To continue the theme of the preceding post, and of this one, and way back here and here as well
If Ozu were still making movies, they would still be about the family and its tensions for, in that aspect, nothing has changed from 1949 to 2009. There would still be no story as such, just an unblinking, unsentimental, observing eye. Parents would still be disappointed with their children and vice versa. Children would still find themselves acting like their parents in spite of themselves. There would still be stubborn old men and mischievous children. And trains. Pillow shots. The aching poignancy of rituals repeated after time has passed. Regrets.
Ozu would recognize all this in Hirokazu Koreeda’s Aruite mo, aruite mo.
And I recognized myself in it. As with Tokyo Story, as with Late Spring, I was grateful to be shown life, and so come to have a little more appreciation for its simple pleasures; a little more compassion for its disappointments.
--Julian
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