Could just be my own wistsful, ave atque vale mood, considering the Pentagon's about-face realization that global warming actually provides another strategic cover for aggressive military buildup and expenditure, but ...
There's something about Katsuhito Ishii's The Taste of Tea (2004), running through March 8 at Facets, that makes describing it as a "comedy"--which just about everyone's done so far: e.g., "a modern Japanese variation on 'You Can't Take It With You'" ... not the half of it, amigos--seem utterly shortsighted and maybe even a little strange. Not that it isn't funny, or at the very least absurdist, but some valedictory part of me insists that it be taken as possibly, just possibly, the last film we'll ever see--or perhaps that'll ever be made--that treats the earth as home, as a singular green haven that, at some phenomenological level, within the mesh of human artifacts (the built environment) and what's usually known as "nature," has essentially been "made" (interpret that as mythically/metaphorically as you choose) for us, as well as everything else in the biogenetic neighborhood. Which also, I think, makes it quintessentially "Japanese," like Miyazaki's animated ecological spirits and the comforts of place in Ozu, Naruse, Imamura--all that placid horizontality, that watery rice-growers' spread--down to the recent samurai twilights of Yamada. It's twilight for the family in The Taste of Tea as well, especially after the death of the grandfather, and everyone's steeped in the crepuscular glow: a bit like a speed read of Benning's drifting altocumulus in Ten Skies, but less conceptually demanding, more lyrically engaged. All in all, a strange, enchanted tone that's finally deeply affecting, suffused with the sadness of a loss that's both terminal and large. So good-bye to the world we're ultimately suited for, with which our Darwinian parameters overlap, and hello to the rude beasts of catastrophe in the coming eco-plague.




I do agree that the film has a very "My Neighbor Totoro"-ish feel to it, putting similar visual weight on the undeveloped Japanese countryside, but none of the characters works at anything that directly connects them to the land, and they do not seem to be suffering for it. Perhaps the brother is somewhat unhappy that he lost his old girlfriend by moving to the city, but he still takes pleasure in his work as a producer. And the mother has found a compromise between family and her work, which takes her out of the countryside, indicating that coexistence in life is possible. And how, out of curiousity, would you analyze the conclusions for the children? They seem to be quite optimistic.
Further analysis on your part would be welcome.
so: not saying the film itself is sad, or that the valedictory character's intended ... though in fact it might be * consider the long twilight coda: obviously something's coming to an end that, connotatively, is more than just the day * so what is it?--not that there's a literal answer, much less one that's optimistic or pessimistic or otherwise fits the binary mode, but ... ultimately it's pretty open-ended: what sort of "world" are we leaving behind and at the same time moving toward?
but the answer, whatever it is, comes out of OUR mental box and not the film's: TOT's simply a vehicle for these ruminations ... which is what i implied at the beginning of the post