n 1956, when I was 11 years old, I saw my first Japanese film or more 
accurately a parody of a Japanese film shown on the Sid Caesar show. 
Called “U-Bet-U”, it was obviously a take-off on “Ugetsu Monogatari”, a 
1953 film that along with “Rashomon” helped introduce Japanese films to 
American audiences.

Three years later I saw the original at a special screening at my local 
high school one evening. My mother had heard that it was a masterpiece 
and brought me there to see an alternative to Martin and Lewis comedies 
and John Wayne westerns. I can’t say that I understood “Ugetsu” but it 
was my first inkling that a hipper world existed. The appearance of the 
SUNY New Paltz film professor who came there to introduce the film made 
more of an impression on me than the movie. With the suede patches on 
his tweed sports jacket and his closely cropped beard, he was the first 
bohemian I had ever laid eyes on.

Fast forward two years later and I am a freshman at Bard deeply immersed 
in some of the greatest films I have ever seen, including masterpieces 
made by Akira Kurosawa who was in his prime. Ever since those days, 
Japanese films have remained the gold standard for me, joined in later 
years by those made in China and Korea. I was never quite convinced that 
Andre Gunder Frank’s “Re-Orient” was correct in its projections that the 
East would become a global hegemon just as it was before Europe’s rise 
in the 15th century, but when it comes to film, I need no 
convincing—most often after I have seen some of the films offered at the 
annual New York Asian Film Festival whose latest installment runs from 
June 26th to July 11th (http://www.subwaycinema.com/nyaff15/). The four 
films under review below should persuade anybody in the greater New York 
area to check the schedule and buy some tickets. If the term “race to 
the bottom” is most often associated with factories moving to Asia, 
suffice it to say that it is just as applicable to the current morass in 
a bottom-line oriented Hollywood.

full: 
http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/06/26/turning-oppressive-realing-into-great-art/
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