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Keiko Kishi | ||
Tadao Sato | ||
Kie Nakai | ||
Chikage Awashima | ||
Tatsuya Jô | ||
Setsuko Hara | Noriko Hirayama | |
Chiyeko Higashiyama | ||
Ky Kagawa | ||
Shiro Osaka | Keiso Hirayama | |
Chishu Ryu | Shukishi Hirayama | |
Haruko Sugimura | Shige Kaneko | |
S Yamamura | ||
Chieko Higashiyama | Tomi Hirayama | |
Sô Yamamura | Koichi Hirayama | |
Kuniko Miyake | Fumiko Hirayama - his wife | |
Kyôko Kagawa | Kyoko Hirayama | |
Eijiro Tono | Sanpei Numata | |
Nobuo Nakamura | Kurazo Kaneko | |
Hisao Toake | Osamu Hattori | |
Teruko Nagaoka | Yone Hattori | |
Mutsuko Sakura | Patron of the Oden Restaurant | |
Toyo Takahashi | Shukichi Hirayama's Neighbor | |
Toru Abe | Train employee |
Director |
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Producer | Takeshi Yamamoto
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Writer | Yasujiro Ozu
Kôgo Noda |
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Cinematography | Yuuharu Atsuta
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Musician | Kojun Saitô
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Yasujiro Ozu's Tokyo Story follows an aging couple, Tomi and Shukichi, as they journey from their rural village to visit their two married children in bustling, postwar Tokyo. Their reception, however, is disappointing: too busy to entertain them, their children send them off to the hot springs. After Tomi falls ill, she and Shukuchi return home; the children, grief-stricken, hasten to be with her. From a simple tale unfolds one of the greatest of all Japanese Films. Starring Ozu regulars Chishu Ryu and Setsuko Hara, the film reprises one of the director's favorite themes - that of generational conflict - in a way that is quintessentially Japanese, and yet universal in its appeal. |
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Features
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