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Tuesday, May 13, 2003
 

In the parlor with Richie, Kurosawa, and Helen

It’s really a page from my steadily wearing copy of The Last Samurai but Dewitt quotes a portion of Donald Richie’s book The Films of Akira Kurosawa:

"The hero is a man actively engaged in becoming himself – never a very reassuring sight.  The villain, on the other hand, has already become something…
Kurosawa’s preference is the preference we all have for the formed man.  In the ordinary film this man would be the hero.  But he is not and, despite his admiration, Kurosawa has told us why.  On of the attributes of all his heroes, beginning with Sugata, is that they are all unformed in just this way.  For this reason, all of his pictures are about education—the education of the hero.
After this superb battle… one might expect the picture to end with some kind of statement that he has at last grown-up, that he has arrived, that he has become something – the great judo champion.  This would be the logical Western conclusion to a film about the education of a hero.
Kurosawa, however, has seen that this cannot be true.  A hero who actually becomes is tantamount to a villain—for this was the only tangible aspect of the villain’s villainy.  To suggest that peace, contentment, happiness, follows a single battle, no matter how important, is literally untrue…"

For those of us who wonder whether we will ever become, some comfort, some truth.

posted in [home], [prattle]


2:15:36 PM    comment []


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