What are some great Asian cinema movies?
What are some great Asian cinema movies?
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黒崎くんの言いなりになんてならない
Nice, Ozu's my favourite Japanese director; An Autumn Afternoon is my favourite film of his. If we're talking Asian cinema in general, then I fully recommend the work of Edward Yang to everyone. Yi Yi and ABSD are both undeniable masterpieces.
bump
just finished with my exams, finna watch Late Spring and Tie Xi Qu soon
>Late Spring
Good choice!
>Tie Xi Qu
Oh boy, I hope you were able to sit through Sátántangó
The best movie of HHH, if not the best of Taiwan
Does Yi Yi ever get not boring? I thought ABSD was fantastic but I can't watch more than 5 minutes of Yi Yi at a time.
sorry what is this? I don't speak insectscribble
It depends on mood I guess. I liked Yi Yi sometimes because the scenes in it looked interesting. There were some cultural symbols in it. Similar to Ang Lee's Banquet, or perhaps to all other third world movies.
m.youtube.com
The traditional wedding appeared to be joyous and celebratory but when it quieted down the kids of new generation felt alienated
The alienated feeling comes from awakening of modernization.
Koreeda's After Life and Maborosi (still have to watch more of his stuff).
Where do I find this flick
80s and earlier is Japanese Kino prime
90s to mid 00s ist Hongkong Kino prime
mid 00s to today is Korean Kino prime
Possibly the most subtly moving film ever made. Ozu was a master. Reading up on his life story and the fact that this was his final work just made it hit harder.
Watch Yakuza Papers user
It's the opposite for me. I loved Yi Yi on my first viewing, but ABSD took longer to appreciate.
>pic unrelated
>incel identifies with incel
lmao
Name one then.
digits of truth
yakuza papers is god-tier kino
there you go
the virgin melodrama lacking any subtlety (OPs pic)
vs
the chad neorealist thriller with subtext social commentary
Now was that so hard? Stop being a prick.
His story really is something, probably the last person you'd expect conscripted to Nanking and chucked into a POW camp. The thing that amazes me the most about Ozu is how he captured family life so perfectly, despite never having any real family of his own - not even a marriage.
Get off Yea Forums Kurosawa. Go make another samurai flick, smelly.
>Stop being a prick.
no
Comfy
Dust in the Wind Blu-ray youtube.com
The third world coming of age story is the same and you have already heard a million times. Young boy and girl go to city. The boy loses the girl.
Based. I'm halfway through the series and it's really, REALLY good so far.
In the world of Asian cinema
You may see that there are different brands, colors, and styles in China, South Korea, and Taiwan.
But in fact they are all from japan. The money was from japan. The technology was from japan. The music was from japan. The styles and themes and topics and ideas were from japan.
>Ozu
>"melodrama"
Based retard.
I'll never understand why Teshigahara doesn't get the same attention as the other postwar greats.
.....but that's just me
Yeah Stephen Chow was some talent.
He got earlier middle and later phases. I like the earlier and middle. But I agree the third phase has some substance.
>tokyo story
>not melodrama
whatver egets you to sleep at night you fag
A brighter summer day. Absolutley loved it
>no one posting jav codes
I... I'm proud of you, anons.
The Woman in the Dunes
black and white movies are mostly boring 2bh
This and Face of Another are some of the best
Also anything with Nakadai is usually good
Watched it the other day, loved it (Sonatine is still my favourite of his though)
Not *technically* an Asian production, but Mishima is pure kino
based brainlet
They make colorful movies as well
sauce?
here,
tell me what it is, cunteyes
A Page of Madness
Any movies about Americans in Japan that arent Lost in Translation?
I suppose you want a Japanese movie then
Ramen Girl perhaps
Based, I love both, truly great avant-garde filmmaking.
Also kino.
begone
Summer Soldiers (1972) by Hiroshi Teshigahara, haven't seen it yet.
Black Sun (1964) is a great flick about a black GI and Japanese youth teaming up to wreck havoc in postwar Japan
okay recommend me good non b&w movies then
thanks for posting user
and other one (needs updating)
Its on Prime video
Dust in the Wind
thanks anons
>Chan Wook-Park
I see you're men of culture as well
Would include "The Handmaiden" into those charts, a solid 8 as min
>posting the worst one of them all
great thread op
>ozu
>worst anything
way to expose yourself
Learn what words mean.
Farewell My Concubine
good shit. Drunken Angel is a Kurosawa movie that I don't see talked a lot here but is fantastic