A peerless chronicler of the soul who specialized in supremely emotional, visually exquisite films about the circumstances of women in Japanese society, Kenji Mizoguchi had already been directing movies for decades when he made The Life of Oharu in 1952. But this epic portrait of an inexorable fall from grace, starring the astounding Kinuyo Tanaka as an imperial lady-in-waiting who gradually descends to street prostitution, was the movie that gained the director international attention, ushering in a new golden period for him.
New, restored high-definition digital film transfer, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
New audio commentary for the opening of the movie by film scholar Dudley Andrew
Mizoguchi’s Art and the Demimonde, an illustrated audio essay featuring Andrew
The Travels of Kinuyo Tanaka, a 2009 film by Koko Kajiyama documenting the actor’s 1949 goodwill tour of the United States
New English subtitle translation
PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by film scholar Gilberto Perez
Extras
New, restored high-definition digital film transfer, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
New audio commentary for the opening of the movie by film scholar Dudley Andrew
Mizoguchi’s Art and the Demimonde, an illustrated audio essay featuring Andrew
The Travels of Kinuyo Tanaka, a 2009 film by Koko Kajiyama documenting the actor’s 1949 goodwill tour of the United States
New English subtitle translation
PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by film scholar Gilberto Perez