Title: Kurosawa Akira
1Kurosawa Akira
2Perfectionist
- Movie directors, or should I say people who
create things, - are very greedy and they can never be satisfied.
Thats - why they can keep on working. Ive been able to
work for - so long because I think next time Ill make
something - good."
3Perfectionist
- Total control over his film
- I am my film nothing
- more and nothing less.
- Kurosawa Akira
- Screenwriter, director and editor
- He expected the same enthusiasm and dedication
from his staff and co-workers.
4PerfectionistAnecdotes
- Nickname Emperor
- The director who made something impossible
possible. - 20 tons of water was used for the opening scene
of Rashomon and the local area ran out of water. - The water was coloured with calligraphy ink.
- He demanded all furniture had to be antique and
they had to be filled with antique clothes and
materials.
5Perfectionist
- Kurosawa got the roof of a house removed to film
a short scene from a train in High and Low. - Kurosawa demanded to change the direction of
river flow for better visual effects. - Kurosawa asked actors call each other by the
names of the characters that they played and wore
their costumes before, during and after
rehearsals.
6Perfectionist
- Kurosawa used real arrows for the concluding
scenes of Throne of Blood. Master archers aimed
at the targets only inches away from Washizus
body.
7Realism
- Thorough historical research
- Gritty (exaggerated - hyper) realism - costume
designs, set designs, befitting the living
conditions of characters
8Realism
- Even samurai look extremely shabby and hopelessly
poor, when their fortune declines or become
masterless ronin. - More realistic rendition of the Medieval time in
Japan than in other conventional genre films.
9Realism
- Kurosawas gendai geki (contemporary drama) are
(dramatized) records of the immediate post-war
period Japan - poverty, desolation and recovery - Lives of ordinary people and people desperate for
survival.
10Realism
- (Hyper-) real fighting rather than theatrical
display of chanbara (sword play) - Performance to show a fight for life rather than
showy swordsmanship
11Heightened-realism
- Are Kurosawas films realist? - No.
- The reality in his films is modified and
exaggerated - heightened reality - The representation of reality is backed by
heightened aestheticism and stylistics
12Heightened Stylism
- Film style to appeal to the emotion rather than
intellect of the spectator - Psychological rather than mimetic realism
- (Mimesis mimicry and copying of reality)
13Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- The emotional effects are enhanced by dynamic
visual images and sound effects being brought
together. - Heightened psychological and exaggerated
realism - expressive mise-en-scène (acting,
lighting, camera work, and composition).
14Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Contrast between stillness and movement
quietness and excitement - On the spur of the moment a quiet scene is cut to
a scene full of movements and excitement
15Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Dynamism of movement enhanced by swish pan,
graphically matched and quick editing.
16Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Sudden movement of samurai in response to a false
alarm in Seven Samurai
17Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Suspense created by trick photography telephoto
lens shortens deapth, Red Beard
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21Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Visual dynamism and kineticism - epic scale
movement of the subjects on the screen shot by
multiple camera and edited in frantic paces.
22Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Dynamic movements unusual in Japanese cinema
against expansive landscape and large horizon - Throne of Blood and Western films
23Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Cinematic sound is that which does not simply
- add to, but multiplies, two or three times, the
- effect of the image.
- Kurosawa Akira
24Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- The final battle sequence of Seven Samurai shot
with 8 cameras and edited in a frantic pace. - Sound effects of beating rain, running horses,
their cries, splashing water, mens yelling
which are mixed together to create dynamic sound
track in Seven Samurai.
25Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Emotional appeal and heightened realism achieved
by lighting and camera work. - Rashomon - shot by Miyagawa Kazuo, the
photographer of Mizoguchi Kenji using reflecting
mirrors.
26Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Geometrical and painterly compositions enhance
psychological effects on the audience - two
police detectives pursuing the murderer who has
killed people using the gun that he stole from
them - vertical shadows of grills create create
psychological suspense (photo, Stray Dog)
27Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- The bed of flowers on which the young couple lie
or sit - creating lyrical effects in No Regrets
for Our Youth and Seven Samurai
28Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Paisley patters of the futon hang to dry in Red
Beard was shot with a telephoto lens. Depth
disappeared and two dimensional quality
emphasized the patterns.
29Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Natural phenomenon visually and aurally
emphasizes the atmosphere of the scene. - Howling wind and fierce rain
- Strong wind churning up sand - bleak townscape
Yojinbo
30Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- The opening scene of Rashomon, a ruined gate in a
great storm. - Natural phenomenon reveals the smallness and
weakness of the human being and its rational
power and moral strength.
31Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Snow in the park whose creation Watanabe
contributed and where he dies. Ikiru - Loneliness and ephemerality
32Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Intense heat in Stray Dog and High and Low
- Heat is metaphor for corruption, social
impoverishment, and criminality
33Hyper-stylistic Filmmaking
- Dense fog and mist - hinting the existence of
super-natural being and super-human power. - Throne of Blood, Ran and Dreams