- Departures (Takita, 2008). Part of a genre of Japanese films that are about returning to the country, getting back to one's roots, and becoming more engaged in the basic facts of life.
- Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (Schrader, 1985). Context: Yukio Mishima was a novelist who was entranced with the beauty of national tradition, the male physique, and death. (3/n, this dot point TBC)
I think the thing I mainly like about Japanese literature and film is that it comes from a culture that has continually had to seriously reckon with the tension between preserving a national culture and achieving greatness/abundance/excellence by Westernizing, which tends to produce interesting stuff IMO.
Anyway as you can see I haven't actually watched all that much in the grand scheme of things so do let me know if you have recommendations. (5/5)
This film combines a depiction of some of his novels with a quasi-biographic take on his life, focussing on the day he attempted to start a coup, failed, and killed himself. As well as doing AFAICT a good job at depicting Mishima's aesthetic vision, I think it also helps you see Japanese ultra-nationalist violence as part of a broader phenomenon that includes modern-day Islamic terrorism. (4/n)