Film Review
Between 1950 and 1965, Akira Kurosawa directed thirteen films, of which
eleven are unequivocal masterpieces, one is inexplicably all but
forgotten (
I Live in Fear) and the other (
The Idiot, a.k.a.
Hakuchi) continues to divide
critics and fans of his work.
The
Idiot is the most problematic and contentious of the films that
Kurosawa made in his magnificent middle period, an overly ambitious
adaptation of Fyodor Dostoevsky's famous novel that was comprehensively
ruined by a ham-fisted last-minute re-edit.
The Idiot was Kurosawa's dream
project, the film he had always wanted to make. From his youth,
he had nurtured a keen passion for Russian literature and he considered
Dostoevsky to be the author who wrote most honestly about human
existence. In his adaptation of
The
Idiot, Kurosawa was consumed by a desire to translate as
faithfully as possible Dostoevsky's words and ideas into the language
of cinema.
Some have argued that the enterprise was doomed to fail from the
outset, that Kurosawa was too in awe of the text to deliver anything
more than a far too literal transposition of Dostoevsky's work.
We shall never know for certain whether this is the case, as around 100
minutes of Kurosawa's original edit was removed (somewhat ineptly) at
the insistence of the studio executives at Shochiku
Company. Kurosawa oversaw the original re-edit, which had
the original 265 minute film reduced to 166 minutes, with inter-titles
and voiceover narration added to bridge the gaping holes in the
narrative that this caused. Even with this massive re-edit,
Shochiku still felt the film was too unwieldy and demanded further cuts
which Kurosawa refused to cooperate with. It is therefore
unsurprising that the resulting film is something of a mess, a
grotesque distortion of Kurosawa's original vision that could hardly
escape being a massive critical and commercial failure. In the
1990s, Kurosawa made a thorough search of Shochiku's film vaults in an
attempt to unearth the excised footage from
The Idiot, but without
success. It would appear that his one great tribute to Dostoevsky
has been lost forever.
Whilst
The Idiot is certainly
flawed, it is not without interest. Indeed, it could be argued
that this is the most crucial film of Kurosawa's entire career, the
first great challenge which allowed the director to develop his unique
form of cinematic expression, thereby laying the foundation for the
masterpieces that were to follow. Would Kurosawa's next film,
Ikiru
(1952), have been such a sublime piece of cinema if its director had
not endured the travails and frustrations of
The Idiot? It is no
coincidence that many of the core themes of
The Idiot - in particular the
capacity for human change and redemption - would become central to
Kurosawa's subsequent oeuvre. Neither is it an accident that all
of Kurosawa's later literary adaptations are (without exception) far
less slavish to the original source and achieve a far more harmonious
balance of western and traditional Japanese culture.
The Idiot may not have been an
unqualified success, or even a partial success, but it represents a key
milestone in Kurosawa's filmmaking career.
What is perhaps most fascinating about
The Idiot is Kurosawa's flagrant
plundering of western culture in his attempt to give the film an
authentic Russian (as opposed to Japanese) feel. Filmed on the
north Japanese island of Hokkaido, the spectacular snowy landscapes of
The Idiot are instantly evocative
of pre-Revolutionary Russia, and the clothes and customs of the
characters are more recognisably western than oriental. More
interesting is Kurosawa's eagerness to appropriate the iconography of
western cinema for his own purposes. Much has been made of the
striking physical resemblance of the main heroine (Taeko Nasu, played
by Setsuko Hara) to the Death Princess (María Casares) in Jean
Cocteau's 1949 film
Orphée. Like
Casares, Hara has a chilling ethereal quality, and she is photographed
and dressed in a similar way, to accentuate her remoteness and
mystique.
Perhaps an even greater influence is Jean-Pierre Melville's adaptation
of Cocteau's novella
Les Enfants terribles (1948),
which has some surprising narrative similarities with Dostoevsky's
novel. As in Kurosawa's
The
Idiot, Melville's film begins in a picturesque snowscape
that is powerfully evocative of childhood, emphasising the child-like
innocence of the main protagonists and their isolation from the
community to which they belong. The most visible reference to
Melville's film is the sequence near the end of
The Idiot where the four main
characters are brought together in Akama's austere and threatening
homestead for a climactic final reckoning. In both films, the
sinister, mortuary-like setting seems to amplify the poisonous
rivalries that will propel the four characters towards insanity and an
inescapable tragic denouement. Kurosawa also emulates Melville in
his use of voiceover narration and in a sequence near the start of the
film (Nasu's snow walk with Akama) that appears to have been lifted
wholesale from
Le Silence de la mer
(1949). Just as visible are Kurosawa's references to Hollywood
melodramas of the previous decades, most notably Clarence Brown's
Anna Karenina (1935).
Georges Lampin's earlier French adaptation of Dostoevsky's novel,
L'Idiot
(1946), may also have influenced Kurosawa - notice how similar Masayuki
Mori's Christ-like portrayal of Kameda is to Gérard Philipe's
Prince Muichkine.
It is fortunate that most of the trims that were imposed on the film
are in its first half - virtually all of the second half is as Kurosawa
originally intended. Once you have passed the midpoint,
Kurosawa's genius for composition and expressive storytelling soon
begins to assert itself and from this point on you are hooked.
Unfortunately, getting to this point is something of a challenge and it
is easy to be turned off by the uneven pacing and painful fragmentation
of the first half. The most obvious casualties of the aggressive
re-editing that was foisted on Kurosawa are the performances of the
lead actors, in particular Setsuko Hara and Toshirô Mifune, who
appear absurdly theatrical in most of their early scenes in the
film. Most of the cuts involved the removal of secondary
characters, so when they suddenly crop up in the second half of the
film the spectator is left confused. Much of the subtlety of the
rapport between the four main characters is lost as a result of the
removal of extended earlier scenes which were intended to expose their
psychology and motivations. Considering how much of the film was
removed and how poorly the re-editing was executed, it is a miracle
that it holds together as well as it does. Is
The Idiot a great work of cinema
that was butchered for commercial expediency, or is it inherently
flawed, a misguided attempt by a director to bend the language of
cinema to the exigencies of the literary form? That is a question
that can never be answered for sure, but what is almost certain is that
The Idiot was an essential
stepping stone to Kurosawa's later cinematic achievements.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Akira Kurosawa film:
Ikiru (1952)