#japanese

girlofthesea@diasporasocial.net

#frogs #magic #japanese
I love this magic Japanese frog.
Kunisada: Ichimura Uzaemon XIII and Frog Magic
Artist: Utagawa Kunisada (1786-1864)
Date: 1860

Ichimura Uzaemon XIII in the role of Tenjiku Tokubei. Tokubei was a famous explorer whose exploits were made into a number of kabuki plays. In most plays he learned magical frog powers from Sokan. Here he employs his frog magic to summon a giant frog, seen in the background, whose toothed mouth emits a poisonous-looking red cloud of vapor. Tokubei wears the jaunty scarf of the otokodate character, as well as oversized formal robes that fill the page. His hair is fluffy on top, showing that he does not adhere to societal conventions such as shaving his pate.

girlofthesea@diasporasocial.net

#japanese
August 12, 2024
Japanese Movie Intermission

Recommend: Drink 2 Liters of Water Every Day. I'll float away, but it has to be done to stay healthy, especially during heatwaves.
I use a water filter. I was at the kitchen sink, next to the window, adding tap water to the water filter container. I was thinking about taking a picture of my pasta strainer for him. But of course he already knows what strainers look like. I heard a song - thought it was playing in a passing car down in the street traffic. I looked out of the window. No car.
A Man Needs a Maid ~ Neil Young
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0oeZAOSL8I

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

Favorite German-language Films

I have seen very few of these. What others should I try to see?

Lola Rennt (Run Lola Run)

directed by Tom Tykwer

This is so clever and inventive, it's hard not to enjoy.

Das Boot (The Boat)

directed by Wolfgang Petersen

The greatest submarine movie ever made. I'm convinced that this is what diesel boats were like in WWII, and I'm glad I never set foot in one.


Favorite Japanese-language Films

I've seen many more of these.

大病人 (Daibyonin or The Last Dance)

directed by 伊丹 十三 (Juzo Itami)

This was the first film I saw in Japan where I got the gist of every conversation. It gave me more confidence in my Japanese. Then I saw お葬式 (The Funeral) by the same director and was completely lost. I think that was due to the Kansai dialect. The film is about the last year in the life of an old actor dying of cancer. It's about telling patients the truth about their illnesses, which was not always done in Japan at the time.

天空の城ラピュタ (Laputa, Castle in the Sky)

directed by 宮崎 駿 (Hayao Miyazaki)

In the film, Jonathan Swift's Laputa is a real place. A castle floating in the air. Some international intrigue results in some young people actually going to it. Miyazaki has made several very good films, but this is still my favorite of all of them.


What about the rest of you? Any good films in a language other than your first that made a big impression?

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