The Yellow Handkerchief (1977 film)
[2] The film was inspired by the American song "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree," itself based on a column series written by journalist Pete Hamill for the New York Post in 1971.Kinya, who was just in Abashiri, also picks up a woman, Kaori Momoi, who came to Tokyo after a difficult time with her colleagues at work, and had a meal with her.Yusaku, who finished his meal and stopped at the post office, wrote out a postcard and mailed it.Kinya starts driving with Akemi and Ukiuki, two people who came to the beach and had Yusaku, who was also there, take a picture.The next day, near Rikubetsu Station Yusaku was not chatty while eating crab in a small dining room near where Kinya was born.He will be taken to the nearest Shintoku police station, where the chief who presided over Yusaku's case, Watanabe Kiyoshi, is on duty by chance, and his warm feelings make him happy.Yusaku, who found one yellow handkerchief fluttering on the way home from work, felt as if he was rising to heaven.Even though Mitsue said she did not know about the previous miscarriage, the desperate Yusaku became disillusioned, went out to the downtown at night, and started a quarrel with Chimpira."You were a selfish person, even when I met you," Mitsue cried, but this was a love expression for a man of his style, who could only live a clumsy way of life.""I'll turn back," "I can't think he's alone," "I'm with someone," and the feelings of a shaking man and the two people encourage it.Kinya and Akemi who saw the event naturally hold hands in the car, hug each other strongly, and kiss.