|
DVDs > Reviews > Akira Kurosawa > Post-War Kurosawa: Eclipse Series 7 ![]() From I Live in Fear Post-War Kurosawa: Eclipse Series 7Director: Akira KurosawaCast: Toshiro Mifune, Setsuko Hara(1980) Rated: N/A US DVD release date: 15 January 2008 (Criterion) By Michael Barrett![]() Scandal Postwar Kurosawa assembles five movies united by three facts: they’re directed by Akira Kurosawa, they’re set in contemporary postwar Japan, and they aren’t going to get their own single Criterion release. The least interesting title here is Scandal (1950), although the theme is surprisingly contemporary. Toshiro Mifune plays a painter who’s photographed by a paparazzo (not called that, since Fellini hadn’t made La Dolce Vita yet) and romantically linked with an actress in a scandal sheet. It winds up in the courtroom as people argue about libel and truth. One of the eternal rules of drama that no one seems to understand is that ending in a courtroom is always, always death—the great exception being Take the Money and Run. Dramatists seem to be attracted to the instant formula of opposition, passionate argument, and alleged suspense, but nothing deflates a story faster than going to court. Even Perry Mason knew the true function of a courtroom is to unmask a killer, not resolve an issue. That aside, of course the picture is well-made and has its charms, from Mifune at his most dashing to the figure of a morally ambiguous attorney whose weary Everyman persona anticipates the desperate salaryman who would take center stage in Ikiru (1952). Next on the interest meter is One Wonderful Sunday (1947), a semi-neorealist slice of life that follows a young couple in love. Their Sunday is hardly wonderful, since they are constantly threatened or thwarted by their lack of money, which among other things prevents their marriage. The theme is the difficulty of getting by in the postwar era (still under US occupation), and the idea is to present a portrait of a city (Tokyo) at a certain point in its history. It may be compared with Vincente Minnelli’s hopeful yet bittersweet The Clock or even with King Vidor’s The Crowd, which are both about how ordinary couples try to entertain themselves on a single day. ![]() One Wonderful Sunday This film is overlong, and its greatest point of interest is a device employed at the end when Kurosawa breaks the fourth wall, in a manner oddly reminiscent of Peter Pan but perhaps really indebted to Brecht, in order to snap the viewer out of passivity and engage the issues more directly, if hardly intellectually. Suddenly this previously quiet, low-key film becomes a tour-de-force of style, and this contrast in itself is engaging. The most immediate postwar film here, No Regrets for Our Youth (1946), is intriguing in several ways. First, its style is quite smooth and lilting as it follows the moral development of a young woman who learns about social responsibility after falling in love with a handsome proletarian and eventually leaving the city to work on his parents’ farm. Her political consciousness runs counter to the rise of militarism that sweeps the country into war and victimizes the lovers in different ways, which is why she need have no regrets for her youth. In the angst of defeat and occupation, this film’s point would seem to be consolation and assertion that not everybody shares the guilt of political collaboration, that many Japanese resisted militarism and that now they can work for a brighter future. ![]() No Regrets for Our Youth While this is an important point historically, it also sidesteps the issue of everyone who does have guilt and regrets, and who don’t have movies made about them. That issue might have been too sensitive, perhaps even forbidden by US censorship and Japanese self-censorship. It’s an understandable impulse, shared with the tendency of European cinema to make movies about individuals who fought the Nazis and hid Jews in the basement instead of movies about people who turned them in. It really wasn’t until the 1960s that Japan began to produce angry films about what they had gone through and to search for guilt and blame. ![]() The Idiot The holy-fool Prince Myshkin character is now a returning POW instead of a recovering invalid. Setsuko Hara, the fresh-faced heroine of No Regrets for Our Youth, is riveting as the sophisticated, demonic Nastasya character, and the film really belongs to her. The camera uses her as its center of gravity as it slinks about the well-appointed rooms with astonishing vigor. Everyone is perfectly cast, reminding us that Kurosawa was excellent at adapting the work of others and had no trouble applying non-Japanese sources to Japanese cinema. In an aesthetic crime on the order of the gutting of Erich von Stroheim’s Greed, this 166-minute film was butchered by the studio from a now-lost director’s cut that ran more than four hours. This accounts for the fragmentary nature of some plot developments, yet it underlines the sense of an intense fever-dream. If this is minor Kurosawa, it’s major minor Kurosawa. ![]() I Live in Fear Kurosawa, living in the same country and partaking of the same zeitgeist that spawned the Godzilla movies, chose to make a film that addressed these issues without the metaphor, catharsis, and hope. Mifune plays an industrialist paralyzed by fear of a coming nuclear apocalypse. It leads him to breakdown as he attempts to convince his family of the danger and alert them to what they must do (pull up stakes and move to South America), while their loyalties are increasingly torn between love and rage. 14 March 2008Related Articles
Throne of BloodBy Chadwick Jenkins16.Oct.09 In Throne of Blood, Ambition appears as something outside of the human character that preys upon pride and contributes to the demise of the prideful.
Dodes’ka-DenBy Ian Chant08.Apr.09 Kurosawa’s camera turns an intense, voyeuristic gaze on the residents of the junkyard that is at once sympathetic and unflinching.
IkiruBy Marc Calderaro26.Mar.09 The story is deeply affecting and life-affirming, but the plot is only a small part of what makes Ikiru so masterful. |
|
Comments
In *No Regrets for Our Youth,* the protagonist does not fall in love after she moves to the farm. She moves to the farm after the “proletariat” is out of the picture. You need to rewatch.
Comment by Tommy Atkins — March 14, 2008 @ 4:30 pm
Additionally, you miss the point of the film entirely. Readers, go somewhere else for a cogent description of *No Regrets for Our Youth,* because what you get here is simply incorrect.
Comment by Tommy Atkins — March 14, 2008 @ 4:32 pm