Osaka Elegy () poster
7.3
Your Rating: 0/10
Ratings: 7.3/10 from 38 users
# of Watchers: 74
Reviews: 1 user
Ranked #58207
Popularity #99999
Watchers 38

Ayako Murai is a young woman working as a telephone operator in 1930s Osaka. In order to pay the debts of her father, unemployed and threatened with arrest after embezzling 300 yen, she agrees to become the mistress of her employer Mr. Asai. (Source: Wikipedia) Edit Translation

  • English
  • Português (Brasil)
  • magyar / magyar nyelv
  • dansk
  • Country: Japan
  • Type: Movie
  • Release Date: May 28, 1936
  • Duration: 1 hr. 11 min.
  • Score: 7.3 (scored by 38 users)
  • Ranked: #58207
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Cast & Credits

Photos

Osaka Elegy () photo

Reviews

Completed
The Butterfly
3 people found this review helpful
Apr 22, 2022
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 2.5
This review may contain spoilers

If I stay where I am, I don't know how much farther I'll fall

Osaka Elegy was a difficult film for me to rate. It attempted to reveal how men with money have power over women and even men with no money still exerted power over the women in their lives. Ayako, the female lead, did the wrong thing for the right reason in order to help the men in her life, only to suffer mightily for her selflessness.

Asai, the owner of a pharmaceutical company received no respect from his wife, nor did he give her any. He was verbally abusive of his female servants. At work he lusted after a young phone operator, Ayako. Initially, she rebuked his advances. She wanted to marry her noncommittal boyfriend and reached out to him for help. He was unable or unwilling to assist her family.
When her father was threatened with jail because of his embezzlement of 300 yen, she gave in and had an affair with Asai to pay off her father's debt. She would also pay off her brother's tuition. Neither man showed any gratitude, rebuffing her instead. Things went from bad to worse, eventually she was abandoned by all the men in her life showing her just how much their loyalty was worth.

Yamada Isuzu made a wonderful, conflicted heroine. She knew her father was inept and unkind, but still could not resist helping him by foregoing her dignity and reputation. Once ensconced as a mistress she began to forge her own limited power, a power dependent on the generosity of a more powerful man. Constantly rebelling against the label of a woman suffering from the "illness of delinquency" Ayako struggled to keep what dignity she could even when publicly humiliated. From shy telephone operator to a woman fiercely fighting for her future, from joy to utter despair, hopelessness to a tiny ray of hope, Yamada played out a wide array of emotions.

The film suffers from age, fading or blurry at times. Even with the shaky and blurred shots, there were many lovely and creative scenes. At times the camera gave the viewer distance literally and figuratively from the characters, at others it sat as a cold observer, intimately close to the destruction of trust and love.

Whether director Mizoguchi made this film as an indictment on the precarious situation of poor women or simply an observation of the women in the world around him, what played out was the price for not having power of one's own. Punishment awaited the woman stepping outside of conservative values even by the same unscrupulous people who turned her toward the dark to make their lives easier or more pleasurable.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?

Recommendations

There have been no recommendations submitted. Be the first and add one.

Recent Discussions

Be the first to create a discussion for Osaka Elegy

Details

  • Movie: Osaka Elegy
  • Country: Japan
  • Release Date: May 28, 1936
  • Duration: 1 hr. 11 min.
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Statistics

  • Score: 7.3 (scored by 38 users)
  • Ranked: #58207
  • Popularity: #99999
  • Watchers: 74

Top Contributors

20 edits
13 edits
6 edits
3 edits

Popular Lists

Related lists from users
Japan (PTW)
469 titles 11 loves
Catalog of Films
412 titles 3

Recently Watched By