
Ep 1.6 // Rashomon
Explicit content warning
04/05/21 • 67 min
It’s Jeremiah’s pick... ‘Rashomon,’ the 1950 film by Akira Kurosawa, the premise of which has been emulated often over the decades. The film has appeared twice on Sight & Sound magazine’s decennial poll of the “greatest films” as voted on by directors – #10 in 1992 and #9 in 2002.
- 00:00 - Intro + the last good movies we saw
- 09:14 - About the show / expectations for ‘Rashomon’
- 12:48 - About the film / open discussion
- 55:15 - Favorite scenes or moments / the test of time / influence or relevance today
- 59:28 - Bonus question: Which international/non-English language film is either your favorite or first made you want to explore more from that country or region?
- 55:59 - Next week on Stereoactive Movie Club... / Outro
Produced by Stereoactive Media
It’s Jeremiah’s pick... ‘Rashomon,’ the 1950 film by Akira Kurosawa, the premise of which has been emulated often over the decades. The film has appeared twice on Sight & Sound magazine’s decennial poll of the “greatest films” as voted on by directors – #10 in 1992 and #9 in 2002.
- 00:00 - Intro + the last good movies we saw
- 09:14 - About the show / expectations for ‘Rashomon’
- 12:48 - About the film / open discussion
- 55:15 - Favorite scenes or moments / the test of time / influence or relevance today
- 59:28 - Bonus question: Which international/non-English language film is either your favorite or first made you want to explore more from that country or region?
- 55:59 - Next week on Stereoactive Movie Club... / Outro
Produced by Stereoactive Media
Previous Episode

Ep 1.5 // Tokyo Story
It’s Alicia’s pick... Released in 1953 and very loosely based on a 1937 American film called ‘Make Way for Tomorrow,’ ‘Tokyo Story,’ follows a retired couple living in a town in the southern part of Japan as they visit their grown children, who mostly live in Tokyo. Over the course of the film, the couple’s children have trouble managing time to spend with their parents, while their daughter in law, the widowed wife of the couples’ son who died in the war, does all she can to make them feel welcome and cared for. Eventually, the couple return home and the mother falls ill and dies soon after, prompting all the children to gather in their hometown to mourn. Directed by Yasujirō Ozu, whose career as a director began in 1927 with silent films, it is considered emblematic of the themes and style he’d already developed and would continue to develop over the course of the next decade before he died and also includes many actors he worked with often -- perhaps most notably Chishū Ryū as the retired patriarch and Setsuko Hara as the caring daughter in law.
Even though ‘Rashomon,’ directed by fellow Japanese filmmaker, Akira Kurosawa had introduced many people in the West to Japanese cinema, Ozu’s work was deemed “too Japanese” by some and it did not begin to gain attention in the West until a few years after this film’s release. Filmmaker and critic, Lindsay Anderson, after seeing it in London in 1957 wrote a review for Sight and Sound magazine titled “Two Inches off The Ground,” likening the film to the idea that to achieve a Zen state is to experience the world in the same way as before, but feel as if you’re 2 inches off the ground. And the film became more popular in the United States after a screening in New York in 1972. Newsweek’s review said it was "like a Japanese paper flower that is dropped into water and then swells to fill the entire container with its beauty."
The film has been on the Sight & Sound critics poll of the “greatest films ever made” 3 times: #3 in 1992, #5 in 2002, and #3 again in 2012 (just behind ‘Vertigo’ and ‘Citizen Kane’). And the Sight and Sound directors poll ranked it as the greatest film ever made in 2012, just ahead of 2001: A Space Odyssey and Citizen Kane, which tied for 2nd.
Produced by Stereoactive Media
Next Episode

Ep 2.1 // Round 1 Wrap Up / Round 2 Picks
It’s the end of Round 1 of the Stereaoctive Media Movie Club podcast! We’re revisiting the films we’ve discussed in the last 5 episodes and addressing comments from listeners and members of the Facebook group. Also, we’re picking our next round of movies to watch and discuss – but this time there’ll be 6 because we have a special guest joining us to make a pick and join us for the episode where we’ll discuss their choice!
- 00:00 - Intro + the last good movies we saw
- 10:38 - About the show / Does ‘The Magnificent Ambersons’ belong on a greatest films list?
- 16:15 - ‘Citizen Kane’ and cruel portrayal
- 19:25 - ‘Kane’ and ‘Velvet Goldmine’
- 23:45 - Which films have we thought about most since discussing them?
- 28:22 - Our thoughts on the Sight & Sound poll after Round 1
- 43:24 - A pitch for a future round of movies...
- 44:32 - Listener feedback: Women on the panel on the women in the movies so far
- 52:14 - Listener feedback: how was ‘Ambersons’ supposed to end / Welles almost shot something years later
- 57:13 - Has Lora watched ‘Bogus Journey’ yet?????
- 59:30 - Our Round 2 picks... w/ a special surprise guest!
- 64:45 - Final thoughts / wrapping up
- 12:48 - About the film / open discussion
Produced by Stereoactive Media
If you like this episode you’ll love
Episode Comments
Featured in these lists
Generate a badge
Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode
<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/stereoactive-movie-club-186787/ep-16-rashomon-17007209"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to ep 1.6 // rashomon on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>
Copy