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Ozu’s Anti-Cinema
University of Michigan Press, 2003 Paper: 978-1-929280-27-8 | Cloth: 978-1-929280-26-1 Library of Congress Classification PN1998.3.O98Y6713 2003 Dewey Decimal Classification 791.430233092
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ABOUT THIS BOOK
Yoshida starts his award-winning Ozu’s Anti-Cinema with a story about his trip to Ozu’s deathbed. Yoshida writes that a dying Ozu whispered to him twice, as if speaking to himself, “Cinema is drama, not accident.” These cryptic last words troubled Yoshida for decades, and throughout this book he examines Ozu’s films and tries to uncover what Ozu really meant. Ozu’s Anti-Cinema concerns Ozu’s films, but it is also Yoshida’s manifesto on films and filmmaking. In other words, this book is Yoshida’s personal journey into Ozu’s thoughts on filmmaking and, simultaneously, into his own thoughts on the nature of cinema. Every page displays the sensibility of one artist discussing another—this is probably a book that only a filmmaker could write. Within Yoshida’s luminous prose lies a finely tuned, rigorous analysis of Ozu’s films, which have rarely been engaged as closely and personally as here. See other books on: 1903-1963 | Criticism and interpretation | Ethnic Studies | Miyao, Daisuke | Social Science See other titles from University of Michigan Press |
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