Events

2025 July 28 (Mon) 8:30 pm | (In-Person) | Harvard Film Archive, 24 Quincy Street, Cambridge

Film screening: The Whole Family Works (Hataraku ikka)

Details and tickets purchase information: 
https://harvardfilmarchive.org/calendar/the-whole-family-works-2025-07
Harvard students admitted free to regularly priced shows.

Directed by Naruse Mikio.
With Tokugawa Musei, Honma Noriko, Ubukata Akira
Japan ,1939, 35mm, b/w, 65 min. 
Japanese with English subtitles

One of Naruse’s “all-time favorites,” The Whole Family Works is the filmmaker’s starkest, darkest and most sharply subversive output of the wartime years. Based on a novel by Tokunaga Sunao (of 1920s proletarian literature fame), the script maneuvered past jingoist Japan’s strict pre-censorship committees and gave Naruse exactly the type of material that he, in his own words, “understood best: stories about poor people.” A struggling family of eleven encounters an existential roadblock when its eldest son Kichi—Ubukata Akira in his fourth and last Naruse appearance—asks to be excused from factory labor to instead pursue higher education at an electricians’ college. The Ishumiras’ economic predicament is thrown into disarray, their immiseration and alcohol-laced travails depicted through low-key lighting, austere (yet emotionally loaded) camerawork and Ota Tadashi’s stunning avant-garde soundtrack. Kichi’s ultimate endorsement of filial piety—of duty to an abstract collective (or to a nation?)—is at once affirmed and exploded with a haunting, indelible last shot that sees schoolchildren leaping into a future of war and death. While many of the film’s performers are amateur non-actors, Honma Noriko would go on to achieve fame in Kurosawa’s Stray Dog, Rashomon, Ikiru and Seven Samurai. – Nace Zavrl

Harvard Film Archive special film series FLOATING CLOUDS… THE CINEMA OF NARUSE MIKIO co-sponsored by the Reischauer Institute