Director : Akira Kurosawa
Producer : Minoru Jingo
Screenwriter : Shinobu Hashimoto, Akira Kurosawa
Starring : Toshirô Mifune, Machiko Kyô, Masayuki Mori, Takashi Shimura, Minoru ChiakI, Kichijiro Ueda, Fumiko Honma, Daisuke Katô
Not many films have earned the mandate of comparison any time a
similarly-structured movie follows it, but any time a modern film is told from
multiple perspectives, Rashomon is referenced. It has to be.
Akira Kurosawa masterfully combines the testimony of four
witnesses/participants in a rape/muder occuring in the woods in the era of
feudal Japan. It all sounds straightforward at the start, but by the end,
we're left to wonder exactly who's telling the truth, or even if the
participants know what the truth is. The exploration of subjectivity has never
been so thrilling, and Kurosawa is at his pinnacle as a filmmaker, framing
testimony shots in earnest close-up and staging the flashbacks with inimitable
grace. But of course it's not just a beautfully constructed movie, it's also a
biting commentary on deceit, gender roles, and due process (not to mention
Japanese culture). And every viewer is given the opportunity to draw his own
conclusions.
The new Criterion disc remasters the film brilliantly. Most of us have seen
aged VHS versions that don't do justice to Kurosawa's gorgeous camerawork.
It's restored here, along with an introduction from Robert Altman (irony:
Altman claiming Throne of Blood is "more accessible" than Rashomon... as if any
of Altman's films were "accessible") and a commentary from Japanese film
historian Donald Richie. Also included is a fantastic booklet, which includes
the original short stories "In a Grove" and "Rashomon," upon which the script
was based.
Not only is the DVD highly recommended, it's a must-have for any serious DVD
library.
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" Essential "
Rating: NR, 1950