To be clear, I wasn't "reaching for comparisons".
I was pointing out that the film I had just watched was a carbon copy of an Ozu.
In particular:
-the static camera, as pioneered by Ozu
-the 3d like depth on the shots as pioneered by Ozu
-most notably the composition of the shots which could not be more of a copy of Ozu without having everyone sitting at the dinner table in Kimonos and Yukutas
-the harbour scene is a carbon copy of the harbour scene in Floating Weeds
-the lone bicycle is a reference to the two bicycles in Late Spring
-strongly featuring trains
-focus on family
Granted Ozu's in there, and a lot of people zero in on that (Ebert's review) to the extent that this is ALL they focus on. Let's not forget that Ozu was himself influenced by Hollywood - his early films are peppered with nods to other people's features, movies posters show up on the walls and such - he even drew from "Make Way for Tomorrow" for "Tokyo Story". So, inspiration is drawing from inspiration and so on and so on. There's a long thread connection one source to the others which finds its way into Maborosi.
Mizo's in there (long angle camera shots), Hou's in there too.
The lone bicycle comes from "El Sur", as does the dark lighting, and the frame within a frame bits (specifically having a character look through a window), but he's not just doing shot by shot mimicry - inspiration - a favorite moment, yes, but with differences (I just watched the harbor scenes on both films, and saw similarities, but not a carbon copy)
That said, it is, in his words, a collection of scenes inspired by others. He's gathering favorite moments from a variety of sources.
Maborosi was my first feature. And I think it's a patchwork of scenes I really liked from films by Eric Rohmer, Theo Angelopoulos, and Victor Erice. Maborosi, for me, gathers favorite images from my favorite directors, though I paid close attention to its style and techniques.
And focus on family? Who hasn't done that, remember, the screenplay is an adaptation of a novel, the story elements come from that - the ubiquitous train that both foreshadows and calls back (brings back to memory) a key plot point, comes from Miyamoto, not Ozu.
I'll concede that Ozu is there - but it's wrong to deny what Naruse meant to him, you can feel it in interviews when he speaks of the man's pictures and how important they were to him and his own work.
Good to hear! You'll probably get a rush of ballots on the last couple of days. I'll be sending mine in soon.
Looking forward to seeing it, you've mentioned several titles, but I wonder which ones will make the final cut?