Kurosawa and Ozu: Two Faces of Japanese Cinema

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  • Опубліковано 7 гру 2016
  • A video essay analyzing Rashomon (1950) and Tokyo Story (1953) in the context of Japanese Art History.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 229

  • @dimitrisalomao
    @dimitrisalomao  3 роки тому +52

    Hey everyone, I hadn't realized that this video got this many comments, so I never thought to check and answer haha
    Regarding some of the comments: I totally agree that Mizoguchi needs to be in that discussion. If I had more time, I'd certainly include him. This was a university project of mine that required a comparison between two artworks (hence, only two examples).
    Glad to hear you all liked it, and all the constructive feedback was awesome! I never thought to continue making videos like this, but your comments are definitely making me at least consider it.

    • @FreeFilmHeritage
      @FreeFilmHeritage 3 роки тому +4

      Thank you for this video! I agree that Mizoguchi is very important to Japanese cinema, however, your video is called "Two Faces of Japanese Cinema", not "THE Two Faces of Japanese Cinema". And with respect to you considering making more of these videos, either about Japanese cinema just cinema in general, I give you my support!

    • @mamabari07
      @mamabari07 3 роки тому

      Excellent work! Keep it up..

    • @ScrewyDriverTheMan
      @ScrewyDriverTheMan 5 місяців тому

      Yeah OLD Japanese cinema.
      TRUE Japanese cinema is IMAMURA and ITAMI

  • @arryacc
    @arryacc 4 роки тому +91

    Just seeing these last shots from Tokyo Story makes my eye water. What a beautiful beautiful cinematic masterpiece.

  • @omeshsingh8091
    @omeshsingh8091 5 років тому +80

    "Mizoguchi's greatness was that he would do anything to heighten the reality of every scene. He never made compromises… Of all Japanese directors, I have the greatest respect for him... With the death of Mizoguchi, Japanese film has lost its truest creator." - Akira Kurosawa

    • @christiangasior4244
      @christiangasior4244 Рік тому +6

      Yeah he is usually considered the third great master. After that you have Naruse and Miyazaki and plenty of other masters. I love Foreign cinema, especially Japanese cinema. Still, Ozu is my favorite for the calm he brings me. He puts me in a meditative state.

  • @piktip
    @piktip 5 років тому +5

    Thanks so much for making & sharing this video. It's insightful. Those are beautiful movies (and directors).

  • @jamesjoelholmes4541
    @jamesjoelholmes4541 6 років тому +5

    Nicely done! Two of film's best makers I can think of. Thank you for putting this together!

  • @monkeyfruitm4n783
    @monkeyfruitm4n783 5 років тому +2

    All along, I was so moved not only by the movies (spevially Ozu's) but for your caring analyssis. Subbed

  • @hattorihanzo8385
    @hattorihanzo8385 6 років тому +3

    Well Done, Dimitri. I was mesmerized not just with the visuals of the masters, but also with your great analysis... make more such videos!!!

  • @mikeinthemiddle
    @mikeinthemiddle 7 років тому +17

    This is a great, informative video of two master filmmakers! As a former film student and now a working filmmaker, it's awesome to be reminded - through videos like yours - why we love film! Thanks a lot for that! :)

  • @EdwinSmeets
    @EdwinSmeets 3 роки тому

    One of the best essay I ever saw ! congratulation

  • @TheCpHaddock
    @TheCpHaddock 4 роки тому +3

    I really wish you'd continue making videos like this! Very interesting comparison between these two giants of cinema...

  • @earthrooster1969
    @earthrooster1969 3 місяці тому +1

    Thank You!
    For this beautiful docu on these two masters ..

  • @greggvanvranken6482
    @greggvanvranken6482 Рік тому +2

    Outstanding analysis of a very old debate. Deserves a lot more views.

  • @roblikesmusic9476
    @roblikesmusic9476 4 роки тому +1

    Truly insightful. Thank you. I feel incredible after watching this video.

  • @Any_Friday
    @Any_Friday 5 років тому +1

    Excellent video of appreciation and understanding of two great masters

  • @daroldcruz8349
    @daroldcruz8349 3 роки тому

    Wow!!!! Good job (Y) loved your analysis. Definitely want more of this please.

  • @sharonazar1
    @sharonazar1 2 місяці тому

    Beautifully and powerfully crafted!! Thank you so much!!

  • @doktoryok
    @doktoryok 6 років тому

    rational analyses which have various questions within curiosity that includes respectful approach.thanks mate.

  • @antoniocoppola7644
    @antoniocoppola7644 3 роки тому

    What makes the two artists absolutely identical is the magic hug which softly surrounds the wiewer makeing him/her aware of it just when "the end" appears on the screen.

  • @oliviaborghi1349
    @oliviaborghi1349 3 роки тому +1

    Very kind and thoughtful essay. Thank you for sharing

  • @melodramacaminante
    @melodramacaminante 7 років тому

    Thanks for making and sharing this, Dimitri. Greets from Argentina.

  • @markpaulantony4237
    @markpaulantony4237 2 місяці тому

    thank you for the insight. need to watch this!

  • @jayarajankv2897
    @jayarajankv2897 4 роки тому +3

    interesting analysis. simply amazing

  • @cynthiap7741
    @cynthiap7741 5 років тому +1

    Well done! Enjoyed watching very much. Thank you!

  • @kimbenbow1358
    @kimbenbow1358 4 роки тому

    Wonderful analysis. Thank you for sharing.

  • @beeurself8947
    @beeurself8947 5 років тому +1

    I love Rashomon! I am greatful you picked exactly this movie! and good video in general as well

  • @cowsaysboo
    @cowsaysboo 2 роки тому +7

    Kurosawa is the best director of all time. It saddens me that not many people know his name nowadays. Ozu is amazing as well, I loved Tokyo Story

    • @matty6878
      @matty6878 Рік тому +3

      Ghost of Tsushima helped introduce his name to a new audience in an homage to his style.

    • @Drums_of_Liberation
      @Drums_of_Liberation 11 місяців тому

      ​@@matty6878yeah but who other than Kurosawa fans actually used the Kurosawa filter?

    • @nathanakpe4897
      @nathanakpe4897 4 місяці тому

      ​@@Drums_of_Liberationmultiple people loved the black and white mode

  • @heothoem8692
    @heothoem8692 6 років тому

    Thank you for a wonderful video !

  • @sunilkamesh
    @sunilkamesh 5 років тому

    the amount of clarity you bring to this topic is amazing ..and doing so without using cliches like "perspectives" while describing rashomon ...pls review Ikiru...

  • @cuervacho
    @cuervacho 6 років тому

    Great work my friend. Thanks for the effort

  • @Patricia-bk1en
    @Patricia-bk1en 6 років тому

    Thanks for this knowledgeable and interesting video!

  • @MarkKeuthan
    @MarkKeuthan 3 роки тому

    Very nicely done. Insightful and compelling.

  • @lemoncake011
    @lemoncake011 7 років тому +21

    This needs far more views, good stuff.

    • @tayoo.1965
      @tayoo.1965 6 років тому +2

      im surprised this doesnt have a 500k-1mil already

  • @vertigq5126
    @vertigq5126 Рік тому +1

    Great video! Your take on Rashomon was especially interesting. Thanks for sharing this with us man! Keep up the good work and God bless you :)

  • @gingrsnap1951
    @gingrsnap1951 6 років тому +2

    Amazing video, love the depth of study and thought that went into this essay. Domo

  • @dfdanfads
    @dfdanfads 5 років тому

    Exquisite research and conclusion

  • @Rubytuesday957
    @Rubytuesday957 2 місяці тому

    This was very good, thank you.

  • @scottw.kekamaamona9577
    @scottw.kekamaamona9577 6 років тому

    Mahalo! Great analysis and thoughts.

  • @cherylm2C6671
    @cherylm2C6671 2 роки тому

    I like this. Thank you for your posting. But there's so much mercy in Rashomon, unmentionable mercies, and judgements too.

  • @christopherphillips9891
    @christopherphillips9891 4 роки тому +3

    SO beautiful. It took me four nights to watch. I looked at some scenes or dialogue lines multiple times. As Ronald Richie wrote (paraphrasing): American films are about action, European films are about character, Japanese films are about ATMOSPHERE. It is certainly true of this masterpiece.

  • @heinrichvon
    @heinrichvon 7 років тому +98

    There are a lot of good ideas in this brilliantly edited video. The notion that the opposition between Kurosawa and Ozu is not between "Western" Kurosawa and "Japanese" Ozu, but rather between two kinds of "Japaneseness" is a view I endorse. One cavil: the author of this video claims that Kurosawa was not concerned with the individual and that Ozu was. For me, the opposite is closer to the truth. Kurosawa says explicitly in his autobiography that, after the war, he wanted to make films that asserted the value of the individual. Whereas Ozu, though he filmed stories about Japanese people of all ages and classes, invariably perceives and displays them as part of the larger unit of the family, and their actions and sufferings only make sense in that context, not as individuals per se. But otherwise, the Otoko vs. Onna dichotomy that the author presents here makes sense. I also thought the bibliography at the end was a nice (and useful) touch.

    • @mckavitt
      @mckavitt 5 років тому +3

      heinrichvon Absolutely. Altho’ I would add that we get to know & care about each character in Ozu’s films as well.

  • @kamilziemian995
    @kamilziemian995 3 роки тому

    Great analysis, just great.

  • @LarryParamedic1
    @LarryParamedic1 4 роки тому

    Wonderfully done, Thank You..

  • @bradenwells520
    @bradenwells520 7 років тому

    This is great man.

  • @CarlosChavez-eq9sp
    @CarlosChavez-eq9sp 6 років тому

    This is beautiful.

  • @johnradovich8809
    @johnradovich8809 Рік тому +1

    Excellent! Thank you.

  • @manuelgonzales2570
    @manuelgonzales2570 Рік тому

    Excelente análisis. Muchas gracias!

  • @jfl100
    @jfl100 4 роки тому +1

    I appreciate your insight into these two directors, and these two films, all of which I have held close now for many, many years. Your presentation here feels like we are having a conversation, a chat between two folks intimately familiar with the subjects, who rarely sit down with anyone else who understands. Thank you.
    I cannot recall from memory any Ozu film that "crosses over" from onna to otoko, but I have to wonder now if maybe Kurosawa did not cross over to onna when he created Ikuru. And if we allow that, then there perhaps are others as well, especially in the earlier days?

  • @manish2310
    @manish2310 Рік тому

    Amazing presentation

  • @furnacecreek1035
    @furnacecreek1035 6 років тому +1

    Very good scholarship. I'm glad you covered the "non-Japanese-ness" of Kurosawa and the humility (floor POV) and transience ("aware") of Ozu. Very good post! Thank you!

  • @TimothySielbeck
    @TimothySielbeck 5 років тому

    Well done. Thank you.

  • @aratdhar4015
    @aratdhar4015 3 роки тому

    Really enjoyed watching this video......I am a fan of Ozu's films.....good luck for your future projects👍👏 🙂🙏

  • @jacobbecker1905
    @jacobbecker1905 6 років тому +1

    I dig the Max Richter piece! Great vid and analysis!

  • @42kellys
    @42kellys 3 роки тому

    I liked your video, although I only learnt about Tokyo Story from you having only seen Rashomon. Thank you. I am pondering on whether to watch Tokyo Story or not.

  • @AkihitoKoriyama
    @AkihitoKoriyama 7 років тому

    素晴らしい内容でした

  • @graybow2255
    @graybow2255 4 роки тому +42

    I've watched several of the "greatest" Japanese films but for me none beats The Human Condition.

    • @f.boogaloospook2318
      @f.boogaloospook2318 3 роки тому +6

      Kino kobayashi and nakadai

    • @mcedizulu5311
      @mcedizulu5311 3 роки тому

      Thank you!

    • @graybow2255
      @graybow2255 3 роки тому

      @@mcedizulu5311 What for?

    • @mcedizulu5311
      @mcedizulu5311 3 роки тому +5

      @@graybow2255 no one talks about that movie enough, or about Kobayashi.

    • @sirgriffith7122
      @sirgriffith7122 2 роки тому +1

      Yes, The Human Condition is simply magnificent. My personal favourite film.

  • @allertonoff4
    @allertonoff4 3 роки тому

    insightful article .. 10/10

  • @zebragiraffe1
    @zebragiraffe1 3 роки тому

    Thank you, Dimitri!

  • @mom0murxsaki
    @mom0murxsaki 7 років тому +22

    Awesome video!! I really liked how you did a very complete research on japanese culture (: Also music and edition were beautiful

  • @rnilu86
    @rnilu86 8 місяців тому

    Thank you so much

  • @fernandovilla9931
    @fernandovilla9931 3 роки тому

    Un placer ver tu video! Y muy buen análisis. Saludos desde Argentina!

  • @mariamartaaguirre2361
    @mariamartaaguirre2361 3 роки тому

    Loved it!👏👏👏

  • @kinodino2200
    @kinodino2200 7 років тому

    Fantastic video

  • @diegoabw
    @diegoabw 7 років тому +1

    thank you!

  • @atmantipheret456
    @atmantipheret456 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you, thank you. I have for years observed the masculine vs. feminine approaches of Kurosawa and Ozu and also seen it in relation to Western art and literature, as with Melville's _Moby Dick_ of action packed adventure upon the grand quest of conquering the ultimate truth vs. Jane Austin's _Pride and Prejudice_ (and other novels) with a Fitzwilliam Darcy character and the eligible daughter Elizabeth available for marriage, with all the action transpiring within the drawing room, yet a world of action and insight into the human condition occurs and unfolds on those pages.

  • @THinleyDhendupTopper
    @THinleyDhendupTopper Рік тому

    Thank u Yuri

  • @molesticles
    @molesticles 5 років тому

    Really well done video. I'm surprised I haven't stumbled on this video essay before. I actually hadn't watched an Ozu movie before today and I honestly didn't enjoy iit in even an intellectual or spiritual sense. But your video was valuable. I hope you're still creating content.

  • @timothy9734
    @timothy9734 5 років тому

    Thank you!

  • @lorenzmueller2355
    @lorenzmueller2355 4 роки тому +1

    Splendid video! Really wants me check out Tokyo Story! Thanks a lot.

  • @charlie-obrien
    @charlie-obrien 2 місяці тому

    I am an admirer of Ozu's films, Late Spring and Floating Weeds, being my favorites. I have never watched an original Kurosawa film and now it is time to explore his work.

  • @lizardman7364
    @lizardman7364 5 років тому +1

    awesome video my dude

  • @mamabari07
    @mamabari07 4 роки тому +1

    Brilliant..

  • @monalisaarshnirvi2953
    @monalisaarshnirvi2953 Рік тому

    Wow I liked this.

  • @billa6825
    @billa6825 4 роки тому

    Thank you. My ignorance is slightly less monumental due to your effort.

  • @thiccboss4780
    @thiccboss4780 6 років тому +11

    *17 seconds in, subbed*
    don't care if it'll take 7 months until the next 20 minute film dissection, but it'll be worth it when it gets here

    • @dimitrisalomao
      @dimitrisalomao  6 років тому +5

      Valeu, Zé Ninguém! Brasileiro? I made this video for a class, and wasn't planning on doing any more, but comments like this really motivate me to give it a shot. Thank you so much.

    • @oquemeamarraaoracionalesba9788
      @oquemeamarraaoracionalesba9788 5 років тому +1

      Escuta, Zé Ninguém!

  • @NoName-xc6cg
    @NoName-xc6cg 9 місяців тому

    Why is every Japanese movie ive ever watched a banger

  • @SCHMIELSHOW
    @SCHMIELSHOW 6 років тому

    Really enjoyed this. I haven't checked out Ozu's work at all and only just heard of him yesterday. Looks like his work isn't available for streaming anywhere but it does seem like a lot of his movies have been uploaded to UA-cam so I'll have to check them out.

    • @massive351
      @massive351 6 років тому

      SCHMIEL SHOW if you're in college, check your schools online library, mine has a lot of his films

  • @carrerlluna66
    @carrerlluna66 Рік тому

    Well said.

  • @Piolin768
    @Piolin768 6 років тому +1

    Hi, thank you so much for uploading! Question: do you mind sharing some of these books that you mention in the video? Thanks.

  • @michaellipton6277
    @michaellipton6277 5 років тому +4

    Hey, cool video. One caveat to keep in mind is that Ozu loved American films. Particularly Buster Keaton and D.W. Griffith. But he was constantly consuming western films and his visual style was informed by that.
    Wish you mentioned Mizoguchi as he was considered the most "Japanese" of the three. It's weird how Ozu is considered to be a textbook example of a "Japanese" director. Maybe he drew more attention to everyday mannerisms and customs that Kurosawa sometimes liked to brush by. Anyways, great job.

    • @HP_____
      @HP_____ 2 роки тому

      Agreed completely!

  • @TrevRockOne
    @TrevRockOne 3 роки тому

    Everyone whining that the video isn't an exhaustive history of all great Japanese directors. Ozu and Kurosawa really are the two greatest Japanese filmmakers. They're also polar opposites within the context of Japanese cinema, so it is worthwhile and good to compare them in particular.

  • @Narutero98
    @Narutero98 6 років тому

    You should espend more time producing this kind of video essays, please. Please. Please. Please.

  • @Lusiada1955
    @Lusiada1955 7 років тому +37

    And Kenji Mizoguchi?!!!!!!!!
    He is so great as Ozu and Kurosawa.

    • @juomariturmio
      @juomariturmio 5 років тому +5

      Masaki Kobayashi is right up there also, and I would argue he is even more important than the two of these as his best movies combine the drive and moral questions of both directors.

    • @CINAMASTER1
      @CINAMASTER1 4 роки тому +1

      He’s better than both and that says so much

    • @Azathoth13
      @Azathoth13 4 роки тому +1

      especially his Harakiri, a masterpiece.

    • @user-gg6sh7wr6d
      @user-gg6sh7wr6d 2 роки тому

      Mikio Naruse should also be in the conversation, as well as Mizoguchi and Kobayashi

  • @theblondedirector
    @theblondedirector 3 роки тому +1

    this is not a cool video, its a intense video thanks for your efforts. loved it Akira is the best director of all times for me.

  • @stokescroftmuseum
    @stokescroftmuseum 3 роки тому

    thanks

  • @coffeehito
    @coffeehito 6 років тому +4

    However, for instance in Tokyo Story wabi-sabi is not exactly about the ephemeral in life in the Western sense of "memento mori" but instead about the fact that growing of life and decaying of life belong together as an eternally continuing circle of life and in that sense the gift of the mother's watch to the daughter in law with the wish to her to forget about her late husband and marry anew means the continuum of life and not the end of it;

  • @b.terenceharwick3222
    @b.terenceharwick3222 5 років тому

    Sad and transient beauty. Yet a fulness in emergent moments
    Ineffable challenge of understanding the human heart through individual characters
    Feminine and Masculine stories: Interweaving of private affairs and public stage of action
    Personal and cultural imperfection in life yet a universal message at once

  • @Pululapu
    @Pululapu 6 років тому

    Great job. I need to see more of Ozu. Please, can you tell the name of teh song at the minute 13:00. Thanks.

  • @ayannandi1453
    @ayannandi1453 6 років тому

    This threw perspective. Wish we could talk more in person on nuances of Japanese culture and films... do you have any idea of Shindo's movie "Oni Baba"?

  • @pranavanand4305
    @pranavanand4305 6 років тому +108

    It seems unfair to talk about how Japanese cinema was without analyzing Kenji Mizoguchi. After all, he is known as the most "Japanese" filmmaker of the 3. Still, great video

    • @mckavitt
      @mckavitt 5 років тому +17

      Pran97 Yes, indeed. But the maker of this documentary isn’t pretending that his purpose is to talk about Japanese cinema alone, but to compare & contrast Kurasawa & Ozu. There should be documentaries about the great Mizoguchi. I saw a v good one recently,

    • @ericholland9802
      @ericholland9802 5 років тому +2

      I completely agree.

    • @ichtsh
      @ichtsh 4 роки тому +3

      Nagisa Oshima and Hiroshi Teshigawara

    • @MAQUIYA
      @MAQUIYA 4 роки тому +4

      I will add Mikio Naruse and Kaneto Shindo.

    • @kammerspielfilms
      @kammerspielfilms 4 роки тому +4

      Imamura, Shinoda, Misumi, Ishii x2, Okamoto, Ichikawa, Fukasaku, Gosha, Kobayashi and Suzuki also deserve a credit.

  • @oriondestro
    @oriondestro 6 років тому

    Fantastic research and point of view, great job sir. Also, what's the name of that beautiful music playing when you start talking about Kurosawa, starting when you see him at the Oscars on (3:30 mark). I've heard it before and always wanted to know what it was, thanks.

    • @thechurchofsolange58
      @thechurchofsolange58 6 років тому

      The music piece is called 'on the nature of daylight' composed by Max Richter. It was also played in Villeneuve's movie 'Arrival'.

  • @juliussw9153
    @juliussw9153 3 роки тому

    as many others have pointed out, the japanese golden age of cinema has at least two other (although less prolific but still) super important directors: kenji mizoguchi and masaki kobayashi

  • @jakobkristensen9445
    @jakobkristensen9445 6 років тому +6

    Akira Kurosawa was a real master, but i actually think Ozu is the greatest Japanese director of alle time. Mizoguchi is great too.

    • @Clinkety
      @Clinkety 6 років тому

      Jakob Kristensen Don't forget Teshigara and Kobayashi.

  • @atsukorichards1675
    @atsukorichards1675 4 роки тому +4

    Very interesting! One thing - I suggest you to use もの (hiragana) instead of 物 (kanji), for 物 tends to mean a solid object/thing and in this case もの can be a situation, feeling and so on. And you also can write もののあはれ, too, which is the old way of spelling but still popular and used.

  • @telephilia
    @telephilia 7 років тому

    It's actually a triumvirate with Mizoguchi also.

  • @marioriospinot
    @marioriospinot 6 років тому

    Nice.

  • @OlDoinyo
    @OlDoinyo 6 років тому +2

    Interesting thesis--but if one chooses Ikiru rather than Rashomon is the distinction as clear? I don't know Ozu's work very well, so cannot comment on that side of it.

  • @WillN2Go1
    @WillN2Go1 5 років тому +16

    3:30 "Kurosawa 'the least Japanese of Japanese film directors.' This makes me chuckle. When I was in college there was (allegedly) a Donald Ritchie quote: "Kurosawa was the most Japanese of Japanese film directors." A college professors said this more than a few times. Any of us who'd seen even one Ozu movie knew this couldn't possibly be the case and just figured that it was a simple mistake that got repeated by a lot of people who didn't know better .
    Kurosawa is of course Japanese, but he's also more universal. Keep in mind that in his youth, Kurosawa considered himself to be a Marxist, so he set out to express the universal condition of humans.
    I laughed when I read the non-Chinese scriptwriter of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon saying that asking him to work on this script was like someone not an American trying to make a Western... Well, what's the best Western? Yojimbo. Sergio Leone (still not an American) proved it again. Tampopo is what you'd get if you were Japanese and said, "I'd like to make a Western in Japan,' (and it's billed as the First Noodle Western") a terrific movie, but Yojimbo went a level deeper and told a Japanese story that was also an American Western.
    I don't know where you got the bit about people thinking Ozu's tatami level shots aggrandizing his characters. I've not once heard this. I've always heard it explained as 1. something Japanese viewers would understand and feel respected for, but technically 2 it's about the midpoint floor to ceiling, this is the best height to show an interior while keeping the verticals straight up and down. Even when we look up from the floor in a room we don't perceive the corners of rooms converging.
    As a photographer after many years, somethings that don't seem to bother anyone else can be constantly annoying. So Ozu by not bothering with dissolves, camera movement, different lenses... everything matches, there are no disruptive 'effects' that are common with wide angle lenses.
    (Every source I can find on the web says Ozu used a 50mm lens. I remember it as a 58mm lens.)
    btw the 'cherry blossom festival' in Onomichi in the Tokyo Story clip. This is the end of the cherry blossoms in bloom because the shot is the petals falling off the blossoms.
    I think an another way to look at this subject might be to compare Japanese filmmakers with Canadian. How hard have Canadians been trying for how long to 'double' Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal as New York or other US locations? I can't think of a single Japanese film that ever attempted this.

  • @chitra9207
    @chitra9207 6 років тому +1

    18:49 has the references

  • @anguyen9785
    @anguyen9785 7 років тому +2

    nice video ! also love its soundtrack . What is this song in 5:26 ?

    • @dimitrisalomao
      @dimitrisalomao  7 років тому +2

      That's Max Richter's On The Nature of Daylight :) Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @anguyen9785
      @anguyen9785 7 років тому +1

      thank you. I just realize it is Arrival's OST

  • @mckavitt
    @mckavitt 5 років тому

    Excellent analysis, based on comprehensive research, intelligent reflection & sensitivity, even tho’ you are American. ☺️😉😊