Review: The Man Who Died Seven Times by Yasuhiko Nishizawa

7 thoughts on “Review: The Man Who Died Seven Times by Yasuhiko Nishizawa

  1. Family dynamics can be as daunting as any time travel paradox. Tackling them together— it’s no wonder Hollywood steals so often from brilliant Japanese minds. You mentioned three of my favs here. Including Edge of Tomorrow👾⏰🛹🎬

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    1. Edge of Tomorrow is so good, isn’t it? Yes, what this book never lacks is ideas, plenty of them. You kind of see the author’s starting points here – other works. I have always believed that this inventiveness in general has something to do with the fact that, in Japan, taking some work and improving on it or trying to see it from varied perspectives is not discouraged and is viewed as a sign of admiration. This mentality of nothing being perfect and therefore there is the need to “complete a work of art further with the original author or add to it” is not really something encouraged in the west 🙂

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      1. So good. So fun… Wow I resonate with that ‘building-upon’ concept a lot. And I agree, in the West everybody’s trying to build their Own worlds, start from scratch… Would much rather improve upon what’s already established. Or better yet, see it from a new perspective. Because there are SO MANY perspective possibilities in any given story, aren’t there. The Wizard of Oz, for example… Wicked… Edge of Tomorrow— NOw I wanna rewatch that.

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