Advertisement
Hiroshi Shimizu’s first acclaim outside Japan spotlighted his films on children and his more genial tales, but A Hero of Tokyo crystallizes his other, more hard-boiled melodramas of social critique and urban noir. After her new husband skips town thanks to shady business deals, a widow covertly becomes a bar hostess to pay for her children’s education. Years later, her secret is revealed, with predictably heartbreaking results that are soon made worse by the husband’s reappearance. Gangsters and prostitutes, newspapermen and swindlers (running a “Manchuria-Mongolia Gold Mine” scheme, in a pointed nod to Japan’s wartime imperialism) merge with family honor and filial duty, creating one of early Japanese cinema’s darkest, most sorrowful works. Shimizu “is unsparing in his depiction of the Japanese family, and trenchant in his criticism of the social assumptions that destroy it from outside and from within” (Alexander Jacoby). Screening with a 35mm Archival Print.
Advertisement
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive, 2155 Center St,Berkeley,CA,United States
Tickets