Jump to content

What Did the Lady Forget?

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What Did the Lady Forget?
From left to right: Mitsuko Yoshikawa, Chōko Iida and Sumiko Kurishima
Directed byYasujirō Ozu
Written by
Starring
Cinematography
  • Yūharu Atsuta
  • Hideo Shigehara
Edited byKenkichi Hara
Music bySenji Itō
Production
company
Distributed byShochiku
Release date
  • March 3, 1937 (1937-03-03)
[1]
Running time
75 minutes[1]
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

What Did the Lady Forget? (淑女は何を忘れたか, Shukujo wa nani wo wasureta ka) is a 1937 Japanese comedy-drama film directed by Yasujirō Ozu.[1][2] In 2009 the film was ranked at No. 59 on the list of the Greatest Japanese Films of All Time by Japanese film magazine Kinema Junpo.[3]

Plot

[edit]

Komiya is a good-natured professor of medicine at a Tokyo university, who lives in a childless marriage with his strict wife Tokiko. When his niece from Osaka, Setsuko, comes for a visit, Tokiko criticises her liberated manners, including her smoking in public, which annoys Setsuko.

Tokiko asks her husband to go for his usual weekend golfing trip to Izu, though Komiya is not keen. So as not to upset his insistent wife, Komiya leaves anyway, but leaves his golf equipment with his student Okada, and writes a postcard telling Tokiko that he's having a nice trip and the weather is fine. Setsuko follows her uncle to a Ginza bar, and insists on Komiya taking her to visit a geisha house, where she gets drunk. Komiya asks Okada to take Setsuko back to his home, where Tokiko is displeased about her niece's behaviour. He stays overnight at Okada's place, worried about the rainy weather which would have made the golfing trip, which he wrote about in his postcard, impossible.

When Komiya returns home, Tokiko demands that he lectures Setsuko. While he pretends to do so, he secretly asks Setsuko to intercept the traitorous postcard. Unfortunately Setsuko fails, and Tokiko reads the card and discovers Komiya's untruthfulness. She loses her temper before the two, who leave to prevent any more friction. At the Ginza bar, Setsuko lectures her uncle for being henpecked and asks him to stand up to his wife. Upon their return, Tokiko asks her niece to leave and scolds Komiya for spoiling her. Unable to hold back any longer, Komiya slaps his wife. Setsuko secretly compliments her uncle for his demeanour, and then goes to Tokiko and apologises for causing trouble. Komiya too goes to Tokiko to apologise. When he goes back to his room, Setsuko scolds him for his inconsequence, to which he replies that it's best to "take the opposite approach", like scolding a child while praising on the surface, or in his case apologizing to his wife.

When Tokiko meets with her friends Chiyoko and Mitsuko again, she talks about the incident as if she were enlightened by her husband's "manliness". Setsuko meets with Okada before leaving for Osaka, joking about how they would treat each other if they were married, and announcing her return for the university baseball game. In the evening, Komiya and Tokiko agree how empty the house is with Setsuko gone, sharing a cigarette.

Cast

[edit]
[edit]

In one scene, Setsuko reads an edition of French cinema journal Pour Vous, prominently featuring a photograph of filmstar Marlene Dietrich.

Home media

[edit]

In 2010, the BFI released a Region 2 DVD of the film as a bonus feature on its Dual Format Edition (Blu-ray + DVD) of Early Summer.[4]

The Criterion Collection's Blu-ray and DVD release of The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice in 2019 included the film as an extra.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "淑女は何を忘れたか (What Did the Lady Forget?)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  2. ^ "淑女は何を忘れたか (What Did the Lady Forget?)". Kinenote (in Japanese). Kinema Junpo. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Greatest Japanese films by magazine Kinema Junpo (2009 version)". Archived from the original on July 11, 2012. Retrieved 2011-12-26.
  4. ^ "BFI Filmstore Japan". Filmstore.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved 2013-01-20.
  5. ^ "The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved March 20, 2024.
[edit]