Kôichi Satô

Kôichi Satô

  • Born: 1960-12-10
  • Height: 5' 11¾" (1.82 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Raleigh 2022-01-18 08:02:29

      Classic attempt

      One day, your neighbor, a strange uncle who is arrogant in appearance and indulged in danmei and humanistic creation, finished writing a novel of his. Suddenly telling you that he decided not to be a writer and became a terrorist. His plan was to hijack Beijing—Wei=Su+=Commander, call on the army...

    • Hester 2022-01-18 08:02:29

      The unity of pen and sword

      The words are all fictitious.
      In order to change the world, words must lie,
      but the behavior will never lie

      . The unity of pen and sword.
      But how? ...

      What is the Japanese spirit that Mishima pursues?
      This is not something I can figure out at the moment,
      but I know absolutely not some metaphysical...

    • Stephania 2022-03-25 09:01:19

      3.5; Using the four representative works as an index to connect the life of Mishima Hurricane Drama, the text is very superficial and deliberate (in order to "fit" the hard concave feeling of the original work), but the stage installation is amazing enough, and the beauty refers to the first-class; The transformation of the stage, the connection between the present and the past, is very beautiful in form; the casting... Really failed; the soundtrack is good. On the whole, it still carries the curiosity of the Western style, and has not really penetrated into its spirit. The death and beauty he advocates, and the violent purity are difficult to visualize.

    • Florence 2022-03-26 09:01:12

      Mishima Yukio is a descendant of aristocracy and inherits the spirit of Bushido in his heart. After Japan entered a modern society, he was still a stubborn extremist militarism, and probably the mentality of gay people was also distorted. committed suicide. As gorgeous as cherry blossoms, they wither, chrysanthemums and swords are both Japanese characters~!

    Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters quotes

    • Isao: By turning one's life into a line of poetry written in a splash of blood.

    • Yukio Mishima: I come out on the stage determined to make people weep. Instead, they burst out laughing.