Film

Tokyo Stories

Darrell Hartman  01/14/2009 10:38 AM

Still courtesy of Strand Releasing

 

Forget Paris: This season's darling city of art house films is shaping up to be Tokyo. March sees the release of Tokyo Sonata, Kiyoshi Kurosawa's drama about a family that falls apart after its patriarch (Teruyuki Kagawa) loses his job. Also that month: Tokyo!, a triple bill of short films set in the Japanese capitol and directed by foreigners Michel Gondry, Leos Carax, and Joon-ho Bong.
 
First, though, there's Cherry Blossoms, out this Friday. In purely geographic terms, it's not full immersion—about half the film takes place in Germany—yet Doris Dorrie's account of a staid German man (Elmar Wepper) who makes meaning from an unlikely trip to Tokyo and Mt. Fuji makes ample use of the foreign setting. Incidentally, it's one that Dorrie, who has been to Japan more than a dozen times and has shot three films in Tokyo, knows well.



Dorrie's film is loosely based on Ozu's 1953 classic Tokyo Story, but "it's really much more about Japan and my experience in Japan," she says. "The sense of being a total stranger and at the same time being very much at home in this foreign land—the sense of being taken good care of by the whole country... It has a lot to do with Japanese mindfulness, tact and respect."
 
As she perceives it, at least. Those same qualities are critiqued in Tokyo Sonata as a mask for emotions that may explode any moment. For Sofia Coppola, they meant humorous inscrutability—a Western-oriented perception, Dorrie claims, and one she hopes to correct. "I find Lost in Translation extremely racist and condescending. Every Japanese in the film is a total idiot, and the two main characters never venture out of the realm of the tourist attractions." Another reason international filmmakers might want to revisit Japan? "In Tokyo, nobody in the streets ever looks into the camera, and nobody ever stops and asks you questions-it's just something you don't do," Dorrie said. "So it's very easy to move around with a flexible crew and shoot guerilla-style."

Tags: Cherry Blossoms, Elmar Wepper, Lost in Translation, Sofia Coppola, Dorris Dorie, Tokyo, Art house film

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Toussaint

01/16/09 10:46am

Tokyo is one of my favorite cities! Dorrie's film seems like it is going to do right by this hot spot. Her comments and critiques are dead on.
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Baberahamlincoln

01/14/09 11:07am

This looks great. I totally want to go eat sushi now.
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bajillionare

01/14/09 11:05am

I guess since I am never going to Japan these can tide me over. But what's up with that guys face it looks like he is having a heart attack.
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stolaf

01/14/09 11:04am

What's up with that white dude being so beet red?

Otherwise I'm dying to see Gondry let loose in Tokyo.
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