Damn, you watch a lot of films - how do you have time?
I'm trying to get more into Asian cinema, any recommendations?
I had a ton of time before because I was a very good high school student, so I could finish homework during lunch/recess then come home and watch at least one movie a day lol.
Now I'm a college student with a job, so it's a lot more difficult but I am in the cinema studies department so I have access to super rare films and I watch films during some of my courses!
You're in luck since East Asian cinema is my primary interest. It is important to note that there are different great national cinemas in Asia each with their own tradition (hell even China has three separate traditions) so let me mention them.
Japan (this one is usually mentioned alongside the US and France as the most important cinematic nation)
Mainland China
Taiwan
Hong Kong
South Korea
and most recently Thailand (I'm less familiar with this cinema, but it's led by Apichatpong Weerasethakul) and the Phillipines (I'm also less familiar with this cinema, but it's led by Lav Diaz)
I can talk about Asian cinema all day but I'll just try to mention my favorite directors with my favorite film by them (sometimes I'll just mention films if I don't think the directors are too notable overall), and if you are interested in one of them then I'll give you more specific recommendations. I threw in a bit of everything I'm familiar with since you didn't tell me what kind of preferences you had. I'm only mentioning films I've actually seen, so I know there's a lot of essentials missing just because I haven't seen them yet due to the fact that Criterion DVDs are super expensive.
Japan
Yasujiro Ozu (
Tokyo Story)
Kenji Mizoguchi (
Ugetsu)
Akira Kurosawa (
Rashomon)
Mikio Naruse (
Morning's Tree-Lined Street or
Wife! Be Like A Rose!)
Hayao Miyazaki (
Spirited Away)
Sadao Yamanaka (
Sazen Tange And The Pot Worth A Million Ryo)
Kaneto Shindo (great director and writer of
The Ball At The Anjo House)
Teinosuke Kinugasa (
A Page Of Madness)
Hirokazu Kore-eda (
Maborosi)
Isao Takahata (
Only Yesterday)
Shunji Iwai (
All About Lily Chou-Chou)
Kon Ichikawa (
The Burmese Harp)
Satoshi Kon (
Millennium Actress but you should probably start with
Perfect Blue)
Takashi Miike (
Audition)
Tokyo Sonata
Keisuke Kinoshita (I've only seen his early films but I already know he's talented)
Mamoru Hosoda (
The Girl Who Leapt Through Time)
A Letter To Momo
Tadashi Imai is also good but I find him to be overrated by obscurists like me, yet underrated by people that only stick to canonized directors. Still, I think only diehard postwar Japanese cinema fans should watch his stuff.
Hong Kong
Wong Kar-Wai (
In The Mood For Love)
John Woo (
The Killer, but I would say you should start with
A Better Tomorrow just the way that Hong Kong fell in love with John Woo's brand of action/melodrama and Chow Yun-fat)
Johnnie To (
The Mission)
Ringo Lam (
City On Fire, watch this especially if you are a fan of
Reservoir Dogs which borrowed a lot from this film)
Tsui Hark (
Shanghai Blues)
Jackie Chan (
Police Story series and many others)
Sammo Hung (
Winners & Sinners)
Patrick Lung Kong (
Teddy Girls)
Patrick Tam (
My Heart Is That Eternal Rose)
Peter Chan (
Comrades: Almost A Love Story)
Mambo Girl
Infernal Affairs
Taiwan
Edward Yang (
That Day, On The Beach)
King Hu (
Dragon Gate Inn)
Tsai Ming-liang (
What Time Is It There?)
Hou Hsiao-hsien (
The Boys From Fengkuei)
Ang Lee (Father Knows Best trilogy, the most accessible of them is
The Wedding Banquet but they are all accessible films)
China (mainland)
Fei Mu (
Spring In A Small Town)
Yuan Muzhi (
Street Angel)
Zhang Yimou (
Raise The Red Lantern)
South Korea
Lee Chang-dong (
Poetry)
Hong Sang-soo (
The Day A Pig Fell Into The Well)
Kim Ki-duk (
Bad Guy)
The Man From Nowhere
Guilty Pleasures
Executioners
Hou Hsiao-hsien's first and third film
A Moment Of Romance
As Tears Go By
The
Happy Ghost series
The 2nd and 3rd
Lucky Stars films
Bruce Lee films (great martial artist, mediocre at best filmmaker)
The Quiet Duel
Pom Pom
Island Of Fire
Picture Bride
He Ain't Heavy, He's My Father
Young Cops