Akira Kurosawa's Dreams
I first saw Akira Kurosawa's Dreams in a freshman film survey class—it was projected onto a giant screen, where I watched alongside hundreds of other students in the same lecture hall. At the risk of sounding corny, it was a moment in which I realized what film could really do, and it cut through the noise of aughts-era schlock and twee. The 1990 film unfolds in eight vignettes woven together with nods to Japanese folktales; there are fox weddings, warrior ghosts, radioactive landscapes, and even a Martin Scorsese cameo (he plays Vincent Van Gogh). It's also one of Kurosawa's last, and most naturalistic, films.
by Lindsay CostelloThis event is recommended by The Stranger, our sister site. See more of their picks here!