Miura Mitsuko in traditional Japanese dress, carrying a bowl, walks alongside Takamine Hideko in a western skirt and blousealr

Lightning
(Inazuma)

Screening on Film
Directed by Naruse Mikio.
With Takamine Hideko, Miura Mitsuko, Kagawa Kyoko.
Japan, 1952, 35mm, black & white, 87 min.
Japanese with English subtitles.
Print source: The Japan Foundation

In a nod to her role in Hideko the Bus Conductor (1941), the Hayashi Fumiko adaptation Lightning stars Takamine Hideko as the jaded bus guide, Kiyoko. The endless bickering and money troubles of Kiyoko's half-siblings, their lecherous lovers and her inconsolable mother have all but destroyed her optimism. Centered around Kiyoko's desire for independence, the interior focus of Lightning makes it one of Naruse's most powerful films about the courage to choose life each day without any guarantee of a change in circumstance. Lightning also marked the start of a more collaborative relationship between Takamine and Naruse, who allowed her to remove lines of dialogue from the script. – Kelley Dong

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