
13
14* ArrangedMarriage: A theme examined in several Ozu works, often with Setsuko Hara playing a character who is none too thrilled with getting pressured by her parents and family into an arranged marriage.
15* BrattyHalfPint: Noriko's awful bratty nephews are walking advertisements for staying single. In one scene, when Koichi brings home a loaf of bread instead of the model train tracks Minoru wanted, Minoru throws a tantrum and kicks the train tracks across the room.
16* ConfirmedBachelor: A rare female example in Noriko's friend Aya, who doesn't want to be married and mocks her married friends for the hassles and concerns they have to deal with in married life. She isn't that sincere about it, however. Late in the film when Mr. Manabe drops by and Noriko expresses reluctance to take a look at him after she's decided to marry Kenkichi, Aya says "I may marry who's left."
17* TheGhost: Mr. Manabe is never seen, not even when he pays a visit to the house and Aya makes Noriko take a look.
18* JapanesePoliteness: Another theme of Ozu films, in which characters maintain polite smiles while talking about disturbing things. Shukiki has a smile plastered on his face when he says that he's given up hope that their other son, missing in action in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, will ever be found.
19* MatchCut: A cut from Noriko and Aya hoisting drinks, after they're stood up by their married friends, to Noriko's parents snacking in the park as they talk about her impending marriage.
20* OldMaid: Noriko's family is concerned about her status as a 28-year-old unmarried woman, as Japanese cultural norms deem a woman older than 25 to be unmarriagable.
21* SignatureShot: An example of the technique Ozu used throughout his career of staging conversations as shot-reverse shots where the camera turns 180 degrees and the characters address the camera directly.

Top