The original Japanese title of "Perfect Days," the
Wim Wenders film nominated recently for the foreign language Oscar, was "
Komorebi." I'm told that means
"sunlight leaking through trees." Neither title matches the
tone of this portrait of Hirayama, a vaguely troubled middle-aged
man who lives alone and follows a set routine, cleaning the public toilets of
Tokyo by day, stopping in at a bar after work where everyone knows him, and
spending his evenings at home reading Faulkner, Patricia Highsmith, and Aya Koda.
Hirayama is good at cleaning toilets, but there isn't much Zen
in his approach. He's fast, careful, methodical, and efficient. He rarely
speaks to his assistant or anyone else, often spending lunch breaks on a bench
in a park photographing the branches of a nearby group of trees as they're jostled by the wind. In short, Hirayama has crafted a simple lifestyle
that works well for him, though it seems to be driven less by enlightened
satisfaction than caution and circumspection, and even hints of latent fear,
like a dog who had a cruel master years ago and can't quite get over it.
Koji Yakusko won the best actor prize at Cannes for his
portrayal of Hirayama, and we spend much of the film watching subtle changes in
his expression. Though they're sometimes hard to read, Hirayama is clearly moved
from time to time by a childlike glee, as when he watches a homeless man doing
pantomimes in the park. On the other hand, when a woman sits on a bench near
him twice in the same week to eat her sandwich, he's spooked; he doesn't know
what to make of it.
The central mystery of Hirayama's back-story gurgles quietly
beneath a succession of minor incidents involving, for example, his goofy assistant,
whose demanding girlfriend steals one of the cassette tapes Hirayama plays every
day on his way to work—The Velvet Underground, the Kinks, Otis Redding, Patti
Smith. Some critics have taken Lou Reed's "Perfect Days" and Nina
Simone's "Feelin' Good" as anthems of Hirayama's inner contentment,
though it seems more likely that this music serves as an early morning pick-me-up
to go along with the canned coffee Hirayama invariably buys from a vending
machine in the alley before heading off to spend another day polishing sinks and
urinals.
Critics have also found it significant that Hirayama is
still playing cassettes, as if he were nobly eschewing streaming technology, but the simple truth is that he drives a dilapidated van fitted with a cassette
player. What else is he going to do?
Fans of Wenders' early films such as Alice in the City and Kings
of the Road will relish the relaxed pace, subtle humor, and seemingly
random digressions that occupy much of Perfect
Days, but when Hirayama's young niece, Nico, shows up at his apartment one night, out
of the blue, and asks if she can spend a few days—she's run away from
home—it gives the film an added dimension.
Some movie-goers will be disappointed, no doubt, by a film in which very little happens and not all is revealed. But often the things we remember best are those that remain unresolved--active little seas, dangerous at times, across the surface of which we live our lives.
Notes: This film began its life when the city of Tokyo hired Wenders to direct short videos about a few of their new public toilets, which had been newly designed by world-famous architects prior to the 2020 Olympics. Also worth a note--in Japanese public schools the students are typically assigned to clean the toilets.
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The Taste of Things
begins
in medias res, with Eugenie (Juliette Binoche) selecting
heads of lettuce from a large, well-kept garden. It's a lovely, bucolic scene,
and the same can be said for the kitchen where much of the action takes place. The
greens are brought inside, and for fifteen minutes we watch a highly
choreographed primer on how to cook
haute
cuisine on an open fire and a cast iron stove.
It's clear the
cooks have been working together for a long time—Dodin Bouffant, Eugenie, and her young
assistant Violette. The instructions they send back and forth across the
capacious kitchen are kindly, and they don't look like servants. At this point
we have no idea who these people are, nor do we know who they're cooking for.
We're eventually introduced to four or five well-dressed men
sitting at a table in the next room. Dodin joins them. He's the master of the
house, a true gourmand, and these are his aristocratic friends, all of whom
share his passion for fine dining. They tell stories about Carême, Balzac, and
Estouffier, glory in the subtleties of Meursault and Chambolle-Musigny, and have
a jolly good time. Dodin and his friends gratefully acknowledge that Eugénie
is the kitchen mastermind and deserves a large share of the credit for the
results, and they've invited her to join them more than once. But she
cheerfully declines, pointing out that it would be impossible in that case to
keep the dishes coming.
The film's plot-points, such as they are, revolve around an
exchange of dinners between Dodin and a Eurasian count of great wealth but
limited taste; Dodin's fruitless efforts to get Eugenie to marry him—they've
been lovers for years; and best of all, their attempts to educate Violette's
young niece, who has an extraordinary gift for discerning flavors, in the
culinary arts.
But plot and character remain subordinate to the food—how
it's prepared, what it looks like. The settings are appealing, the lighting is
exquisitely subdued throughout, and the stews, fish, vegetables, and desserts invariably
look scrumptious. Eugenie puts a cheery face on things, though she often looks a
little tired, and occasionally comes close to fainting. Dodin is a cypher:
Where did he get his wealth? Is he writing a cookbook? You don't have to be a
Marxist to ask, more generally, whether eating well can serve as the be-all and
end-all of authentic living.
Director Tran Anh Hung never asks that question, and he
doesn't have to. From an aesthetic perspective, The Taste of Things serves up a lovely meal, though perhaps a bit lukewarm.
Maybe because we never get a chance to taste
the food?
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The Strangeness is
a gem of a film depicting a few days in life of Luigi Pirandello during which
he returns to Sicily to attend to the death of the nanny who cared from him as
a child. Along the way he discovers that Onofrio and Sebastiano, the two gravediggers handling the funeral, are also collaborating
on a community play. Pirandello is suffering from writer's block, and while waiting
for the interment he begins to take an interest in these two
would-be dramatists, whose constant bickering constitute a running comedy
routine.
I had no idea while watching the film that the actors
playing the gravediggers were Salvo Ficarra and Valentino Picone, a well known comedy
duo in Italy. Toni Servillo, whom you might recognize from The Hand of God or La Grande
Bellezza, is also perfectly cast as the melancholy playwright, who sometimes
stays up at night conversing with characters from his plays. Other townspeople,
including Onofrio's sister and other members of the cast, also figure prominently
in the film.
Opening night becomes a scene of mayhem, full of gaffes and
accusations. The play cuts too close to home (as intended) and members of the
audience who recognize unflattering versions of themselves on stage are outraged.
A riot ensues. Pirandello watches it all from a box on the mezzanine. A few
years later, he writes his masterpiece, Six
Characters in Search of an Author.
Not much of this story is true, though Pirandello was invited
to Sicily to deliver a speech in 1920. But it doesn't really matter much. The
joy in the film lies in the humor latent in small-town vanities and anxieties that
are exposed during rehearsals and performance, and also the growing appreciation Pirandello
feels for these Sicilian crooks and bumpkins, who possess their own flavors of sincerity
and genius.