23 Phim Takako Kitahara -
if you want good movies. The compression destroys the cinematography. The Vietnamese subtitles (unless you read Vietnamese) are a barrier. The runtime padding is exhausting.
You are not watching a movie. You are watching a memory of a movie. You see Kitahara’s face, but it is pixelated. You hear her voice, but it is drowned in hiss. The Vietnamese subtitles offer a strange, poetic mistranslation—sometimes elevating banal dialogue into surreal Haiku, sometimes reducing complex emotion to “She is sad now.” 23 phim takako kitahara
There is a profound loneliness to this collection. It is the loneliness of the pre-streaming era, where desire had to be hunted across broken links and seeded torrents. It is the loneliness of Kitahara herself, who retired quietly in the early 80s and reportedly lives in obscurity—her “23 phim” now circulating as digital ghosts in a language she does not speak, on a continent far from Japan. Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3/5) – As a curated set. ★★☆☆☆ (2/5) – As cinema. if you want good movies