Film Review
For every great filmmaker there is invariably one work that stands out
as being particularly revealing of its author, exposing his humanity
and his deeper concerns with human issues more than any other.
For Akira Kurosawa, this film has to be
Ikiru, an intensely poignant
meditation on mortality that many consider to be his finest
work. Lacking the attention-grabbing spectacle and
unflagging energy of Kurosawa's better-known Samurai films,
Ikiru is a surprisingly understated
affair, one of the director's more sensitive and sober cinematic
offerings, and yet it is as perfectly composed and compelling as any
other of the master's great films. In Kurosawa's impressive
oeuvre, few films can match the psychological realism and
emotional power of
Ikiru.
Ikiru translates as 'To Live'
or 'Living' - an apt title for a film which is about a man who,
on discovering he is soon to die from an incurable cancer illness,
suddenly awakens to the preciousness of life. The main character
Kanji Watanabe, a medium rank bureaucrat buried in an unimportant
government department, is at one point described as a mummy, and the
description appears to be laughably apt. His vitality worn down
by years of soul-destroying mechanical routine, Watanabe sits at his
desk like a desiccated cadaver, stamping useless pieces of paper as
though he were a mere machine. It is only when he discovers he
has six months of life left that he becomes conscious of the futility
of his existence. His initial reaction to his impending demise is
to go on a hedonistic spree, but he soon realises that this too is just
another pointless way of marking time. Just when he appears to be
on the point of giving up Watanabe has his moment of epiphany: there
is a cause he can champion that
will allow him to achieve something of value. His living will not
have been in vain.
Bizarrely, it is at this up-beat point that the story suddenly
fast-forwards five months to the day after Watanabe's death. We
do not see Watanabe put his scheme into action and therefore we cannot
be sure whether he was successful or not, whether he did indeed find
meaning in his life. Instead, much as in Kurosawa's previous film
Rashomon
(1950), various lesser characters recount their memories of Watanabe in
the months, weeks and days preceding his death, in the form of short
flashbacks. As in
Rashomon,
the recollections differ subtly in their details and it is left to the
spectator to decide which, if any, is factually correct. Our
natural desire to see that Watanabe did have a positive impact on the
world is initially rewarded when his colleagues, moved by his courage
and resolve, decide to follow his example and make a more useful
contribution to society. But this apparently hopeful outcome is
immediately contradicted by the sequence that follows, and the
bureaucrats soon resume their old practice of pen-pushing,
frittering away their lives in pointless time-wasting drudgery.
Only the condemned man, it seems, has the right to express his
individuality in the bureaucratic mill that is local government.
Ikiru has several points of
interest. First of all it features what is most probably the best
screen performance by Takashi Shimura, a highly distinguished actor of
Japanese cinema who appeared in no less than 21 of Kurosawa's films -
that's five more than that other notable Kurosawa collaborator,
Toshirô Mifune. Unlike Mifune, who could essentially play
only one kind of character (albeit brilliantly so), Shimura was a
remarkably versatile actor who is as convincing as the warrior chief in
Seven Samurai (1954) as he is
in more low-key roles such as the one he plays in
Ikiru. Arguably, Shimura
brings as much to
Ikiru as
Kurosawa; his portrayal of a man facing up to his mortality is
harrowingly true to life and one of the great character portrayals of
Japanese cinema. The sequence in which Watanabe, almost
completely crushed by worthlessness and depression, seats himself in
a nightclub and gently croons an old romantic ballad to himself is
heartrendering in the extreme.
The film is also to be noted for its subtle but highly effective use
of subjective techniques, which allow us to get into the head of the
central protagonist and see the world through his eyes. The best
example of this is the extended sequence in which Watanabe goes out for
a night on the town, something he has apparently never done
before. Kurosawa convinces us of the novelty of the experience by
his expressionistic use of sound and camerawork, which conveys a
powerful impression of the vitality that surges into the main
protagonist's consciousness, awakening his zest for life whilst leaving
him totally lost and disoriented. Towards the end of the film,
there are some sequences of breathtakingly lyrical power, most notably
the one in which the camera slowly tracks across the children's
playground in a nocturnal snowfall, revealing Watanabe contentedly
playing on a swing. This is the one part of the film that cuts
against its almost unbreakable mood of pessimism and leaves us with a
slender vestige of hope. Watanabe may not have been able to
convince others that his life has been worthwhile, but it is evident
that he himself believes he has achieved something, and surely that is
all that matters.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Akira Kurosawa film:
Seven Samurai (1954)
Film Synopsis
For thirty years, Kanji Watanabe has worked in the same office in a
local government department, hoarding his money because he does not
know what to do with it, afraid to take a day off work through fear
that no one would miss him. It has been many years since his wife
died and he is becoming increasingly estranged from his grown-up son
who is looking forward to the day he retires so that he can help
himself to his father's retirement bonus. Suffering from acute
stomach pains, Watanabe visits his doctor and, although he is not told
as such, he realises that he has stomach cancer and may have as little
as six months left to live. Immediately Watanabe is struck by the
meaningless of his life. For all the thousands of hours he has
put into his work he has achieved nothing. In a deep state of
depression he withdraws a large sum of money from his bank and decides
to have a night out on the town. He meets a world-weary young
writer who, moved by his plight, shows him the fleshpots the city has
to offer. Watanabe then attempts to buy the company of one of his
young female colleagues, leading his son to think that he is about to
embark on a new love affair. It is at this point that Watanabe
realises he can do something meaningful - he can use his position to
push through a development project to build a children's playground on
an unwanted area of wasteland. After Watanabe's death five months
later, his colleagues reflect on his part in the project. Some
believe that the deputy mayor is right to claim all the credit for
himself; others are certain that without Watanabe's persistence the
playground would never have been completed. What none of them can
account for is the sudden change in Watanabe's behaviour. It was
as if he knew he was going to die...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.