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  1. Wife! Be Like a Rose! (Japanese: 妻よ薔薇のやうに, romanized: Tsuma yo bara no yô ni), also titled Kimiko, is a 1935 Japanese comedy drama film directed by Mikio Naruse. It is based on the shinpa play Futari tsuma (二人妻, lit. Two Wives) by Minoru Nakano [1][2] and one of Naruse's earliest sound films. Wife!

  2. May 22, 2018 · Be Like a Rose. A surprisingly emotionally complex film, perhaps the best way to describe it would be a comic family tragedy. We start with a very Modern Young Woman (Sachiko Chiba) leaving her office and teasing her fiancé in a way that leaves him constantly befuddled and confused. Nevertheless, she has decided to marry the big lug, as he ...

  3. Dec 23, 2017 · Wife! Be Like a Rose!, 1935. December 23, 2017 (December 28, 2017) acquarello. In Nippon Modern: Japanese Cinema of the 1920s and 1930s, Mitsuyo Wada-Marciano cites the contradictory delineation between urban and provincial life in Mikio Naruse’s Wife! Be Like a Rose! as an example of interwar Japan’s amorphously defined domestic and social ...

    • Every Night Dreams (1933) Only five of Naruse’s silent pictures have survived (handily collected in a single DVD edition by Criterion’s Eclipse imprint in the US), all much more stylistically dynamic than his better known later works.
    • Wife! Be like a Rose! (1935) One of the earliest Japanese films to achieve critical attention in the west (it had a short run at New York’s Filmarte Theatre in 1937), Wife!
    • Late Chrysanthemums (1954) One of the most exquisitely realised of all Naruse’s ‘women’s pictures’, Late Chrysanthemums eschews any driving narrative force for a stunningly nuanced study of emotional and economic complexities, rooted firmly in the quotidian dynamics of the present.
    • Floating Clouds (1955) Despite being his most acclaimed and well-known film in Japan – it’s ranked by Kinema Junpo as the third greatest Japanese film of all time, behind Tokyo Story (1953) and Seven Samurai (1954) – Naruse’s gut-wrenching masterpiece is something of an anomaly in his filmography.
  4. Wife! Be Like a Rose! (Japanese: 妻よ薔薇のやうに, romanized: Tsuma yo bara no yô ni), also titled Kimiko, is a 1935 Japanese comedy drama film directed by Mikio Naruse. It is based on the shinpa play Futari tsuma (二人妻, lit. Two Wives) by Minoru Nakano [1] [2] and one of Naruse's earliest sound films. Wife!

  5. Wife! Be Like a Rose! or Kimiko (妻よ薔薇のやうに, Tsuma yo bara no yō ni) is a 1935 film directed by Mikio Naruse. It won the Best Film prize at the Kinema Jumpo Awards. In 1937 it became first Japanese sound film released in the United states, and the first Japanese film to have a successful run in the United States. Kimiko, whose parents have divorced, hopes to gain her father's ...

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  7. Wife! Be Like a Rose! (1935) - Plot summary, synopsis, and more... Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box ...

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