Only Yesterday (1991)
Dir. Isao Takahata
A twenty-seven-year-old Tokyo resident named Taeko takes a summer trip to the countryside. It's a holiday away from city life, but Taeko plans to work whilst there, helping with the annual safflower harvest. What she hadn't planned was that her ten-year-old self would choose to accompany her.
It's the same person but in two different eras. The adult Taeko (Miki Imai) replays and relives her memories of fifth-grade Taeko (Yōko Honna), reflecting on the trials of youth, the hopes and dreams she had and how they stack up to where she is now in her life. When combined they make one complete story – one lengthy journey toward an unwritten future.
The deliberate undefined edges that some scenes employ suggests that feelings and situations we thought were complete at the time might actually have lines that aren't filled in until years later, provided we're wise enough, and perhaps even daring enough, to make the connections.
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