Domo Arigato

Unless you’re deeply steeped in Eastern film history, you might not realize just how bald-faced and brazen the theft -- excuse us, inspiration and influence -- of classic Japanese film has been in modern Western moviemaking. Take Quentin Tarantino, for example. Without the undeniable influence of filmmaking masters such as...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Unless you’re deeply steeped in Eastern film history, you might not realize just how bald-faced and brazen the theft — excuse us, inspiration and influence — of classic Japanese film has been in modern Western moviemaking. Take Quentin Tarantino, for example. Without the undeniable influence of filmmaking masters such as Akira Kurosawa, Kenji Mizoguchi, Yasuijiro Ozu, and Hiroshi Teshigahara to shape his vision in the days when he was manning the cash register at a video store, we might not have films like Kill Bill today. So instead of heading to the multiplex to peep the latest Japanese horror movie rip-off, we say go to the source at the Japanese Masters Film Festival at the Cosford Cinema (on the UM campus, on the second floor of the Memorial Building, 1111 Stanford Dr., Coral Gables).

Lovingly screened on 33mm film, these cinematic classics were hand-plucked from the prolific Fifties and early Sixties – a time of tremendous power and historical significance for Japanese film. The festival will run through April 27, and upcoming highlights include Mizoguchi’s indelible ghost story Ugetsu and Kurosawa’s classics Ikiru,/I> and Throne of Blood – one of the most celebrated adaptations of Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Tonight feast your eyes on Teshigahara’s Academy Award-nominated 1964 film Woman in the Dunes, an erotic battle that hinges on beetles, loneliness, and the vast, arid desert. It begins at 6.
Sat., April 5, 6 p.m., 2008

Miami, make your New Year’s Resolution Count!

We’re $15,000 away from our End-of-Year campaign goal, with just a couple of days left! We’re ready to deliver — but we need the resources to do it right. If Miami New Times matters to you, please contribute today to help us expand our current events coverage when it’s needed most.

$30,000

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Arts & Culture newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...