小津安二郎

D. Miyao
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引用次数: 0

摘要

小津安二郎(生于1903年12月12日)1963年12月12日),日本电影导演。作为一个电影迷,小津在现代化的东京长大。1927年,他在Shochiku公司的Kamata工作室执导了他的导演处女作,拍摄了一部默片《忏悔之剑》(Zange no yaiba)。在那之后,小津开始专注于现代戏剧,并开创了一种类型的shoshimin geki(中下阶层的工薪族电影),如东京合唱团(东京no korasu, 1931)和我出生了,但是…(Otona no miru ehon: Umarete wa mita keredo, 1932)。他的许多二战后的电影,包括晚春(板顺,1949);《东京物语》(Tokyo monogatari, 1953),在2012年的视觉和声音投票中被评为有史以来最伟大的电影;最后一部电影《秋天的下午》(Sanma no aji, 1962)描绘了日本的日常城市生活、家庭事务(结婚、葬礼和离婚)以及几代人之间的关系。到1962年,他导演了53部电影。从小津还在工作的时候起,他就一直是评论家和学者们关注的对象。在日本,小津作为日本电影界最重要的导演的地位始于20世纪30年代初。小津的早期庆祝活动强调他的现实主义,忠实地描绘了日本现代生活的现实。评论家认为小津的现实主义是一种社会批判模式。后来,特别是在第二次世界大战之后,小津批评的主要现实主义焦点转向了生活的变迁和更广泛的人文主义思想。这种战后批判倾向似乎影响了20世纪50年代末至70年代初日本以外关于小津的早期学术研究,包括唐纳德·里奇(Donald Richie)的作品,该作品以人道主义的方式颂扬了小津的导演地位。然后,正是小津独特的电影风格,包括所谓的枕头镜头(空间和时间上模糊的镜头打开场景)和360度空间的使用,偏离了好莱坞连续剪辑的叙事经济,使他成为20世纪70年代末和80年代欧美学术界电影研究制度化时期的核心人物。在新学科的形成过程中,最初强调的是形式主义和马克思主义。因此,小津的作品是展示普遍性(“一位人道主义导演”)和特殊性(“好莱坞的挑战者”)的合适范例。此后,许多学者和评论家从不同的理论和历史角度研究了小津的电影。
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Yasujiro Ozu
Yasujiro Ozu (b. 12 December 1903–d. 12 December 1963) was a Japanese film director. Growing up as a film fan in the modernizing city of Tokyo, Ozu made his directorial debut at Shochiku Company’s Kamata Studio in 1927 with a silent jidai geki (period drama) film, Sword of Penitence (Zange no yaiba). After that Ozu became specialized in gendai geki (contemporary drama) and initiated a genre shoshimin geki (lower-middle-class salarymen films) with such films as Tokyo Chorus (Tokyo no korasu, 1931) and I Was Born, But . . . (Otona no miru ehon: Umarete wa mita keredo, 1932). Many of his post–World War II films, including Late Spring (Banshun, 1949); Tokyo Story (Tokyo monogatari, 1953), the film that was voted the greatest film of all time in 2012 Sight and Sound Poll; and the last film An Autumn Afternoon (Sanma no aji, 1962), depicted everyday Japanese urban life, family matters (marriage, funeral, and dissolution), and relationships between generations. He directed fifty-three films by 1962. Ozu has been the object of critical attention by critics and scholars since the time when he was still working. In Japan, the status of Ozu as a foremost director of Japanese cinema was first established in the early 1930s. Early celebrations of Ozu emphasized his realism in faithfully depicting the reality of modern life in Japan. Critics regarded Ozu’s realism as a mode of social criticism. Later, especially after World War II, the primary focus of realism in Ozu criticism shifted to life’s vicissitudes and to a broader idea of humanism. This postwar critical tendency appeared to influence early scholarship on Ozu outside of Japan from the late 1950s the early 1970s, including the work by Donald Richie, which humanistically celebrated Ozu as an auteur. Then, it was Ozu’s unique film style, including the so-called pillow shots (spatially and temporally ambiguous shots that open scenes) and the use of 360-degree space that deviated from the narrational economy of Hollywood’s continuity editing, that made him a central figure during the period that saw the institutionalization of film studies in Euro-American academia in the late 1970s and 1980s. In the formation of the new academic discipline, emphasis was initially placed on formalism and Marxism. Thus, Ozu’s work served as a suitable example in demonstrating both the universal (“a humanist auteur”) and the particular (“a challenger to Hollywood”). Since then, a number of scholars and critics have studied the films of Ozu from various theoretical and historical standpoints.
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