by beaky » Wed Mar 23, 2005 8:04 pm
I have a serious Kurosawa problem... fortunately Netflix has pretty much his entire catalog, so I'm working through renting and watching them all. He's one of my favorite directors. I simply cannot recommend him too highly. He was not only a giant of Japanese cinema, but a truly great visionary director of cinema in general. If you don't know his work, start with The Seven Samurai - that's the film that The Magnificent Seven was based on. Then maybe Yojimbo or Ran, which are both awesome Feudal-era war epics. Dreams was his last film- a mind-blowing, haunting collage of semi-autobiographical vignettes. The one I saw most recently was Ikuru (1952), a powerful story of a boring civil servant in postwar Japan who discovers the true purpose of his life.It's in b&w, the music's a little weepy, and it starts very slowly, but by the end, I was spellbound.
Akira Kurosawa was one of those directors who could render a gigantic war epic, complete with accurately-detailed, full-scale battle scenes, or a quiet tale about some ordinary schmuck, and do both with an intense clarity that is very powerful. He also was madly in love with light, shadow, and color, and it really shows.
Other than that, I'm not very well-versed in Asian cinema, but I do enjoy Miyazaki's stuff very much, and will watch almost any kung fu movie (Enter the Dragon is a masterpiece, IMHO).
Then there's all those old Godzilla movies... still love that stuff, even the silly ones.
Last edited by
beaky on Wed Mar 23, 2005 8:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.