9/10
Phantasmagorical Poetic-Surrealism
30 January 2021
In what may or may not be an auto-biography, Terayama explores his past and the relationship we have with our memories, in a grotesque serie of poetic symbolism, bizarre surrealism, haikus, tragic tales of love and innocence, beautiful scenery and interesting cinematography, all wrapped in a self-referential, intellectually thought-provoking exploration of how our lives are affected by our childhood memories. A magnificent balance between indulgent surrealism and thoughtful objectivism, while still not being really experimental.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed