It explores the "inevitable disappointment" parents feel when children grow up and drift away. The Heart:
In Japanese psychoanalytic theory, there is a concept of amae (indulgent dependence)—the expectation that a mother will indulge her child’s needs, and the child’s desire to be loved without conditions. This is not seen as weakness but as the foundational trust of human connection. Movies about this relationship do not shy away from the double-edged sword of amae : it is both the source of a son’s strength and the chain that binds him to guilt.
Japanese cinema frequently explores the "unfathomable depth" of the mother-son bond, often through the lens of
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It explores the "inevitable disappointment" parents feel when children grow up and drift away. The Heart:
In Japanese psychoanalytic theory, there is a concept of amae (indulgent dependence)—the expectation that a mother will indulge her child’s needs, and the child’s desire to be loved without conditions. This is not seen as weakness but as the foundational trust of human connection. Movies about this relationship do not shy away from the double-edged sword of amae : it is both the source of a son’s strength and the chain that binds him to guilt.
Japanese cinema frequently explores the "unfathomable depth" of the mother-son bond, often through the lens of