
The Japan Foundation, Toronto is proud to celebrate the 120th anniversary of the birth of legendary Japanese filmmaker NARUSE Mikio with a Canada-wide retrospective tour of his extraordinary body of work. From October 2025 through March 2026, cinematheques across the country will present rare 35mm screenings of Naruse’s films, offering audiences a chance to experience his artistry on the big screen.
Six films have been specially imported on 35mm prints from the Film Library of the Japan Foundation’s Tokyo headquarters.*
*The final line-up may vary depending on the participating venue.
Tour Stops:

Cinematheque Québécois (Montreal): October 23 – November 2, 2025
TIFF Cinematheque (Toronto): December 2025 – January 2026
Metro Cinema (Edmonton): January 2 – February 1, 2026
The Cinematheque (Vancouver): January – February, 2026
Dave Barber Cinematheque (Winnipeg): March 2026
Featured 35mm Films:






Director Profile:

NARUSE Mikio (1905–1969) was one of Japan’s most acclaimed filmmakers, celebrated for his understated yet emotionally powerful portraits of everyday life. Beginning his career at Shochiku studios in the silent era, Naruse directed more than 80 films over four decades. Though many of his earliest films have been lost, Naruse’s surviving works reveal a filmmaker of immense sensitivity, able to capture the complexities of ordinary life with striking emotional depth.
Naruse is often mentioned alongside OZU Yasujiro and MIZOGUCHI Kenji as one of the giants of Japan’s classical cinema. What makes his films distinctive is their focus on everyday struggles—especially the resilience of women facing hardship, change, and uncertain futures. His postwar works, including Repast (1951), Floating Clouds (1955), and When a Woman Ascends the Stairs (1960), are especially admired for their intimate storytelling and quietly devastating emotional impact.
His understated style—natural performances, simple yet elegant camerawork, and a tone of bittersweet melancholy—captures the drama of ordinary lives in a way that still resonates today. More than fifty years after his passing, his films continue to move audiences worldwide with their honesty, compassion, and timeless insight into the human condition.