Cover of Yasujiro Ozu Tokyo monogatari [東京物語]
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For fans of yasujiro ozu,lovers of japanese cinema,viewers interested in contemplative films,readers of classic film reviews,audience appreciating slow cinema and subtle storytelling
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LA RECENSIONE

A humble gaze, one that knows how to wait for life's sedimentation.

A still gaze, living within silences: in the imperceptible creak of beech planks, in the bubbling of the tin kettle on the stove.

A quiet gaze, at floor level. As if to signify that it is not indifferent to what it observes.

The story is simple and modest, as in every Ozu film. Precisely for this reason, perhaps, it becomes truly universal.

Seemingly muffled, it is instead bitter, like life.

Bitter yet gentle, full of candor.

That bitter candor that the patina of time and the apparent otherness of the context cannot, despite everything, make us indifferent to.

Ozu's is an (aesth)etic of telling a story on tiptoe, without pulling the viewer; letting the story itself speak.

And the story, as always, speaks only of life's unpredictability, of our humble (and often vain) reaction to it, and of the void that death leaves behind.

Of nothing else but this.

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Summary by Bot

Tokyo Monogatari by Yasujiro Ozu is a quietly powerful film that captures life's bittersweet nature with a humble and patient gaze. The simple story unfolds gently, revealing universal truths about life, death, and human reactions to the passage of time. Ozu’s subtle storytelling invites contemplation without manipulation. This classic remains relevant across contexts due to its genuine candor and emotional resonance.

Yasujiro Ozu

Japanese film director known for understated domestic dramas, low camera positions and composed, static frames; active from the late 1920s until 1963.
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