I was sort of joking before when I pasted in that GIF from Tokyo Story, but I feel a pretty significant Ozu influence in this story. Part of it is the Showa setting, but part of it is the depiction of the blunt brutality of life under traditional Japanese patriarchy, along with the fatalism of the characters. We already know how screwed everyone is in the end, and the way it shows how it got to that point is interesting enough to mostly offset how depressing it is.
Maybe because Ozu is the Other Great Japanese director and has this reputation of being especially Japanese, people discount him as worthy but not really relevant / gripping / alive. I've watched most of his movies, and in the season movies (Late Spring, Early Summer, Autumn Afternoon, Late Autumn) especially, nobody gets out unharmed, and it's both hard to watch and almost too real, despite his many stylistic idiosyncrasies. The big addition in this story is a stifled lesbian romance that seems like it starts as a Class S story that goes well past the logical conclusion of most of those stories. And also involves grievous bodily harm.
I like this story. It's sad and hard but not cruel in the telling. (Yet.)
last edited at Aug 6, 2021 2:12AM