“The most important task facing humanity today is the integrated use of all existing achievements of science and technology to solve global problems caused by the inhumanity of commodity-money methods of resource allocation on the planet. ? Jacques Fresco.
The stunning director Hirokazu Koreeda watched impressive in its social direction films: “Son in the father” (2013), “Diary of Umimati” (2015), “Miracle” (2011), “No one will know” (2004).
As for “Shop Thieves”, it is simple in its public statement ... seems only at first glance. Many philosophical accents and allegories, in particular, a fairy tale about small fish from a textbook on Japanese.
“It is a pity that one cannot destroy all stupidity and cruelty in one fell swoop without destroying a person. ? The Strugatsky brothers.
And the way the director masterfully directs the vector of really real relationships (a very necessary and cool final point), immediately become warmer and simpler and more tolerant, wiser and more humane. There’s a metaphor for Ken Loach’s I, Daniel Blake, which is the same road to eternal humanity and humanity.
“Nothing has changed since the days of serfdom: we are still guided by basic instincts, a desire to satisfy our sexual urges and financial and physical superiority. Enslavement, the destruction of the weaker for their triumph. It has always been and will continue to be. It's not someone else. It's all of us, it's who we are. Our animalistic immutable essence. World peace is a myth. Humanism is utopia. Justice - ...? (c).
Marina Matisse
Weightlessness
I recommend the entire filmography of this Japanese director for a more accurate formulation of the understanding of the foundation and basis of semantic load, which he carefully and meticulously lays each time in his film.
Thanks for the big movie.👌