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IMDb > Rakudai wa shita keredo (1930)

Rakudai wa shita keredo (1930) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
7.0/10   57 votes
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Director:
Yasujiro Ozu
Writers:
Akira Fushimi (writer)
Yasujiro Ozu (story)
Contact:
View company contact information for Rakudai wa shita keredo on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
11 April 1930 (Japan) more
User Comments:
An Ozu Classic more

Cast

  (Credited cast)
Tatsuo Saito ... Student
Kaoru Futaba ... Landlady
Kinuyo Tanaka ... Cafe's waitress
Tomio Aoki ... Landlady's son
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Chishu Ryu ... Class mate
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
I Flunked But...
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Country:
Japan
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Silent

Fun Stuff

Movie Connections:
Referenced in Ikite wa mita keredo - Ozu Yasujirô den (1983) more

FAQ

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3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful:-
An Ozu Classic, 11 May 2004
Author: artist_signal

"I Flunked, But..." (Rakudai wa shita keredo) is an Ozu piece made in the 1930's, and a great example of what a Silent Film can achieve. A college satire set in Depression-era Japan, "I Flunked But.." is an excellent movie, a comic masterpiece, and perhaps one of the stronger examples of Ozu's silent film ouevre.

It concerns the humorous attempts made by Takahashi and his gang of friends in trying to pass the rigourous "Exam Hell" mandated by the College of Economics they attend. We are introduced to a variety of very humorous cheating techniques and the gang's dedication to perfecting odd gaits and struts. Takahashi and his cohorts fail the one important exam that enables them to graduate, when one of their valuable cheating tricks (a shirt cribbed with diagrams and notes) is taken out by the laundryman. This movie is filled with a bunch of comic miniutae as well, from Ozu's play with shadows (a noose shows up as a lamp's string after Takahashi fails the exam), superb dialogue (even though its a silent film - many lines are very good), some fairly memorable characters (one of Takahashi's dorm-mates, a bespectacled klutz, constantly thinks it absurd that he was able to graduate while Takahasi, his smart "teacher", fails), and some nice indoor cinematography in Ozu's classic style.

The film's ironic punchline comes in the harsh truth that during tough times, there are rarely any jobs, so the student who flunks is actually better off than the student who graduates. All of Takahashi's dorm-mates receive one job-rejection after the next, and reminisce of the "good college days" - one of the most memorable lines is when one of the characters say: "I want to go back to college - we graduated too hastily". The film may be a hard find, being that its silent and B&W, (and it was made in 1930!) but if you can catch it, it's definitely worth it. Definitely a small fraction of the overall aesthetic greatness of Ozu as a director, auetuer and an artist.

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