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Cinephile № 1,131 “Perfect Days”
Recommendation: 4/5 Stars, SHOWTIME
Plot: “Hirayama cleans public toilets in Tokyo, lives his life in simplicity and daily tranquility. Some encounters also lead him to reflect on himself.” -IMDB
Review: My idea of perfection has evolved significantly over the last twenty years. Straight out of college, I assume happiness would be found in a big modern house, a new car every five years, a career defined by notoriety, a bank account bursting at the seams, a loving partner, and perhaps a few kids to call my own.
As I kick and scream my way into the midway point of my years (I hope), perfection is now a roof overhead, things that give me joy, experiences that add value to my life, a career that gives me purpose and ample space to make a difference, enough money to feel comfortable, opportunities to travel, and a loving and supportive partner.
My idea of perfection has morphed to meet the realities of my life. This sort of perfection now feels attainable. Knowing this, I am not sure I would have appreciated co-writer and director Wim Wenders’ “Perfect Days” as a younger man. But now, as a forty-year-old man searching for a new form of perfection, it makes perfect sense.
This film centers itself on Hirayama (Kôji Yakusho). Every day, Hirayama rises with the sun and to the sound of a neighbor…