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A lesserknown masterpiece

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Dairy Center to screen Ozu’s ‘Tokyo Story’ by Michael J. Casey

KUNC 102.7 FM

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THURSDAY APR 24

5:00 PM SCIENCE & ART EXPERIMENT 7:00 PM COLORADO SKIES 9:00 PM RADIOHEAD

FRIDAY APR 25

7:00 PM DYNAMIC EARTH 9:00 PM BOB MARLEY 10:30 PM NO DOUBT 11:59 PM NIRVANA

SATURDAY APR 26

10:00 AM MOONS AND LASERS 11:30 AM TWO SMALL PIECES OF GLASS 1:00 PM A BRIEF MYSTERY OF TIME 2:30 PM BLACK HOLES 9:00 PM DYNAMIC EARTH 10:30 PM PINK FLOYD: WELCOME TO THE MACHINE

SUNDAY APR 27

1:00 PM STARS AND LASERS 2:30 PM ZULA PATROL: DOWN TO EARTH 4:00 PM DYNAMIC EARTH

Fiske Planetarium - Regent Drive

(Next to Coors Event Center, main campus CU Boulder)

www. fiske.colorado.edu 303-492-5002 50 April 24, 2014

BOEDECKER THEATER Independent film & cultural performances in high definition.

ElAInE STRITCH: SHOOT ME

Apr 24 - 7:00 | Apr 25 - 4:00 & 8:30 Apr 26 - 6:00 & 8:00

CHIlD’S POSE

Apr 24 - 4:30 | Apr 25 - 6:00 | Apr 26 - 3:30

ERnEST AnD CElESTInE Oscar-nominated Animation for kids Apr 26 - 11:30 & 1:30

OPERA: lA BOHEME SAlzBuRG FESTIvAl Apr 27 - 1:00 | Apr 30 - 1:00

ClASSICS: TOKYO STORY Apr 27 - 4:00, talkback with Albert Hand

EnEMY

Apr 30 - 4:30 | May 1 - 7:00 | May 2 - 6:30 May 3 - 4:00 & 8:30

THE GAlAPAGOS AFFAIR: SATAn CAME TO EDEn

Apr 30 - 7:00 | May 1 - 4:30 May 2 - 4:00 & 8:30 May 3 - 6:00

OPERA: CAPRICCIO With Renee Fleming from Vienna May 4 & 7

WATERMARK One day only! May 4

REDWOOD HIGHWAY May 7-10

FInDInG vIvIAn MAIER May 7-10

EnjOY HAzEl’S BAR AT THE BOE 26TH & WAlnuT STREET - BOulDER

303.440.7826 x 110 WWW.THEDAIRY.ORG

very decade, the British Film Institute conducts its Sight and Sound poll of the Greatest Movies Ever Made. In 2012, the top two films were familiar: Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo and Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane, but third was a dark horse: Yasujirô Ozu’s 1953 masterpiece, Tokyo Story, which will play at The Dairy Center as a part of Classic at The Boe series on Sunday, April 27th at 4:00 p.m. If you haven’t heard of it, don’t worry. Though Tokyo Story was made when film fans were eating up the works of Akira Kurosawa, Ozu was deemed “too Japanese” and his work remained dormant on the Western stage for years. The persistent writings of film critics Donald Richie, David Bordwell and Roger Ebert brought exposure to Ozu films, but it was Ozu and his gentle nature that made the movies so timeless. Ozu’s films deal with middle-class people, focusing primarily on family dramas with a universal and timeless appeal. Tokyo Story is over 50 years old, depicts a foreign land and culture, and yet continues to resonate with audiences far and wide. Tokyo Story is quietly simple: Two elderly parents leave their small country town to visit their children in the city. The children are happy to see them, but too busy with their jobs and their own children to pay them any real attention. The parents feel guilty about being in the way and the children feel guilty for neglecting them. Manners keep everyone from stating the obvious. The children decide to send them to a hot springs spa for a vacation, but the parents decide to go home. On the train ride home, the mother grows ill and

dies, and the children must make a trip. A summation of the movie makes it sound intolerably sad, and it is a sad movie, but only because it invokes genuine empathy. Consider the scene where the mother watches her grandson playing in a field. She wonders if he will grow up to be a doctor. She then wonders if she will live to see it. She won’t, and the look on her face conveys that in a way that words simply can’t. The Japanese call this “mono no aware” or “a bittersweet passing of things” and Ozu finds the right moments to strike this chord. After the mother’s funeral, two of the daughters discuss their siblings, mother and father until the younger one says, “Isn’t life disappointing?” The older one nods, “Yes, it is.” Yasujirô Ozu directed Tokyo Story as well as co-authoring the script. His style is unique and may seem off-putting to the casual moviegoer, but it quickly becomes invisible and quite effective. His camera is positioned three feet off the ground and remains stationary. When characters have a conversation, Ozu films them talking directly to the camera. This allows them to talk to us and occasionally for us. What these children and these parents on the screen go through, we shall go through too. Of the 54 films Ozu made in his 60 years, Tokyo Story is the acknowledged masterpiece, which makes it an excellent starting point to the rest of his oeuvre. For those familiar, this screening will be a special event, thanks to an included talkback session with Albert Hand, a member of the film selection committee for The Boe. Tickets and more information are available at thedairy.org Respond: letters@boulderweekly.com Boulder Weekly


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