Skip to content

Perfect Days

Robert Rackley
Robert Rackley

I finally got around to watching Wim Wenders Perfect Days, in which it must be said that the city of Tokyo is as much a character as any of the actors. The beautiful, future-forward and unusual toilets which protagonist Hirayama has to clean for his meager living make many appearances. They set the stage for Hirayama to live his days, which illustrate an ordinary life and the events which conspire to disrupt the pleasant monotony. Hirayama conveys a wide range of emotions without saying much of anything.

I was happy that I was able to correctly guess almost all the songs in the soundtrack. I also loved the minimalist sensibilities and the "a place for everything and everything in its place" angle.

• • •

Perfect Days (2023) is currently streaming on Hulu.

Culture

Robert Rackley

Mere Christian, aspiring minimalist, inveterate notetaker, budget audiophile and paper airplane mechanic. Self-publishing since 1994.


Related Posts

Members Public

It Could Have Been You

Last week I made it to an art exhibit I had been anticipating since its announcement: The Book of Esther in the Age of Rembrandt. Having read the book of Esther several times, I was familiar with the subject material, but I learned quite a bit about how the book

It Could Have Been You
Members Public

Walden on an iPad

I was reading some thoughts on Walden the other day, and I realized I hadn’t engaged with one of my favorite philosophical works in some time. I first encountered Thoreau and the transcendentalists as a teenager. Their emphasis on nonconformity seemed really punk at the time. Wasn’t Jello

Walden on an iPad
Members Public

A Frog And Toad Kind of Life

Sometimes a slower pace is what we need.

A Frog And Toad Kind of Life