A heart-breaking film by Shohei Imamura.
Why is it that the other Japanese show I watched was also set in a really poor village, where they lived such bitter, hard lives?
Driven by poverty, the villages live out John Stuart Mill's Utilitarianism. They make laws so that the village as a community will survive: thieves are buried alive, those who are 70 years old are carried up the mountain to die. It's sad. Heart-wrenchingly so. Is this what we become when you take away our food, lodging, warmth, lodging? Are all our ethics and principles just sentimental fluff, suitable only for the well-fed?
The show intersperses cuts of animals mating with each other or devouring each other, almost like a periodic reminder that only the fittest survive — that life is nasty, brutish, short.
Watching grandma made me tear. She is too stoic, too selfless, too much like my own grandma.
Sunday, September 16, 2007
The Ballad of Narayama (1983)
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2 comments:
Say, where do you get to see movies like that? I happen to be a Jap movie fan: I remember Ken Ogata from "Hidden Blade". Gosh, he won so many awards.
mrdes, the Japanese Film Festival is on! Free tickets are supposedly only for Singapore Film Society members, but I think they have been giving them out to the public as well...
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