Japan’s Golden Age of Cinema

Carmen Comes Home

Générique

Titre original :
Karumen kokyo ni kaeru
Pays :
Japon
Année :
1954
Réalisateur :
Keisuke Kinoshita 
Version :
vostEN
Durée :
86 minutes
Format/Type de support :
digital 
Acteurs :
Hidelo Takamine, Shuji Sano, Chishu Ryu, Kuniko Igawa
In collaboration with the Japan Foundation and the Japanese Embassy in Luxembourg

synopsis

Japan’s First Feature in Colour 

A musical comedy about a free-spirited woman named Carmen, who returns to her rural hometown after living in Tokyo as an exotic dancer. Upon arrival, her conservative family and the small town’s residents are shocked by her modern, independent lifestyle and unconventional choices.

Kinoshita’s seemingly disparate fusion of effervescent comedy and subversive satire is particularly evident in this first, all-color Japanese feature. Filmed in 1952 at the end of American occupation, Kinoshita presents a thoughtful, humorous, and (still) relevant commentary on the legacy of cultural imperialism enabled by the Occupation. Within this framework, the tongue-in-cheek characterization of a naïve, scatterbrained heroine serves as an acerbic metaphor for the nation’s collective amnesia in the aftermath of the Pacific War.

Strictly Film School

It is this contrast, of boisterousness and serenity, of the modern and the traditional, of liberalism and conservatism, that best sums up Kinoshita’s film. In the larger scheme of things, the film’s existence in colour, amongst a sea of black-and-white movies at the time of its release, also parallels this notion of contrast.

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