Boyhood (1951 film) explained

Boyhood
Native Name:
Kanji:少年期
Director:Keisuke Kinoshita
Producer:Takeshi Ogura
Music:Chuji Kinoshita
Cinematography:Hiroshi Kusuda
Editing:Yoshi Sugihara
Studio:Shochiku
Distributor:Shochiku
Released:[1] [2]
Runtime:110 minutes[3]
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese

, also known as A Record of Youth, is a 1951 Japanese drama film directed by Keisuke Kinoshita. It is based on a collection of letters by writer Isoko Hatano.[4]

Plot

When a family of Tokyo war evacuees arrives on the outskirts of Suwa, they are met with hostility by most villagers. The father, an English professor who had to quit lecturing due to his liberal views, opposes his son Ichirō's wish to enlist at a military school. Ichirō, who previously had to suffer mockery at school for alleged cowardice, is now confronted with his new schoolmates' reluctance and bullied by the son of the local military commander. He is also at odds with his father because of his father's staying at home and reading, while the mother works for the family's income. After Japan's defeat, the commander's son tries to kill Ichirō before committing suicide himself for the inflicted "shame," but Ichirō can fend him off. The ending hints at more peaceful times lying ahead for the family.

Cast

Literary source

The screenplay for Boyhood is based on a compilation of letters exchanged between child psychologist and writer Isoko Hatano and her son in 1944–1946. The book was published in 1950 and became a nationwide bestseller. An English translation was published in 1962.[5] [6]

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 少年期 (Boyhood) . Japanese Movie Database . Japanese . 1 February 2021 .
  2. Web site: 少年期 (Boyhood) . Shochiku Cinema Classics . 1 February 2021.
  3. Web site: Boyhood . Shochiku Films . 1 February 2021.
  4. Book: McVeigh, Brian J. . The History of Japanese Psychology: Global Perspectives, 1875-1950 . Bloomsbury Academic . 2017 . London . 191 . Epilogue: In Retrospect: Trajectories, Alternative Routes, and the Contributions of Japanese Women Psychologists . 978-1-4742-8308-3.
  5. Web site: 波多野 勤子 (Isoko Hatano) . コトバンク (Kotobank) . ja . 1 February 2021.
  6. Book: Mother and Son: The Wartime Correspondence by Isoko & Ichiro Hatano . Kirkus Reviews . 1 September 1962 . 1 February 2021.
  7. Web site: 6th Mainichi Film Awards . Mainichi.jp . ja . 2 February 2021.