Tag - burton

 
 

BURTON

Japan Times
COMMENTARY / Japan
May 27, 2017
Burton Watson, noted translator, remembered
Burton Watson, the foremost translator of Chinese classics and poetry into English, chose to live much of his long life in Japan.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Books / ESSENTIAL READING FOR JAPANOPHILES
Jan 31, 2015
For All My Walking
Poet Taneda Santoka (1882-1940) cut a pitiful, tragic figure. His mother's suicide when he was 11 seems to have unhinged him for life. After a failed marriage and a failed sake-brewing enterprise he took to drink and hit the road. Someone took pity on him and brought him to a Zen temple, where he studied and entered the priesthood. Unable to settle down, he embarked on a life of endless, aimless tramping. In priestly garb, he walked the backroads of rural southwestern Japan for years on end, begging his sustenance, sleeping at wretched wayside inns, drinking whenever and whatever possible, and — is this incongruous? — writing.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Film
Jan 28, 2015
Big Eyes: 'The devil's pact between creativity and marketing'
Tim Burton's "Big Eyes," a portrait of real-life artists Margaret and Walter Keane, who specialized in creepy but cute paintings of saucer-eyed children and kittens, marks the first time Burton has returned to the real world since "Ed Wood" (1994). Yet while "Big Eyes" is as much an ode to kitsch as "Ed Wood" was, it's also just as much a vampire comedy as his last flick, "Dark Shadows." However, the vampire in this film — Margaret's fame-claiming husband Walter — sucks talent and soul, not blood, and he's a lot less amusing as the film goes on.
Japan Times
LIFE / Lifestyle
Oct 29, 2014
Stretch your fright nights right into the weekend
This year, many people in Japan celebrated Halloween early. Last weekend saw parades, parties and trick-or-treating at special events across the country, but for those who grew up in places that historically celebrate the holiday, Oct. 25 may have been a bit too soon to get spooked.

Longform

Later this month, author Shogo Imamura will open Honmaru, a bookstore that allows other businesses to rent its shelves. It's part of a wave of ideas Japanese booksellers are trying to compete with online spaces.
The story isn't over for Japan's bookstores