Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Did Yasujirō Ozu win an Oscar?

Did Yasujirō Ozu win an Oscar?

I didn't get it.

An Jiro (1903.12.12 ~1963.6438+02) is a Japanese film director. When I was young, I liked painting. 1923 joined Putian Film Studio of Songzhu Company as a photography assistant, 1926 as an assistant director. 1August, 927, served as the director of the costume film department, and his first work was Blades of Confession.

On June 20th, 2009, in the list of "TOP 10 of Best Japanese and Foreign Movies" selected by the authoritative Japanese film magazine "Ten Days to Commemorate its 90th Anniversary", Yasujiro's Tale of Tokyo beat the Seven Warriors to win the title of Best Japanese Film.

An Erlang wrote 54 works in his life. Although some of them have been lost, more than 30 remain in the world. Observing the joys and sorrows of life from the nuances, the omission and blank space always make the viewer realize the helplessness or clarity of life.

His unique visual aesthetic is composed of his ultra-low-altitude composition and delicate pictures under the frozen lens. This "aftertaste" of Ozu may "echo" in the "obsession" of filmmakers in different times.

In Anjiro's early silent films, a restrained and relaxed comedy style was basically reflected. In Ozu's films, family affection, as an ethics similar to religion, has been repeatedly discussed. There is no female perspective in Ozu's films, and the female role is just a sigh in the father's field of vision as a daughter who is about to get married or leave.

Ozu's early films reached the highest achievement in Japan's silent film period, and his later films still adhered to the traditional style of Japanese films with its consistent style. The preservation of the traditional family structure and the sigh of lonely and frustrated life in his later years have become the affairs of Ozu's works.