a capsule review by Bob and Adele Levin
Wim Wenders’ Perfect Days follows a middle-aged cleaner of public toilets in Tokyo from waking, through sleep, to waking again. About two-thirds of the way in, the film introduces issues of family. “While,” Goshkin suggested, “they make the movie more audience friendly, it might be better off without distracting from someone simply going about tasks like a Zen monk.”
Ruth disagreed. “Everyone on earth comes from parents, and all parents present problems for all children.” She clouded milk into her tea. “Buddha’s must have been a pair, given the trip he took.”