Mr. Hayashi
Bruce Baillie's Mr. Hayashi might be thought of as a putative East Coast story transformed by a West Coast sensibility. The narrative, slight as it is, mounts a social critique of sorts, involving the difficulty the title character, a Japanese gardener, has finding work that pays adequately. But the beauty of Baillie's black-and-white photography, the misty lusciousness of the landscapes he chooses to photograph, and the powerful silence of Mr. Hayashi's figure within them make the viewer forget all about economics and ethnicity. The shots remind us of Sung scrolls of fields and mountain peaks, where the human figure is dwarfed in the middle distance. Rather than a study of unemployment, the film becomes a study of nested layers of stillness and serenity.
Watch online
Click to play
📋 Film Details
| Year | 1963 |
| Country | United States of America |
| Genre | Documentary |
| Director | Bruce Baillie |
| Runtime | 3 min. |
| Rating | TMDB: 5.5/10 (11 votes) |
📺 Where to Watch
Unfortunately, we couldn't find any official platforms or free sites for this title yet.
Try finding similar movies with our AI-powered search
🎬 MovieFinder's Take
Bruce Baillie constructs the film not as direct reportage but as a visual poem, where social critique yields to aesthetic experience. It relies on the power of black-and-white imagery and compositions that echo traditional Eastern painting.
What lingers after viewing is not a thought about unemployment, but a profound sense of calm and contemplative peace in which the human figure dissolves. — MovieFinder Editorial
Director: Bruce Baillie
Best Watched
Alone, in dim light, to dissolve into its meditative rhythm.
💬 Audience Reviews
Audience Score
Write a Review
Quick rating — tap to vote:
Or write a full review: