Saturday, May 12, 2018

Tokyo Disneyland, at the Castle.



Tokyo Disneyland was the first Disney park to be built outside the United States, and it opened in 1983.  The park was constructed in the same style as Disneyland in California and Magic Kingdom in Florida.


The park has seven themed areas: the World Bazaar; the four traditional Disney lands: Adventureland, Westernland, Fantasyland and Tomorrowland; and two mini-lands: Critter Country and Mickey's Toontown.


Many of these areas mirror those in the original Disneyland as they are based on American Disney films and fantasies. Fantasyland includes Peter Pan's Flight, Snow White's Scary Adventures, Dumbo the Flying Elephant, based on Disney films and characters.


Cinderella’s Castle is the fairy tale castle at the center of  the Tokyo Disneyland. It serves as worldwide recognized icon and the flagship attraction for the theme park.


Cinderella’s Fairy Tale Hall is located in the castle where various artworks are exhibited that show scenes from her story.


In the lobby and corridor, guests will find eight murals showing how Cinderella changed from beloved daughter, to servant girl, and then to Princess.


The murals mozaik were designed by Imagineer Dorothea Redmond and crafted and set in place by a team of six artists led by mosaicist Hanns-Joachim Scharff, the 4.6 by 3.0 m  ornate panels are shaped in a Gothic arch. The murals took 22 months to complete and contain just over 300,000 pieces of Italian glass and rough smalti (glass made specifically for mosaics traditionally used by Italian craftsmen) in more than 500 colors.


 Many of the hand-cut tiles are fused with sterling silver and 14-karat (58 percent) gold, and some are as small as the head of a tack. Looking closely at these ornate murals, one will notice that each of Cinderella's wicked stepsisters appears with a little added color - one sister's face is clearly "red with anger", while the other is a little "green with envy" as they watch Cinderella try on the glass slipper.
 
 
Source: Wikipedia




Sunday, May 6, 2018

NARA, at Todaiji Temple



Nara is the capital city of Nara Prefecture located in the Kansai region of Japan. Nara was the capital of Japan from 710 to 794, lending its name to the Nara period.


Tōdai-ji or Eastern Great Temple, located in the city of Nara, is a Buddhist temple complex that was once one of the powerful Seven Great Temples. Todai-ji , is a complex of buildings that includes the world's largest wooden structure, and the main hall houses the colossal bronze Buddha statue . 
Buddhism’s influence grew in the Nara era  during the reign of Emperor Shomu and his wife, Empress Komyo who fused Buddhist doctrine and political policy—promoting Buddhism as the protector of the state.
 In 741, reportedly following the Empress’ wishes, Emperor Shomu ordered temples, monasteries and convents to be built throughout Japan’s 66 provinces under the jurisdiction of the new imperial Todai-ji to be built in the capital of Nara.
The vast temple at Todaiji was constructed as a symbol of imperial power, and took over 15 years to complete at great expense. Emperor Shomu’s motives to build Todai-ji temple on such an unprecedented scale seem to have been a mix of the spiritual and the pragmatic: in his bid to unite various Japanese clans under his centralized rule, Emperor Shoumu also promoted spiritual unity. 
Todai-ji would be the chief temple of the monastery system and be the center of national ritual. Its construction brought together the best craftspeople in Japan with the latest building technology. It was architecture to impress—displaying the power, prestige and piety of the imperial house of Japan.
On the centre of this Buddhist temple, you will be able to find the biggest statue of Great Buddha, or Daibutsu, made of bronze. The height of the statue is reaching 15 meters and weighs 500 tons.
The Buddha is seated with the palm of his right hand extended forward. This gesture means "fear not" and “conversion of jealousy and envy” into all-accomplishing wisdom.
Deer, regarded as messengers of the gods in the Shinto religion, roam the grounds freely. According to legend a mythological god, Takemikazuchi, arrived in Nara on a white deer to guard the newly built capital of Heijokyo. 
The deer that populate Nara are Sika deer or spotted deer and are also known as bowing deer because they often times bow their heads before being fed.
You will find a lot of deer and you can also feed them if you want, but you need to buy the food first.


Source: Wikimedia








Monday, April 30, 2018

Kyoto, at Kinkaju-ji Temple




Kinkaku-ji which means Temple of the Golden Pavilion is a Zen Buddhist temple located at the foot of the gently-sloping Kinugasa Hill, northern Kyoto, Japan. The Temple’s top two floors are completely covered in gold leaf. The image of the temple richly adorned in gold leaf reflects beautifully in the water of Kyokochi, the mirror pond.


The Pavilion, that constitutes of Kinkaku-ji, gardens and other buildings, is said to be designed to realize Buddhist paradise on the earth. The Pavilion's first purpose was to serve the retiring Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu as a residence.  Yoshimitsu was a one of the most powerful persons during the Muromachi period of Japan. He created a solid political foundation of Muromachi shogunate and restored the relation between Japan and China. The Pavilion was turned into a Zen temple after Yoshimitsu’s death in 1408, and continues to function as a temple of sacred relics.


The first floor of the Pavilion is in the Japanese palace style and was used for Noh plays or Japanese classical dance drama. The second floor is in the samurai style and was used for composing poetry. This floor is built in the Bukke style used in samurai residences. Inside is a seated Kannon Bodhisattva, as the goddess of mercy Kannon helps people who are in distress. The third floor is in the old Chinese style and was used for meditation.


The roof is in a thatched pyramid with shingles. The building is topped with a bronze phoenix ornament. In Japanese mythology the Phoenix brings goodwill as it descends from the heavens and is typically shown sitting on top of a gateway to a Shinto shrine. This ornament adorns the roof of the Kinkaku-ji Temple, it is a symbol of an imperial household.


From the outside, viewers can see gold plating added to the upper stories of the Pavilion. The gold leaf covering the upper stories hints at what is housed inside: the shrines. The outside is a reflection of the inside. The elements of nature, death, religion, are formed together to create this connection between the Pavilion and outside intrusions.


The garden complex is an excellent example of Muromachi period garden design. The Muromachi period is considered to be a classical age of Japanese garden design. The correlation between buildings and its settings were greatly emphasized during this period. It was a way to integrate the structure within the landscape in an artistic way. The garden designs were characterized by a reduction in scale, a more central purpose, and a distinct setting. A minimalistic approach was brought to the garden design, by recreating larger landscapes in a smaller scale around a structure.
Source: Wikipedia



Wednesday, April 25, 2018

An Interview with Akira



Photo: Wikimedia

“Akira-san”, I said, “ I must confess that your movies Throne of Blood and Ran introduced me to Shakespeare. The stories are compelling, tragic and dark but you masterfully expressed it in the cinemas, in black and white and in color. In Ran, which is an adaption of King Lear, the dark , cruel world is expressed in cinematic beauty, highlighted by the colors of the traditional costumes and the color of blood. Is this more or less how you see the world?”

Akira-san:
“Tragedy is part of Japanese life which has been frequented by by earthquakes, tsunamies and wars. The Kanto earthquake was a terrifying experience for me, and also an extremely important one. Through it I learned not only of the extraordinary powers of nature, but extraordinary things that lie in human hearts. The Edogawa river had raised its bottom and showed new islands of mud.  The whole district was veiled in a dancing, swirling dust whose grayness gave the sun a pallor like that during an eclipse. The people who stood to the left and right of me in this scene looked for all the world like fugitives from hell, and the whole landscape took on a bizarre and eerie aspect. I stood holding on to one of the young cherry trees planted along the banks of the river, and I was still shaking as I gazed out over the scene, thinking, "This must be the end of the world."

I said:
“ In the Throne of Blood, which is an adaption of Macbeth, there is a scene with the piles of human skeletons forming little mountains. Is this how it looks like in the aftermath of the Kanto earthquake?”

Akira-san:
“When the earthquake had died down, my brother Heigo brought me to look at the ruins. The burned landscape for as far as the eye could see had a brownish red color. It looked like a red desert. In the conflagration everything made of wood had been turned to ashes, which now occasionally drifted upward in the breeze. Amid this expanse of nauseating redness lay every kind of corpse imaginable.  When I involuntarily looked away, Heigo scolded me, "Akira, look carefully now." I failed to understand my brother's intentions and could only resent his forcing me to look at these awful sights. The worst was when we stood on the bank of the red-dyed Sumidagawa River and gazed at the throngs of corpses pressed against its shores. I felt my knees give way as I started to faint, but my brother grabbed me by the collar and propped me up again. He repeated, "Look carefully, Akira." I resigned myself to gritting my teeth and looking.
Later he said "If you shut your eyes to a frightening sight, you end up being frightened. If you look at every-thing straight on, there is nothing to be afraid of." Looking back on that excursion now, I realize that it must have been horrifying for my brother too. It had been an expedition to conquer fear.  “

I said:
“You once said that your brother Heigo has a great influence in your interest in cinemas. How did he influence you? “

Akira-san:
“Heigo was a professional silent-film narrator. The narrators not only recounted the plot of the films, they enhanced the emotional content by performing the voices and sound effects and providing evocative descriptions of the events and images on the screen— much like the narrators of the Bunraku puppet theater. The most popular narrators were stars in their own right, solely responsible for the patronage of a particular theater. Under the leadership of the famous narrator Tokugawa Musei, a completely new movement was under way. He and a group of like-minded narrators stressed high-quality narration of well-directed foreign films.
In matters of both film and literature I owe much to my brother's discernment. He was addicted to Russian literature. But at the same time he wrote under various pen names for film programs. He wrote in particular about the art of the foreign cinema, which was much promoted following the First World War. I took special care to see every film my brother recommended. As far back as elementary school I walked all the way to Asakusa to see a movie he had said was good.”

I said:
“What happened then when the cinema transitioned silent movies into sound movies?”

Akira-san:
“As the silent films went out, so did the need for the narrators, and Heigo's livelihood was struck a terrible blow. At first all seemed well because by this time my brother was chief narrator at a first-run movie house, the Taikatsukan in Asakusa, where he had his own following.
Then it had now become clear that all foreign movies would henceforth be sound movies, and theaters that showed them decided as a universal policy that they no longer needed narrators. The narrators were to be fired en masse, and, hearing this, they went on strike. My brother, as leader of the strikers, had a very difficult time.”

I said:
“As what has happened, the transformation of cinema is inevitable, from silent to sound, from black and white to colors, and from celluloid to digital.”

Akira-san:
“In the midst of this, one day we heard of my brother's attempted suicide. I believe the cause was his painful position as leader of the narrators' strike, which had failed. My brother seemed to be resigned to the fact that narrators would no longer be needed when film technology progressed to the point of including sound. Since he knew it was a losing battle, the fact that he had to accept the leadership of the strike must have been indescribably painful for him.”

I said:
“ Didn’t he told your mother that he would die before he reached the age of thirty?”

Akira-san:
“My brother had always said that. He claimed that when human beings lived past thirty, all they did was come uglier and meaner, so he had no intention of doing so. I had made light of my brother's words, but a few months after I had assuaged my mother's fears in this way, my brother was dead. Just as he had promised, he died without reaching the age of thirty. At twenty-seven he committed suicide.”

I said:
“Some people said you're just like your brother. But he was negative and you're positive. You have made good black and white as well as good color movies, you are the first Japanese movie director receiving international acclaim.”

Akira-san:
“That time Japanese films all tend to be rather bland in flavor, like green tea over rice. I watched a woman read a book throughout the Japan home-grown movie. Japanese films have lost their youth, vigor and high aspiration. Movies . . . look like the work of tired, old men, who make petty judgments, have dried-up feelings, and whose hearts are clogged.”

I said:
“Your first international acclaim is Rashomon which received Golden Lion in Venice Film Festival in 1951. Set in 11th century Japan, a time of fire, earthquake, pestilence, banditry, war. A period when the country’s central government were being undermined by the growth of political and military powers. There were rebellions, fires, earthquakes and violent crime in the capital city. It was a period where it appeared to be the end of the law, and the country is on the brink of disaster.
The movie opens at the Rashomon Gate, the main gate to the city of Kyoto. The gate is in ruins, and so is the city as well.  The rain in black and white gashing down the Rashomon Gate paints a bleak picture of the world. The destroyed gate, its apparent grand scale and strong foundation reduced to utter ruins. The clothing of the men is ragged, dark, dirty  and wet.”

Akira-san:
“The film goes into the depths of the human heart as if with a surgeons scalpel, laying bare its dark complexities and bizarre twists. These strange impulses of the human heart would be expressed through the use of an elaborately fashioned play of light and shadow. Light and shadow, represents not only good and evil, but also rationality and impulsiveness. The introductory section in particular, which leads the viewer through the light and shadow of the forest into a world where the human heart loses its way, was truly magnificent camera work by Miyagawa Kazuo.”

I said:
“The story and the characters are interesting, involving various characters providing subjective, alternative, self-serving and contradictory versions of the same murder incident. Through an ingenious use of camera and flashbacks, you reveals the complexities of human nature as four people recount different versions of the story of a  samurai's murder and the rape of his wife.”

Akira-san:
“Human beings are unable to be honest with themselves about themselves. They cannot talk about themselves without embellishing. This script portrays such human beings the kind who cannot survive without lies to make them feel they are better than they really are. The characters deceive even themselves; they refuse to face or acknowledge the truth because they fear it. The commoners standpoint is that all men and women are like this, and it is a property of mankind to lie and embellish reality even to itself.  As the priest said, if men dont trust each other, this earth might as well be hell.”

I said:
“ At the end there is the scene of an abandoned baby whom was crying loudly.  At first we did not understand how did this baby arrive at Rashomon gate, out of the blue.  Later I found from readings that other than being a place to abandoned corpses the Rashomon gate also became known as a place where people abandoned unwanted babies.  Then I can appreciate that this scene is not as out of place as some people thought.”

Akira-san:
 “We see the Woodcutter accept the abandoned infant to take the child home to be cared for, although he is poor and already has 6 children. This symbolizes the man choosing to do what’s good. This is important because the Woodcutter for the entire film to this point has merely stood by, choosing not to be a participant in what he sees, “I didn’t want to get involved”, he says. By choosing to take the child he gives hope to the priest that man is good and that the world does not belong to the selfish.”

This is an imaginary interview in memory of Akira Kurosawa.

Source: “Something Like an Autobiography” by Akira Kurosawa




Search This Blog

Blog Archive