This film by Toyoda depicts the hard life of an unmarried mother in Tokyo. Umeko (Machiko Kyo), at 36, is working in a bar, struggling valiantly to keep her family together. Her 17-year-old daughter Takeko becomes increasingly upset by her mother's constant drinking and yakuza boyfriend, and runs away from home. Kyo's performance was highly praised.
Acting
Machiko Kyō's face contains multitudes of unspoken exhaustion.
Direction
Toyoda frames claustrophobic domestic spaces like emotional prisons.

Director
Shirō Toyoda
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Machiko Kyō was already a star from Rashomon and Ugetsu; this lesser-known role showcases her range in grounded social realism.
The film captures a specific post-Olympics Tokyo where economic boom hadn't reached everyone—bar hostesses were visible symbols of invisible poverty.