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  1. May 19, 2024 · Key Takeaways: “The End of Summer” is a nostalgic coming-of-age movie set in the 1980s, exploring themes of friendship, love, and self-discovery against a stunning seaside backdrop. It received critical acclaim and has a dedicated fan base. The film’s authentic portrayal of teenage life, relatable characters, and iconic 80s soundtrack ...

  2. The End of Summer opens with the neon lights of Osaka, among which the most prominent is the English sign for a hotel, “New Japan”. No one can doubt that the movie itself is a portrait of a new Japan, given not only how many signs of modernization and globalization it shows, but also how pointedly it contrasts those with signs of ...

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  4. Mar 28, 2023 · For him, the action is centred primarily on the characters, meaning that the objects and places around them are somewhat inert, merely part of a setting in which development of the plot and of the characters is the priority.

  5. Jul 31, 2014 · The End of Summer was the next-to-last movie Ozu made before his 1963 death, and it is imbued with a sense of loss, both of mortal life and a smaller, simpler era in Japanese life. There are beautiful rhyming shots of a skyscraper, TV antennae, a temple, and the smokestacks of a crematorium posed against the tree-lined Kyoto skyscape.

  6. The End of Summer (小早川家の秋, Kohayagawa-ke no aki, lit. "Autumn of the Kohayagawa family") is a 1961 Japanese film directed by Yasujirō Ozu for Toho Films. [1] It was entered into the 12th Berlin International Film Festival. [2] The film was his penultimate; only An Autumn Afternoon (1962) followed it, which he made for Shochiku Films.

  7. Jan 1, 2000 · The End of Summer Review Depression-hit brewer Ganjiro Nakamura consents to the arranged marriages of his daughter and widowed daughter-in-law, while offending their sensibilities by devoting so ...

  8. Apr 23, 2012 · A Journey Through the Eclipse Series: Yasujiro Ozu’s The End of Summer. David Blakeslee. April 23, 2012. After years of waiting and many months of persistent, low-intensity clamoring, the long anticipated debut of Yasujiro Ozu on Criterion Blu-ray finally came to fruition this week, with the upgrade release of his pivotal 1949 classic Late ...

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