Johann
01-24-2004, 05:44 PM
Yasujiro Ozu's Tokyo Story is near perfection in filmmaking.
I finally got to see this lauded classic on the big screen.
Despite my gripes about the japanese and their deep seriousness when it comes to death, I can step back from their culture and say with all the love I can muster: your culture is fascinatingly unique.
Ozu tells a story that makes a definitive case for treating your parents better. There are some real characters in Tokyo Story. The elder parents who visit their children in Tokyo are just the kind of folks you would want for parents of your own. The children are typical "career" people who want to be seen as good hosts, but don't want to put in the effort. The old couple meander about the film, out of time & place it seems, while their children make gossipy remarks that actually shock you. This film is 50 years old and it could have been shot yesterday. It's only dated in terms of 50's ideals and costumes, and that can't be avoided.
Look past the "formal normal" of the times and you have a universal tale told expertly by one of the great masters of the film medium.
The editing caught my attention immediately: Ozu deftly moves your eyes to new shots that command you to say "beautiful". There is one scene in particular where I said to myself "that scene is worth the price of admission alone". It is a basic, simple shot of the sea waves (3 seconds?) while the father says "the sea is so calm today". Pure poetry. He cuts from that brief shot back to the story, and I've never seen any film where that type of trick is not distracting or dumb. Ozu uses it to enhance the story, and for little things like that I love the man.
The theatre was nearly sold out again (no wonder) and I noticed a lot of wet eyes during the intermission. The theatre manager said to me when I came out: "You're the only one not crying, J!"
I said "I'm not married".
I finally got to see this lauded classic on the big screen.
Despite my gripes about the japanese and their deep seriousness when it comes to death, I can step back from their culture and say with all the love I can muster: your culture is fascinatingly unique.
Ozu tells a story that makes a definitive case for treating your parents better. There are some real characters in Tokyo Story. The elder parents who visit their children in Tokyo are just the kind of folks you would want for parents of your own. The children are typical "career" people who want to be seen as good hosts, but don't want to put in the effort. The old couple meander about the film, out of time & place it seems, while their children make gossipy remarks that actually shock you. This film is 50 years old and it could have been shot yesterday. It's only dated in terms of 50's ideals and costumes, and that can't be avoided.
Look past the "formal normal" of the times and you have a universal tale told expertly by one of the great masters of the film medium.
The editing caught my attention immediately: Ozu deftly moves your eyes to new shots that command you to say "beautiful". There is one scene in particular where I said to myself "that scene is worth the price of admission alone". It is a basic, simple shot of the sea waves (3 seconds?) while the father says "the sea is so calm today". Pure poetry. He cuts from that brief shot back to the story, and I've never seen any film where that type of trick is not distracting or dumb. Ozu uses it to enhance the story, and for little things like that I love the man.
The theatre was nearly sold out again (no wonder) and I noticed a lot of wet eyes during the intermission. The theatre manager said to me when I came out: "You're the only one not crying, J!"
I said "I'm not married".