Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Malcolm in the Middle-Earth... major casting announcements on The Hobbit

Speculation surrounding the casting of Bilbo Baggins - the protagonist of the $300m Peter Jackson produced The Lord of the Rings prequels The Hobbit - has finally been laid to rest today with the announcement this morning from director Guillermo del Toro that Malcolm in the Middle star Frankie Muniz has bagged the coveted role.

Muniz - whose other screen roles include the spy comedy Agent Cody Banks and My Sexiest Year has beaten off stiff competition from a host of actors including James McAvoy, Matthew Goode and Daniel Radcliffe and will shortly head Down Under to begin preparation for the year-long shoot expected to commence this summer.

"In casting Bilbo we wanted someone familiar to audiences and Frankie fits the bill perfectly," says del Toro. "An actor of his stature is perfect for the part and we are delighted to have him on board. Plus he's cheap, meaning we'll have more luche to stretch the two movies out."

The casting of Bilbo was quickly followed by confirmation that del Toro will reunite with two of his favourites with Ron Perlman bagging the role of shape-shifter Beorn and Hellboy co-star Doug Jones providing the voice and movements of the fearsome dragon Smaug. Meanwhile Andy Serkis will take on the roles of all thirteen dwarves via motion capture technology, as well as his previously announced return as Gollum.

"With his wonderful performances in The Lord of the Rings and King Kong, Andy has demonstrated his ability to morph into any character and we're delighted he has agreed to bring his unique talents to Thorin Oakenshield's company." Jackson is quoted as saying. "Plus he's cheap, meaning we'll have more lolly to stretch the two movies out."

Source: WETA

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Epic Dreamer: An Akira Kurosawa Profile (Part 2)

Trevor Hogg profiles the internationally renowned filmmaker Akira Kurosawa in the second of a four part feature... read part one.

“After the Pacific War, a great deal of noise began to be made about freedom of speech, and almost immediately abuses and loss of self-control ensued,” recollected acclaimed filmmaker Akira Kurosawa of life in Post-WWII Japan. “A certain kind of magazine took up flattering readers’ curiosity, provoking scandals with shamelessly vulgar articles.” The prevailing sensationalist mentality had to be addressed. “I felt that this new tendency had to be stamped out before it could spread,” remarked the director. “This was the impetus for Skyandaru (Scandal, 1950).”

A tabloid newspaper falsely reports that artist Ichiro Aoye (Toshiro Mifune) is having a love affair with a famous singer, Miyako Saijo (Yoshiko Yamaguchi); he sues the publication only to be betrayed by his lawyer Hiruta (Takashi Shimura). “While I was writing the script an entirely unexpected character began to take on more life than the main characters, and I ended up being led around by the nose by him,” revealed Kurosawa. “This fellow was the corrupt lawyer Hiruta (“Leech Field”). He goes to the defendants to sell out his client, the plaintiff, who is sincerely attempting to battle the gangsters in court.”

“Since the silent film gave way to the talkie, sound appears to have overshadowed image,” observed the Tokyo-native. “At the same time, the flood of sound has made sound itself meaningless. In motion pictures both image and sound must be treated with special care. In my view, a motion picture stands and falls on the effective combination of these two factors.” By combining two short stories Rashomon and Yabu no naka (In a Grove) about medieval Japan by countryman Ryunoske Akutagawa, Akira Kurosawa produced a picture that harkened back to the old days of cinema. “Rashomon [1950] would be my testing ground, the place where I could apply the ideas and desires growing out of my silent film research.”

“When I took this project to Daiei [movie studio], I told them the only sets I would need were the gate and the tribunal courtyard wall where all the survivors, participants, and witnesses of the rape and murder that form the story of the film are questioned. Everything else I promised them, would be shot on location.” Akira Kurosawa went on to say, “There were only eight characters, but the story was both complex and deep.” The director observed, “Human beings are unable to be honest with themselves about themselves. They cannot talk about themselves without embellishing. This script portrays such human beings – the kind who cannot survive without lies to make them feel they are better people than they really are.” Pressured to disclose whose account is the most accurate, the moviemaker slyly replied, “Probably the person closest to the truth was the woodcutter but he’s lying too.”

“The introductory section, in particular, consisted of magnificent camerawork, as it led the viewer through the light and shadow of the forest into a world where the human heart loses its way.” To accomplish the dramatic effect, Akira had to break a movie industry taboo. “I had to figure out how to use the sun itself. This was a major concern because of the decision to use the light and shadows of the forest as the keynote for the entire film. I determined to solve the problem by actually filming the sun.”

Featuring a cast of Toshiro Mifune (Tajomaru, bandit), Masayuki Mori (Takehiro, samurai), Machiko Kyo (Massago, Takehiro’s wife), Takashi Shimura (woodcutter), Minoru Chiaki (priest), Kichijiro Ueda (commoner), Daisuke Kato (police agent), and Fumiko Homma (medium), the picture became an awards sensation. In 1951, the move won best screenplay at the Blue Ribbon Awards, Best Actress (Machiko Kyo) at the Mainichi Film Concours, the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, and Best Director and Best Foreign Film at the National Board of Review. When Rashomon was screened at the Little Carnegie Theatre in New York, it became the first Japanese film to play in the post-war U.S.. The growing international acclaim resulted in the Academy Awards presenting the movie with an Honorary Oscar in 1952, and Hollywood remaking it as The Outrage (1964) with Paul Newman (The Hustler) and Claire Bloom (The Spy Who Came in from the Cold).

“Our directors aim at small accomplishments,” stated Kurosawa of the Japanese movie industry. “The scale is very small. We must take up big subjects and not be afraid of failure.” These words would come to haunt the director when he decided to make Hakuchi (The Idiot, 1951). “I had wanted to make this film since before Rashomon. Since I was little I’d read [Fyodor] Dostoevsky and had thought this book would make a wonderful film. Naturally, you cannot compare me to him, but he is still my favourite author, he is the one who writes most honestly about human existence. And I think that when I made this picture I really understood him.”

Released from a mental asylum Kinji Kameda (Masayuki Mori) travels to Hokkaido where he tragically becomes involved in the lives of two women, Taeko Nasu (Setsuko Hara) and Ayako (Yoshiko Kuga). “[The film] was difficult to make. At times I felt as though I wanted to die,” confessed the director. “Dostoevsky is heavy enough, and now I was under him – I knew just how those enormous sumo wrestlers feel. All the same it was a marvelous experience for me.” Helping him with his cinematic adaptation was a moment from Kurosawa’s childhood. “My brother once forced me to spend a day wandering through Tokyo looking at the victims of the Great Kanto earthquake of 1923: corpses piled up on bridges, corpses blocking off a whole street at the intersection, corpses displaying every manner of death possible to human beings. When I involuntarily turned away, my brother scolded me, ‘Akira, look carefully now.’ When that night I asked my brother why he’d made me look at that these terrible sights, he replied, ‘If you shut your eyes to a frightening sight, you end up being frightened. If you look at everything straight on, there is nothing to be afraid of.’ With my camera, like Dostoevsky with his prose, I have tried to force the audience – which is often unwilling – to ‘look carefully now.’”

“I worked very hard and put everything I had into this picture,” stated Kurosawa. “It ran into trouble as soon as it was shown in Japan. It was cut, it caused friction with Shochiku, the studio for which it was made, and it was attacked by the critics. It may not have been the best film I made. But we have a saying that parents love best the child that is lame.” Reflecting further about the movie which caused Daiei to rescind its offer of making another project with him, the director remarked, “As entertainment, I don’t think it is a failure. Of all my films, people wrote me most about this one. If it had been as bad as all that, they wouldn’t have written. I trust my audience. They understood what I was saying.”

Rescued by Rashomon becoming a global phenomenon, Akira Kurosawa produced Ikiru (To Live, 1952). “Occasionally, I think of my death,” stated the filmmaker, “then I think, how could I ever bear to take a final breath, while living a life like this, how could I leave it? There is, I feel, so much more for me to do – I keep feeling that I have lived so little yet. Then I become thoughtful, but not sad. It was from such a feeling that Ikiru arose.”

Reminiscing about the picture which details the life of a Post-war civil servant who is doomed by stomach cancer, Kurosawa said, “What I remember best here is the long wake sequence that ends the film, where – from time to time – we see scenes in the hero’s later life. Originally, I wanted music all under this long section. I talked it over with [Fumio] Hayasaka and we decided upon it and he wrote the score. Yet when it came time to dub, no matter how we did it, the scenes and music did not fit. So I thought about it for a long time and then took all of the music out. I remember how disappointed Hayasaka was. He just sat there, not saying anything, and the rest of the day he tried to be cheerful. I was sorry I had to do it, yet I had to.” The music composer had a profound effect on the life of his director. “We worked so well together because one’s weakness was the other’s strength,” confided Kurosawa. “We had been together for ten years and then he died. It was not my only loss – it was music’s loss as well. You don’t meet a person like that twice in your life.”

Ikiru was critical of bureaucrats, but it was respected, and it was given an award by the [Japanese] Education Ministry.” The picture which starred frequent collaborator Takashi Shimura, Nobuo Kaneko, Kyoko Seki, and Makoto Kobori almost did not get released internationally. “The distribution company felt it would not be understood by foreigners,” stated Kurosawa. “Especially the second part, the wake, they felt, would be incomprehensible. But I kept after them. Finally, they agreed to submit it to the Berlin Film Festival. At the Berlin Film Festival, it was very well received, and I won the Silver Bear, the prize for best film. This experience served to confirm my belief that film is international and humanity is universal.”

Growing up in a household where his father was a descendant of a legendary class of Japanese warriors, Akira Kurosawa revisited his family heritage with Shichinin no samurai (Seven Samurai, 1954). A village of farmers seeking to protect its crop from marauding bandits, hires a group of mercenaries. “Some ambitious samurai were naturally intent on advancing their own careers and did not pay any attention to the weak and the needy,” explained Kurosawa. “At the time there were many samurai who were traveling all over Japan in order to find better employment under more powerful lords. These seven samurai are the real samurai, but in the worldly sense there was something missing in them because they couldn’t get jobs and further their careers.” Explaining the actions of Kambai Shimada (Takashi Shimura) who is the leader of the group, Kurosawa stated, “Being a samurai, although he is a jobless ronin, he had the natural moral obligation to help the peasant [a baby had been kidnapped by a thief and held hostage in a small hut],” explained the moviemaker. “As the samurai class is superior to any other, they felt the duty of being the guardians of society. So when the commoners could not handle a situation, they had to use their good judgment.”

Shimada is aided by his warrior compatriots Kikuchiyo (Toshiro Mifune), Gorobei (Yoshio Inaba), Kyuzo (Seiji Miyaguchi), Shichiroji (Daisuke Kato), Katsushiro (Ko Kimura), and Heihachi (Minoru Chiaki). “Out of their compassion for the peasants,” remarked the director, “they helped them, going beyond their class role; in the end they help the peasants because they had to. However, in the beginning their intentions were mixed. The samurai were preoccupied with themselves, not so much helping the peasants out of compassion. Kikuchiyo, played by Mifune, was the ideal go-between – the samurai brought up amongst the peasants. As time went on, both sides, samurai and peasants, had to come down to the very basic condition where they had to fight together to fend off an enemy…They all melted together into the same class.” Kurosawa does not view the villagers as being weak, “It is the samurai who were weak because they were being blown by the winds of time. They won the battle for the peasants, but then they were dismissed and went away. The peasants remained to till the earth. I made Shimura say at the end, ‘We have lost again.’”

Capturing the story for the big screen, the filmmaker employed a revolutionary method. “Much is often made of the fact that I use more than one camera to shoot a scene,” remarked Akira Kurosawa. “This began when I was making Seven Samurai, because it was impossible to predict exactly what would happen in the scene when the bandits attack the peasants’ village in a heavy rainstorm. If I had filmed it in the traditional shot-by-shot method, there was no guarantee that any action could be repeated in exactly the same way twice. So I used three cameras rolling simultaneously. The result was extremely effective, so I decided to exploit this technique fully in less action-filled drama as well.” He went on to say, “As a general system, I put A camera in the most orthodox positions, use the B camera for quick, decisive shots and the C camera as a kind of guerilla unit.”

Over a year in production, with half the time spent in distant locations, the completed film was three hours long. Two shorter versions were released; one for the international market and the other for the Venice Film Festival where the picture won the Silver Lion. Seiji Miyaguchi was awarded Best Supporting Actor at the Mainichi Film Concours. The movie was an Oscar contender for Best Art-Set Decoration (Black and White) and Best Costume Design (Black and White), while the BATFAs nominated it for Best Film and Best Foreign Actor (Toshiro Mifune and Takashi Shimura). The picture was remade by Hollywood as the acclaimed Western, The Magnificent Seven (1960) featuring Yul Brynner (The King and I), Steven McQueen (The Sand Pebbles), Charles Bronson (Machine-Gun Kelly), James Coburn (Affliction), Eli Wallach (Baby Doll), and Robert Vaughan (The Young Philadelphians).

Shifting to a contemporary setting, Akira Kurosawa produced Ikimono no kiroku (Record of a Living Being or I Live in Fear, 1955) about an elderly man (Toshiro Mifune) who wants to take his family to Brazil to escape the next atomic war. Film critic Donald Richie stated that the filmmaker had “created in the old father a kind of everyman, a modern Lear even, who sees what may happen and fears it.”

Kurosawa could relate to his main character as he himself had lived through the devastation of WWII. “It is both a physical and psychological fact that if you are not right there having bombs fall on your head, whatever you see is strangely beautiful,” recounted the director. “Even the bombing of Tokyo, which I watched from a close but safe distance, was like an incredible spectacle, a pageant with search-lights, flashes of light and smoke.”

Reverting once again to Western literature for inspiration, Akira Kurosawa focused his attention on a revered English playwright. “I wanted to make Macbeth. The problem was how to adapt the story to Japanese thinking? The story is understandable enough but the Japanese tend to think differently about such things as witches and ghosts.” To make the classic Shakespearean play more acceptable to his homeland audience, the moviemaker set the story within a familiar historical era. “During the period of civil wars [1460 to 1560] in Japan, there were plenty of incidents like those portrayed in Macbeth. They are called ge-Koku-jo [a retainer murders his lord and deprives him of his power].” The other aspect making Kumonosu-jô (Throne of Blood or Castle of the Spider’s Web, 1957) more comprehendible was its cinematic presentation. “I utilized the Japanese style of painting known as Mushare [warrior painting] in my overall design, and forms of Japanese Noh drama in staging the dramatic elements of the film. My aim was to transform Shakespeare into pure Japanese by borrowing freely from Japanese art forms.”

“Drama in the West takes it character from the psychology of men or circumstances; the Noh is different,” explained Kurosawa. “First of all, the Noh has the mask, and while staring at it, the actor becomes the man whom the mask represents. The performance also has a defined style, and in devoting himself to it faithfully, the actor becomes possessed. Therefore, I showed each of the players a photograph of a mask of Noh which came the closest to the respective role; I told him that the mask was his own part. To Toshiro Mifune, who played the part of Taketoki Washizu [Macbeth], I showed the mask named Heida. It was a mask of a warrior. In the scene in which Mifune is persuaded by his wife to kill his lord, he created for me just the same life-like expression as the mask did.”

“Originally, I wanted to produce this film and let a younger director direct it. But when the script was finished and Toho [the movie studio] saw how expensive it would be, they asked me to direct it. So I did.” It was just as well as the veteran Akira Kurosawa found the principle photography to be an extremely challenging experience. “The camera work was very difficult because there were so many full shots, and the shooting was carried out while I gave strict instructions about the poses of the characters. If the actors moved into an incorrect position, the balance of the picture was broken. If a single shoulder went out of frame, everything was ruined.” The picture was filmed on a famous natural landmark. “We decide that the main castle set had to be built on the slope of Mount Fuji, not because I wanted to show this mountain but because it has precisely the stunted landscape I wanted.” Recruited to help in the building of the pivotal structure were American soldiers from a nearby U.S. Marine Corp base. “When I went into the ways the castles were constructed in those days, some of them made use of wood which was grown as if it had been a maze. Therefore, the wood was named “the wood of spiders’ hair,” meaning the wood that catches the invaders as if in a spider’s web. The title Castle of the Spider’s Web came to me in this way.”

With the release of his next two films, Kurosawa created what he referred to as his “jidaigeki [period picture] trilogy.”

Continue to part three.

Movies... For Free! Rashomon (1950)
Movies... For Free! Throne of Blood (1957)

For more on the filmmaker visit AkiraKurosawa.info, the Akira Kurosawa Foundation or the British Film Institute.

Also be sure to read Trevor's article marking 100 years since the director's birth - Akira Kurosawa: A Cinematic Artist.

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 26/03/10

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 26th - Sunday 28th March 2010.

Fantasy sequel Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang becomes the first 2D film to sit atop the UK box office in 2010 (a feat last achieved by Paranormal Activity for the first weekend of December), although its take of £2,586,760 is the lowest first-placed debut since A Christmas Carol opened with just £1.9m in November. Meanwhile Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland was just a shade behind and slips down to second, having amassed close to £35m in its fourth weekend.

Two other new releases also managed to crack the top ten with Sandra Bullock's Oscar-winning turn in The Blind Side helping the sports drama to third place with £1.3m, which is an impressive number given the usual performance of American Football movies this side of the Atlantic. At the opposite end of the scale, Brit actioner Shank manages to pull in £278k from just 86 screens and places ninth.

Elsewhere in the chart Shutter Island, Green Zone and The Spy Next Door all drop one place apiece to fourth, sixth and seventh respectively, with The Bounty Hunter and Avatar both falling three to fifth and tenth. However the biggest tumble was reserved for comedy I Love You Phillip Morris, which plunges four places to eighth in its second weekend.

On a final note - after 15 weekends James Cameron's sci-fi behemoth Avatar is likely to have made its final appearance in the top ten, although with a record-shattering £91m in the bank and DVD release set f April 26th I doubt that too many tears will be shed.

Number one this time last year: Knowing
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang
£2,586,7601£2,586,760
2Alice in Wonderland£2,496,6734





















































£34,817,788
3The Blind Side
£1,313,3171































































£1,313,317
4Shutter Island£1,146,2593































































£7,677,255
5The Bounty Hunter£994,6562











































































£3,909,655
6Green Zone£465,8113





































































£4,951,818
7The Spy Next Door£393,6042

























































£1,235,494
8I Love You Phillip Morris£369,4602















































































£1,906,927
9Shank£278,9061









































































£278,906
10Avatar£224,84015













































































£91,053,002


Incoming...

There is some hefty competition this week for 3D screens with Dreamworks' How to Train Your Dragon (cert. PG) swooping into cinemas on Wednesday ahead of big-budget fantasy remake Clash of the Titans (cert. 12A), which opens on Friday.

For those who prefer their movies flat, Friday also sees the release of the adult superhero comedy Kick-Ass (cert. 15) from director Matthew Vaughn [watch the trailer here], along with re-releases for classics Psycho (cert. 15) and The Railway Children (cert. U).

U.K. Box Office Archive

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Hong Kong Cinema DVD Giveaway... NOW CLOSED

Hong Kong classics up for grabs...

Bruce Lee
We have a number of classic Hong Kong action movies up for grabs and if you'd like to get your hands on them then you've come to the right place! To get involved, all you have to do is leave a comment between now and Friday 16th April 2010 or drop us an email with your contact details and order of preference. Simple as that!

PLEASE NOTE THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED.

Fist of Fury, 1972

One of the greatest Kung Fu classics of all time, Fist of Fury (dir. Lo Wei) stars Bruce Lee as Chen Jun, a student seeking revenge for the death of his master. Showcasing the best in Kung Fu filmmaking - from breathtaking one-on-one fights to intricately choreographed group battles - Fist of Fury demonstrates the unrivalled skill of the legendary Bruce Lee and set new standards for martial arts performers and films.

The Killer, 1989

The definitive 'heroic bloodshed' movie, John Woo's landmark action movie tells the story of Ah Jong (Chow Yun Fat), an assassin trying to repent for a life of crime, and Inspector Li Ying (Danny Lee), a detective obsessed with tracking him down. Fusing brutal and stylish gunplay, stunning visuals and emotive drama, The Killer is a cinematic masterpiece.

Infernal Affairs, 2002 [two copies available]

The first in an explosive trilogy (which would serve as the inspiration for Scorsese's The Departed), Infernal Affairs sets a stylish benchmark for modern thrillers. Ming (Andy Lau) is a Triad mole in the police department, while Yan (Tony Leung) is a cop working undercover in crime boss Sam's (Eric Tsang) organisation. When the police and the mob both realise there is a mole amongst them a deadly game of cat and mouse soon ensues.

The Prize Finder - UK Competitions
Loquax Competitions

Related:

World Cinema: The Hong Kong Film Industry

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Short Film Showcase - Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB (1967)

Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB, 1967.

Directed by George Lucas.
Starring Dan Natchsheim, Joy Carmichael, David Munson, Marvin Bennett and Ralph Steel.

While teaching a group of US Navy students as a graduate at USC. George Lucas produced the experimental sci-fi short Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB. Presenting an Orwell-inspired vision of a bleak dysotopian society, the film would go on to serve as the basis for his feature debut THX-1138 (1971), produced by Francis Ford Coppola's American Zoetrope. The short concerns the efforts of a man identified only by his number, 1138 (Dan Natchsheim, who also acts as editor), to escape the system in a plot highly reminiscent of the final chase in the later spin-off.

Shot over a period of twelve weeks, Lucas used the parking garages and access ways of Los Angeles International Airport to create the 'electronic labyrinth' of the futuristic, uniform world. The film would go on to receive first prize at the 1968 International Student Film Festival and was also highly praised by legendary filmmaker Fritz Lang (Metropolis) when it was shown as part of a USC showcase for a select audience at Hollywood's Fairfax Theatre.

Hot Rods & Droids: A George Lucas Profile


Click here to view more short films and public domain features.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

New trailer for Gurinder Chadha's It's A Wonderful Afterlife

It's A Wonderful AfterlifeBend it Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha's latest romantic comedy It's A Wonderful Afterlife is set to hit cinemas here in the UK next month and looks to take the phrase 'I could murder a curry' to hysterical new heights. The film centres on an Indian mum, Mrs. Sethi (five-time National Film Award winner Shabana Azmi), whose efforts to marry off her daughter result in deadly consequences for those families who rudely refuse the proposal. Soon the hunt is on for a a serial murderer who cooks a killer curry...

Building on Chadha's record for discovering new talent, the main lead is played by the newcomer Goldy Notay, who will next be seen in Sex and the City 2. The rest of the film's cast includes Sally Hawkins (Happy Go Lucky), Zoë Wanamaker (Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone), Jimi Mistry (East Is East), Sanjeev Bhaskar (The Kumars at No. 42), Mark Addy (The Full Monty), Sendhil Ramamurthy (Heroes) and Ray Panthaki (Eastenders), along with Bend it Like Beckham's Shaheen Khan, Ash Varrez and Adlyn Ross.

Check out the trailer for It's A Wonderful Afterlife:


It's A Wonderful Afterlife is released on April 21st. Check out the official website.

Cult Classics: The Room (2003)

The Room, 2003.

Directed by Tommy Wiseau.
Starring Tommy Wiseau, Juliette Danielle, Greg Sestero.

The Room movie poster
SYNOPSIS:

A black comedy about love, passion, betrayal and lies.

The Room Tommy Wiseau
After hearing this film be described as ‘one of the worst films ever made’ and a ‘mix of Tennessee Williams, Ed Wood and R. Kelly’s 'Trapped in the Closet' I was naturally quite intrigued and even, because I don’t get out much, a little bit excited about my first viewing of Tommy Wiseau’s The Room. I tried not to get my hopes up though and attempted to ignore all the tales I had heard of cringe-worthy dialogue, bizarre plot holes, excruciatingly bad acting, tacky sets and dodgy editing, as I think that cinematically appalling ‘gems’ are often most appreciated when you stumble across them, not when they’ve been massively over-hyped and you’ve been told eighty times how unbelievably embarrassing and hysterical it all is. It turns out there was no need to try and dampen down my hopes.

The film is based on a novel and play by Wiseau and was released in 2003 after he funded a mammoth publicity campaign which included plastering his own scowling face over a giant billboard on Highland Avenue in L.A. The film was branded the ‘Citizen Kane of bad movies,’ but not long after its release it managed to gain a cult following of people who were absolutely fanatical about it. Special screenings were set up for which audience members would dress up as the main characters which still take place today in both the U.S.A and the U.K.

The Room is a melodrama revolving around a group of friends that conveniently all live in the same apartment block. There’s Mark (the sexy one), Denny (the pervy, slightly sinister teenage boy one), Johnny, played by Wiseau himself and Lisa, Johnny’s fiancée. Johnny and Mark are BFFs, which makes things a little awkward when Lisa and Mark start having an affair. Denny has also succumbed to Lisa’s mysterious charms but is more of a spectator, watching eagerly from the sidelines with his hand down his trousers, not really getting in on any of the action. And boy is there a lot of action. I’m talking three, very extended sex scenes, complete with Johnny’s RnB nookie tape blaring away in the background, all within the first twenty five minutes.

The rest of the film deals with Mark and Lisa’s affair, and eventually the consequences of it. The sub-plots, however, provide a substantial amount of the entertainment. It would make a fun game to see how many extra story-lines you can spot that are introduced and then pretty much forgotten in an instant. A couple of the most bizarre examples are when Lisa’s mother casually announces that she has breast cancer, and Denny’s roof top encounter with a gun-wielding drug dealer – neither of which are mentioned again during the rest of the film.

Wiseau’s performance as Johnny is generally quite baffling and slightly absurd. He skulks around looking a bit like a Neanderthal that’s just been thawed out after 500,000 years of being preserved in a Siberian ice cave - part of me wouldn’t have been surprised if this turned out to be an actual sub plot. Perhaps that would explain Johnny’s slightly peculiar take on the English language and his apparent inability to interact normally with Homo sapiens. The film is littered with bouts of oversimplified and unrealistic dialogue and after about twenty minutes of watching the film I came to the conclusion that Tommy Wiseau must have never had a conversation with anyone before. Ever. It’s the only way to explain the following dialogue, which is a little snippet of conversation from a scene in which Johnny and Mark are discussing the troubling topic of women-folk:
Johnny: I’m so happy I have you as my best friend, and I love Lisa so much.
Mark: Yeah man, you are very lucky.
Johnny: Well maybe you should have a girl Mark...What happened? Remember Betty? That’s her name?
Mark: Betty? Yeah, we don’t see each other anymore. She wasn’t any good in bed. She was beautiful, but we had too many arguments.
Johnny: That’s too bad. My Lisa is great when I can get it.
Mark: Aw man, I just can’t figure women out. Sometimes they’re just too smart. Sometimes they’re just flat-out stupid. Other times...they’re just evil.
Oh Mark, don’t underestimate your knowledge. ‘Smart, stupid and evil’ is the Holy Trinity of the female species. It seems like your philosophy on women is almost complete.

Many have wondered how legendary ‘bad director’ Ed Wood would have dealt with his infamy if it had all started before his death. Unfortunately for Tommy Wiseau, he is very much still alive and so must face the scrutiny of both his critics and his audience. It seems that if your film develops a cult status for being utterly dreadful you can do one of two things. The first option: hold your hands up and admit it was you that caused the cinematic stench permeating the nostrils of your suffering audience. The second option: Denial. Strangely enough, it seems like Wiseau has plumped for both. He often appears at the special screenings of his film and answers questions from his audience, so he must at least have a hunch that their appreciation of it is somewhat ironic. However, Wiseau has also denied that his film was intended as a straight drama, and has claimed that it was in fact intended to be a black comedy...a statement that a number of the film’s actors have claimed is untrue. One anonymous member of the cast said "He is a nice guy. But he is full of shit. He was trying to put together a drama. It was basically his stage to show off his acting ability.”

All in all, The Room is somewhat of an unlikely masterpiece. Although it could never be taken seriously, I think it’s probably been enjoyed by everyone that’s watched it - a bit like a theme park ride that’s a lot of fun, but also makes you feel a little bit sick. And you have to hand it to the guy, Wiseau’s dedication and unshakable faith in his project paid off eventually, even if it isn’t in quite the way he initially imagined. And although the audience may not come away pondering his psychologies on relationships like he may have wanted them to, at least you come away with something. And that’s more than you can for a lot of the studio funded Hollywood disasters out there. Well done Wiseau, keep up the good work. Actually, on second thoughts...

Amy Flinders

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Your favourite Tim Burton movie is...

Results of our latest poll...

We've been running a poll these past few weeks in conjunction with Trevor Hogg's latest article, Freakishly Clever: A Tim Burton Profile, asking for your favourite movie from the visionary director's back-catalogue. Well, the clear winner with 18% of the votes is Edward Scissorhands, 7% ahead of its nearest rival, the critically acclaimed Big Fish, with breakthrough supernatural comedy Beetlejuice rounding out the top three.

Unsurprisingly Burton's 2001 remake of the sci-fi classic Planet of the Apes failed to gain a single vote [read Gerry Hayes' thoughts in I Sat Through That?], while Batman Returns had to settle for just the one...

Edward Scissorhands (1990) - 18%
Big Fish (2003) - 11%
Beetlejuice (1988) - 10%
Sweeney Todd (2007) - 9%
Batman (1989) - 8%
Alice in Wonderland (2010) - 8%
Sleepy Hollow (1999) - 8%
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) - 5%
Ed Wood (1994) - 5%
Corpse Bride (2005) - 4%
Mars Attacks! (1996) - 4%
Pee-wee's Big Adventure (1985) - 4%
Batman Returns (1992) - 0%
Planet of the Apes (2001) - 0%

Thanks to everyone who took the time to vote and be sure to check back soon for our next poll.

Epic Dreamer: An Akira Kurosawa Profile (Part 1)

Trevor Hogg profiles the internationally renowned filmmaker Akira Kurosawa in the first of a four part feature...

Akira Kurosawa“I was a struggling young painter,” recalled legendary moviemaker Akira Kurosawa, “I saw a newspaper advertisement, PCL [Photo Chemical Laboratories], which later became Toho Studios, wanted an assistant director. They asked applicants to write essays on the basic weakness of Japanese films and what should be done to overcome them. In my answer I suggested humoursly, that if the weaknesses were basic, there could be no cure. I also said that films could always be made better. To my surprise, I was offered a job, which I took, planning to return to painting after one or two months. But I found films were my medium, and I stayed.”

A veteran of the cinematic craft became a willing mentor to the novice. “[Kajiro] Yamamoto [Hawai Mare oki kaisen] never made a film without actively involving all of his assistants in it,” remarked the Tokyo-born director. “He roused in me a passion for my job. He taught me the ABC’s of directing, how to write a script, and all kinds of useful knowledge about every phase of production. He gave every one of us opportunities to substitute for him as director and permitted us to try our theories in practice.” Kurosawa made the most out of his six year apprenticeship. “When he [Yamamoto] was shooting Uma [Horses, 1941], I took over much of the production. I advanced so quickly that, while Yamamoto was working with the Unit A and shooting a musical comedy in Tokyo, I was allowed to take responsibility for Unit B and shoot Uma on location in northeast Japan. When we both got back, he found me much tougher, much more exacting than he. I would order retakes for a scene he thought acceptable. At first the production crew was amazed, but they soon realized that I was right and obeyed my instructions. People began talking about my prospects, and everyone regarded me as a full-fledge director.”

To complete his transformation into a reputable moviemaker, Akira Kurosawa devoted himself to the art of screenwriting. “The best thing is to write screenplays,” stated Kurosawa. “This is basic to filmmaking, because an excellent screenplay can become an excellent film even in the hands of a third-rate director; a bad screenplay, however, could never become an excellent film even if made by a first-rate director.” As for his writing advice, the Japanese cinema icon remarked, “In order to write scripts, you must first study the great novels and dramas of the world. You must consider why they are great. Where does the emotion come from that you feel as you read them? What degree of passion did the author have to have, and what level of meticulousness did he have to command, in order to portray the characters and events as he did? You must read thoroughly, to the point where you can grasp all these things.”

There are also perils to be avoided when composing a story. “Adding explanation to the descriptive passages of a screenplay is the most dangerous trap you can fall into,” warned Kurosawa. “It’s easy to explain the psychological state of a character at a particular moment, but it’s very difficult to describe it through the delicate nuances of action and dialogue.” Emphasizing the importance of scriptwriting further, the director offered this poetic observation, “The root of any film project for me is the inner need to express something. What nurtures this root and makes it grow into a tree is the script. What makes the tree bear flowers and fruit is the directing.” Practicing what he preached, Akira published his first screenplay A German at the Daruma Temple in 1941. A year later the script All Is Quiet won the Nihon Eiga contest for best scenario while another one entitled Snow was awarded first prize from the Japanese Ministry of Education. Unfortunately, none of the tales were filmed due to war-time production constraints.

Judo Saga KurosawaAt the age of thirty-three, Akira Kurosawa’s scripted his directorial debut Sugata Sanshiro (Judo Saga, 1943) which was an adaptation of the novel by Tsuneo Tomita. “When you are directing from your own script, you understand the script better than anyone else possibly can,” said the creator of the story. “Making this film seemed not like ascending a steep precipice, but more like clambering around the gentle slopes at the base of the mountain.”

The title character played by Susumu Fujita travels to the city to learn Jujutsu only to find himself drawn to the self-defensive art of Judo. “Among the characters in Sugata Sanshiro, the one who most strongly draws my interest and affection is of course Sanshiro himself,” reflected Kurosawa. “But, looking back now, I realize that my feelings for the villain, Higaki Gennosuke [RyunosukeTsukigata], are no less strong.” Asked if he resembled his cinematic personas, the director responded, “Personally, I feel that my own temperament is like Sanshiro’s, but I am strangely attracted by Higaki’s character. For this reason I portrayed Higaki’s demise with a great deal of affection.” Mother Nature inadvertently aided the principal photography for the movie by providing a dramatic strong wind. “On the hill where we had planned to shoot [the climatic fight scene], the pampas grass should have gone to seed already, but a field of the fluffy stalks still waved like a typhoon-ripped sea. Above our heads, tatters of clouds fairly raced across the sky. I couldn’t have asked for a more perfect set design.”

When the picture was released, Kurosawa remarked, “The general public, perhaps because they were starved for entertainment during the war, reacted to my film with feverish warmth.” The enthusiasm for the filmmaker’s screenplay spawned two remakes in 1955 and 1965 (the 1966, 1970, and 1977 versions were based on the book).

The Most Beautiful Akira KurosawaIchiban Utsukushikiu (The Most Beautiful, 1944) became the budding moviemaker’s sophomore effort. “The setting is a military-lens factory belonging to the Nippon Kogaku company in the town of Haratsuka, and the [volunteer corps of teenage] girls are engaged in the manufacturing of precision lenses.” Akira Kurosawa had a particular vision in mind for the tale. “When I received this project to direct, I decided I wanted to try doing it in a semi-documentary style. I began with the task of ridding the young actresses of everything they had physically and emotionally acquired that smacked of theatricality. The odor of makeup, the snobbery, the affectations of the stage, that special self-consciousness that only actors have – all of this had to go. I wanted to return them to their original status of ordinary young girls.”

Helping with the authentic tone of the picture was the real setting. “The girls in each section of the factory of course spoke the lines of the drama that were set down in the script, but rather than paying attention to the camera they were totally absorbed in carrying out the factory job they were learning and monitoring the workings of the machinery. In their concentrated expressions and movements there was almost no trace of the self-consciousness actors have, only the vitality and beauty of people at work.”

Working on the movie became a life-altering experience for Kurosawa. “I married the girl who played the leader of the girls’ volunteer group, Yaguchi Yoko. At that time she represented the actresses and frequently came to argue with me on their behalf. She was a terribly stubborn and uncompromising person, and since I am very much the same, we often clashed head on.”

Judo Saga 2 Akira KurosawaRevisiting his first picture, Akira Kurosawa produced Zoku Sugata Sanshiro (Judo Saga, Part Two, 1945). “Sugata Sanshiro had been a hit, so the studio asked me to make a sequel. This is one of the bad points about commercialism. It seems the entertainment sections of Japan’s film production companies haven’t heard the proverb about the fish under the willow tree that hangs over the stream – the fact that you hooked one there once doesn’t mean you always will.” Battling his reservations about doing the project initially, the filmmaker said, “I had to force myself to arouse the desire to go back to it and continue it. But one aspect of the story of Higaki Gennosuke’s younger brothers seeking a revenge battle with Sanshiro [Susumu Fujita] interested me…the fact that Gennosuke [RyunosukeTsukigata] is forced to see himself in his younger days through the similarly impetuous actions of his younger brother Tesshin [also played by Tsukigata], and the recollection causes him to suffer.”

Reflecting on the movie, Kurosawa wrote in his autobiography, “Sugata Sanshiro, Part Two was not a very good film. Among the reviews was one that said, ‘Kurosawa seems to be somewhat full of himself.’ On the contrary, I feel I was unable to put my full strength into it.”

The Men Who Tread on the Tigers TailThere was another film directed by Akira Kurosawa in 1945. “[Tora no o wo fumu otokotachi] The Men Who Tread on the Tiger’s Tail came about as result of the cancelled Lifted Spear project, and it was thrown together in great haste. The idea was to base it on the Kabuki play Kanjincho (The Subscription List), about the escape of the early feudal lord Yoshitsune across a heavily-guarded barrier with his generals disguised as priests collecting temple subscriptions.” The picture was released at the conclusion of WWII which caused serious complications for the moviemaker. “The first American-appointed censor who came to supervise the company after the war was a very mean-spirited leftist,” recalled Kurosawa. “I was working on The Men Who Tread on the Tiger’s Tail, and he didn’t report properly to the Occupational Forces, and so they took that I was shooting something dubious. The finished film was banned from public showing because it was considered “feudalistic.” The next inspector was a more moderate man: he looked at the film, and couldn’t understand why it had been suppressed. Finally it was shown.”

Joining forces with fellow Japanese co-directors Kajiro Yamamoto and Hideo Sekikawa, Akira Kurosawa worked on Asu o tsukuru hitobito (Those Who Make Tomorrow, 1946). To appease the Toho labour union a number of scenes were changed without the permission of the filmmakers, resulting in Kurosawa removing the project from his list of credited productions.

No regrets for our youth“The Japanese see self-assertion as immoral and self-sacrifice as the sensible course to take in life,” stated Akira Kurosawa of his countrymen. “We were accustomed to this teaching and had never thought to question it. I felt without the establishment of the self as a positive value there could be no freedom and no democracy. Waga seishun ni kuinashi (No Regrets for Our Youth, 1946), takes the problem of the self as its theme.”

Yukie (Setsuko Hara), the daughter of Professor Yagihara (Denjiro Okochi) who was fired from his university position because of his leftist views against fascism, is wooed by two of her father’s pupils, Ryukichi Noge (Susumu Fujita) and Itokawa (Akitake Kôno). The film was made between two union strikes at Toho which had a significant impact on the production. “The second draft of the script for No Regrets was a forced rewrite of the story, so it became somewhat distorted. This shows in the last twenty minutes of the film. But my intention was to gamble everything on the last twenty minutes. I poured a feverish energy into those two thousand feet and close to two hundred shots of film. All of the rage I felt toward the Scenario Review Committee went into those final images.”

One Wonderful Sunday Akira KurosawaConsidered to be too melodramatic and therefore his weakest film, Subarashiki Nickiyôbi (One Wonderful Sunday, 1947) is, in the words of Akira Kurosawa, about “impoverished lovers struggling along in defeated Japan.” Going against the wishes of his co-screenwriter Keinosuke Uekusa, the director tried an innovative approach to the climatic scene in the picture. “The poor couple are in an empty concert amphitheatre and in their minds they hear Schubert’s Unfinished Symphony,” explained Kurosawa. “Naturally, the movie’s soundtrack should have no music on it for this scene. The girl [Chieko Nakatita] breaks the rules of filmmaking and turns to the screen audience to address them. ‘Please, everyone, if you feel sorry for us, please clap your hands. If you clap for us, I’m sure we’ll be able to hear the music.’ The audience applauds, and the boy [Isao Numasaki] in the film picks up a conductor’s baton. As soon as he starts to wave it, the Unfinished comes in on the soundtrack.” Uekusa reservations to the idea turned out to be well-founded. “The Japanese audience sat stock still, and because they couldn’t bring themselves to applaud, the whole thing was a failure,” admitted the filmmaker. “But in Paris it succeeded. Because the French audience responded with wild applause, the sound of the orchestra tuning up at the tail end of the clapping gave rise to the powerful and unusual emotion I had hoped for.” The movie did not go entirely unappreciated by his native homeland; at the Mainichi Film Concours, Kurosawa won for Best Director and Best Screenplay.

Drunken Angel Akira KurosawaYoidore Tenshi (Drunken Angel, 1948) was a creative breakthrough for Kurosawa. “In this picture I finally discovered myself,” declared the director. “It was my picture; I was doing it and no one else. Part of this was thanks to [Toshiro] Mifune. [Though Toshiro Mifune had been in several films this was his first starring role and it resulted in almost instant fame.] [Takashi] Shimura played the doctor beautifully but I found that I could not control Mifune. When I saw this, I let him do what he wanted, let him play the part freely. At the same time I was worried because, if I did not control him, the picture would be quite different from what I had wanted. It was a real dilemma. Still, I did not want to smother that vitality. In the end, although the title refers to the doctor, it is Mifune that everyone remembers.”

Complications arose when writing the screenplay. “We had a difficulty with one of the characters, the doctor himself,” revealed Kurosawa. “[Keinosuke] Uekusa and I rewrote his part over and over again. Still, he wasn’t interesting. We had almost given up when it occurred to me that he was just too good to be true, he needed a defect, a vice. This is why we made him an alcoholic. At the time, most film characters were shining white or blackest black. We made the doctor grey.” An issue that needed to be resolved was how to bring conflict into the story. “Uekusa and I made the gangster and the doctor collide head on in the very first scene of the film. The gangster [Mifune] is injured in a gang war and goes to see the alcoholic doctor to have the bullet removed. As he takes care of the bullet hole, the doctor finds that the gangster has a hole in his lung, resulting from tuberculosis. It is the tuberculosis germ that provides a binding tie for the two men. From that point on, all that was necessary to set the drama in motion was for the two of them to disagree and oppose each other on what should be done about it.”

Along with establishing the master-disciple relationship between Takashi Shimura and Toshiro Mifune (which would last until the mid-1950s), the film welcomed another member into Akira Kurosawa’s inner creative circle. “This was the first picture on which [Fumio] Hayaska worked with me; and from the first we agreed on everything. Like using that vapid Cuckoo Waltz for the saddest part of the film.” The movie was a commercial success in Japan. “One of the reasons for the extreme popularity of this film at the time was that there was no competition - no other films showed an equal interest in people.”

The Quiet Duel Akira KurosawaLeaving Toho Studios, Kurosawa established a new work base by co-founding with colleagues Kajiro Yamamoto, Mikio Naruse, and Senkichi Taniguchi, the Eiga Geijutsu Kyokai (Film Art Association) in 1948. The first picture produced under this new arrangement was Shizukanaru Ketto (The Quiet Duel, 1949). “Since his debut, Mifune had been playing almost nothing but gangster roles,” stated the Japanese filmmaker, “and I wanted to give him a chance to broaden his artistic horizons. Turning his type-cast image around, I conceived a role for him as an intellectual with sharp reasoning powers.” Akira Kurosawa was rewarded for his unconventional casting decision. “Mifune turned in a magnificent performance as the young physician who refuses to marry the woman he loves for fear of infecting her with virtually incurable syphilis, which he contracted from a diseased patient during the Pacific War. Even his posture and movements underwent a complete change, and he succeeded so well in conveying the anguish of this pathetic hero that I, too, was surprised.”

A second film produced by Akira Kurosawa in 1949 was the crime-detective tale Nora inu (Stray Dog). “I first wrote the screenplay in the form of a novel,” remarked the director. “I am fond of the work of Georges Simenon, so I adopted his style of writing novels about social crime. This process took me a little less than six weeks, so I figured that I’d be able to rewrite it as a screenplay in ten days or so. Far from it. It proved to be a far more difficult task than writing a scenario from scratch, and it took me close to two months.”

Stray Dog Akira Kurosawa“The story of Stray Dog begins with a young police detective [Toshiro Mifune] on his way home from marksmanship practice at the headquarters’ range,” began Kurosawa. “He gets on a crowded bus, and in the unusually intense summer heat and crush of bodies his pistol is stolen.” The structure of the screenplay caused a flurry of activity when it came to the principle photography. “Stray Dog is made up of many short scenes in many different settings, so the little sound stage we used was cleared and redecorated with lightning speed. On fast days we shot five or six different scenes on it. As soon as the set was ready, we’d shoot and be done again, so the art department had no choice but to build and decorate sets while we slept.” Good fortune visited the set of the film. “No shooting ever went as smoothly for me as Stray Dog. Even the weather seemed to cooperate. There was a scene when we needed an evening shower. We got out the fire truck and prepared for the rolling of the camera. I had them start the hoses and called for action and camera, and just at that instant a terrific real thunderstorm began. We got a great scene.”

Even after winning the Mainichi Film Concours awards for Best Actor (Takashi Shimura), Best Film Score, Best Cinematography, and Best Art Direction, Kurosawa was not pleased with his ninth cinematic effort, “It is just too technical. All that technique and not one real thought in it.”

With the dawn of the 1950s, Akira Kurosawa was on the verge of becoming the first Japanese director to be known in the West.

Continue to part two.

For more on the filmmaker visit AkiraKurosawa.info, the Akira Kurosawa Foundation or the British Film Institute.

Also be sure to read Trevor's article marking 100 years since the director's birth - Akira Kurosawa: A Cinematic Artist.

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 19/03/10

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 19th - Sunday 21st March 2010.

2010 continues to be the year of 3D dominance as Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland remains firmly in control of the UK box office for the third consecutive week. With over £30m in the bank so far, Alice is just £2m shy of Avatar's haul at the same stage although it has some stiff competition ahead with both Dreamworks' How to Train Your Dragon and Warner Bros.' Clash of the Titans looking to take over the majority of 3D screens in the coming weeks.

Of the three new releases to make an impact in the top ten this week the most successful was action rom-com The Bounty Hunter, which benefits from advance screenings and places second with a five-day haul just north of £2m. These two extra days were less favourable though for Jim Carrey and Ewan McGregor, with their gay comedy I Love You Phillip Morris pulling in just half of its heterosexual rival to finish in fourth behind Martin Scorsese's Shutter Island (down one place from last week), while Jackie Chan family comedy The Spy Next Door opens in sixth.

Elsewhere Iraq War thriller Green Zone slips two places to fifth in its second week, with chart veteran Avatar dropping to seventh after a lengthy 14-week stay in the top half (with the majority of those at number one).
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo also falls two places but continues to perform well in eighth (the Swedish thriller is on track to become the UK's highest grossing Scandinavian release), while Hachi: A Dog's Tale and The Princess and the Frog round out the chart in ninth and tenth respectively.

Outside of the chart, John Travolta's latest - comedy Old Dogs co-starring Robin Williams - adds more misery after the disappointing performance of actioner From Paris With Love, banking a pitiful £130k from 205 screens.

Number one this time last year: Marley & Me
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Alice in Wonderland
£4,847,1293













































£30,493,427
2The Bounty Hunter
£2,055,0211





















































£2,055,021
3Shutter Island£1,813,2822































































£5,483,018
4I Love You Phillip Morris
£1,066,0921































































£1,066,092
5Green Zone£1,022,4582











































































£3,926,084
6The Spy Next Door
£698,1551





































































£698,155
7Avatar£445,80914

























































£90,596,474
8The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo£309,1352















































































£914,850
9Hachi: A Dog's Tale£260,8482









































































£902,615
10The Princess and the Frog£145,6517













































































£10,939,794


Incoming...

Family audiences can look forward to children's fantasy sequel Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang (cert. U) this Friday, which sees Ralph Fiennes and Maggie Gyllenhaal joining Emma Thompson, who reprises her title role from the 2005 original. Also opening this week is the Mike Judge comedy Extract (cert. 15), Brit action flick Shank (cert. 15) and American football drama The Blind Side (cert. 12A), featuring an Oscar-winning Sandra Bullock.

U.K. Box Office Archive

Akira Kurosawa: A Cinematic Artist

Trevor Hogg celebrates the centenary of internationally renowned filmmaker Akira Kurosawa...

Akira KurosawaBorn a century ago on March 23, 1910 was an artist who had the ability to cinematically blend Japanese culture with Western storytelling, allowing him to craft an enduring legend. “I am a man who likes Sotatsu, Gyokudo, and Tessai in the same way as van Gogh, Lautrec, and Rouault,” stated renowned filmmaker Akira Kurosawa. “I collect old Japanese lacquerware as well as antique French and Dutch glassware. In short, the Western and the Japanese could actually be said to live side by side in my mind, without the least sense of conflict.”

Nicknamed “the Emperor” for his ability to handle everything from screenwriting, to film editing and directing, Akira Kurosawa came about his chosen profession accidentally. The twenty-six year old discovered the advertisement of a film studio looking for assistant directors; he applied and was hired by the Toho Motion Picture Company (then known as Photo Chemical Laboratory) for which Kurosawa went on to produce thirteen movies from 1943 to 1958. “I had dabbled eagerly in painting, literature, theatre, music, and other arts and stuffed my head full of all the things that come together in the art of film,” wrote the filmmaker in the memoir Something Like an Autobiography (1982). “Yet I had never noticed that cinema was the one field where I would be required to make full use of all I had learned.”

Assigned to assist Kajiro Yamamoto (Hawai Mare oki kaisen), the young protégé embraced his mentor’s credo, “If you want to become a film director, first write scripts.” Reminiscing about his early directing career which debuted with Sugata Sanshiro (1943), Kurosawa stated, “There was no freedom of expression during the war. All I could do was read books and write scenarios, without having any real outlet for my own feelings. Derzu Uzala [1975] was one of the ideas that came to me then. Like other ideas, it underwent a process of fermentation and maturing, rather like alcohol. Those ideas exploded once the war was over. Looking back, those were happy days.”

Akira Kurosawa garnered global attention with a story about a rape and apparent murder told from multiple points-of-view; Rashomon captured the prestigious Golden Lion at the 1951 Venice Film Festival and an honorary Academy Award in 1952. The former painter cemented his international reputation with the release of Shichinin no samurai (1954) better known to the English speaking-world as Seven Samurai. “I like to see this film once every few years,” remarked New Zealand filmmaker and Oscar-winner Jane Campion (The Piano) of the classic Kurosawa tale that revolves around a group of warriors hired to defend a village. “I love it for its balance of humour, drama, and its deep affection for our noble and flawed natures. When I remember the film I smile and enjoy very much the breadth of the characters, all the beautiful courageous, broken and romantic samurai. I too want to be one of those samurai, and I want to make such a strong and kind film.”

By resetting the works of William Shakespeare, Fyodor Dostoevsky, and Maxim Gorky in his homeland, the Tokyo-native inspired his Western counterparts to imitate him with the star-studded The Magnificent Seven (1960), the Italian “spaghetti” Western A Fistful of Dollars (1967), and the space odyssey Star Wars (1977).

Not all was golden for the moviemaker; he was so intimately connected to his cinematic craft that the commercial failure of his first colour picture Dodesukaden (1970) contributed to him emulating his deceased brother Heigo. Fortunately, Kurosawa was unsuccessful in his suicide attempt and the director rebounded to produce Derzu Uzala; the picture was lauded with the Oscar for Best Foreign Film, and its creator became the first filmmaker to be awarded Japan’s Order of the Sacred Treasure, thereby, designating him a Person of Cultural Merits.

Channeling Shakespeare’s King Lear as a 1985 epic masterpiece about an aging Sengoku-era warlord and his three sons, Akira Kurosawa created the most expensive Japanese film of the time. “In Ran I tried to give Lear a history,” explained the director. “I tried to make clear that his power must rest on a lifetime of blood thirsty savagery. Forced ultimately to confront the consequences of his misdeeds, he is driven mad. But only by confronting his evil head-on can he transcend it and begin the struggle to virtue.” The movie won the BAFTA award for Best Foreign Film, and Kurosawa was nominated for Best Director at the Oscars.

As testimony to his legacy as a filmmaker, Akira Kurosawa received the Lifetime Achievement Oscar at the Academy Awards in 1990. “In sum, I don’t believe that the “messages” of my films are very obvious,” observed the director. “Rather, they are end products of my reflection.” Despite his death from a stroke on September 6, 1998, Kurosawa has continued to have an impact on the movie industry; his last script After the Rain was directed by Takashi Koizumi in 2000, the city of Imari became the site of a memorial museum, and Kurosawa’s son Hisao is completing a documentary begun by his father; Gendai no noh is about Noh, the classical Japanese musical drama performed since the 14th century. Commenting on the worldwide celebrations, christened AK100 Project, which include the release of addition footage to Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970), video games, commemorative stamps, and newly published books, Hisao said, “My hope is that people, especially younger audiences, see the work of Akira Kurosawa. This memorial will be my final act of devotion.”

Be sure to read Trevor's in-depth article covering the filmmaker's illustrious career - Epic Dreamer: An Akira Kurosawa Profile.

Watch Alex Cox's documentary - Kurosawa: The Last Emperor - parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.