
Co-presented by the Yanai Initiative for Globalizing Japanese Humanities
A tale of cinema with a bifurcated film-within-a-film structure reminiscent of Hong Sangsoo, Two Seasons, Two Strangers begins in a seaside town, where tourist Nagisa (Yuumi Kawai) and local Natsuo (Mansaku Takada) fall into a lush summer romance, all deep-sea blues and wind-whipped sundresses. It then yanks us out of this story to show its screenwriter, Li (Eun-kyung Shim, a former Korean child star who also acts in Japan), ducking questions and musing on her own creative block at a deliciously awkward post-screening Q&A (“I don’t have much talent”). In need of a creative and personal refresh, Li heads off to a snowy resort, where she meets the divorced innkeeper Benzo (Shinichi Tsutsumi). The two soon form the kind of relationship that a filmmaker without “much talent” would struggle to make compelling. But not Sho Miyake, who builds his story—adapted from two manga by the legendary Yoshiharu Tsuge—on a foundation of shimmering, serendipitous images, at once cozy and profound, like the way the steam off a bowl of noodles fogs up a pair of glasses, or the revelation of a landscape as a train emerges from a tunnel. Miyake’s Small, Slow But Steady was one of the highlights of the 2022 Berlinale, and Locarno Golden Leopard winner Two Seasons, Two Strangers further confirms his status as a master of deceptively placid, sensitive, and witty studies of surprising human connection. A Several Futures release. (Film at Lincoln Center)
TRT: 89 min
“In every sense, a true masterpiece.” —Shiguéhiko Hasumi
“Sho Miyake is one of Japan’s most perceptive modern filmmakers.” —Josh Slater-Williams, Indiewire
"It’s a tale light on incident but rich, per its title, in doublings, parallels and reflective surfaces, layered to entrancing, cumulatively moving effect." —Guy Lodge, Variety
"Working with cinematographer Yuta Tsukinaga and shooting in the boxy Academy ratio, Miyake has filmed his natural settings with stunning beauty and presence, as if they were about to burst from the frame." —Mark Schilling, Japan Times
"Unfolding in a playful but deeply felt register that is perhaps more melancomedy than tragicomedy, but that delivers the rare satisfaction of watching modest, thoughtful people find just what they need in the last place they’d expect it." —Jessica Kiang, Sight and Sound
(Available to download after screening date)
