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Akira Kurosawa's Dreams
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Directed by Akira Kurosawa.
Following up on his critically acclaimed, blood-splattered epic Ran, master director Akira Kurosawa looks inward with this collection of eight brightly colored dreams. The first section centers on a young boy (Mitsunori Izaki), who witnesses a forest wedding procession of fox spirits in spite of his mother's (Mitsuko Baisho) warning. The second section concerns the same lad who converses with peach-tree spirits after the trees have been cruelly cut down. This is followed by a party of mountain climbers struggling to make it back to base camp in the midst of a terrible blizzard. The fourth dream deals with a man (Akira Terao) -- a Kurosawa stand-in complete with the director's trademark floppy white hat -- who encounters ghosts of Japan's militaristic past in a forlorn tunnel. In the following dream, the same man ventures into a Van Gogh painting called The Crows and meets the artist himself (Martin Scorsese). The sixth and seventh dreams venture into nightmare territory -- one deals with a nuclear meltdown that threatens Japan while the other concerns post-nuclear mutants. In the final dream, Kurosawa meets a 103-year-old man (played by Ozu regular Chishu Ryu) in a utopian rural village. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
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ProteusProteus Re:TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALI ...
by Proteus in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"Hey, stranger. How's tricks? Here's a brief overview of life on earth, in 5 or so languages: 5. Akira Kurosawa's Dreams: An overview of human foibles and achievements, presented with unflinching sympathy and penetrating understanding. 4. The Maltese Falcon: Honor and integrity and everything (drugs, money, sex, etc.) combatting it in a fast-paced, but tightly focused character study. Has the double virtue of leaving Casablanca to be seen at some other point down the road. 3. Jules & Jim: Love and Romance, and the importance of knowing the difference. How life feels to the young, and how decisions can be made without regard for consequences, based on intuition, principle, and ambiguity. 2. The Tin Drum: The follies of youth in competition with the absurdity of life and the misery of war - a firm lesson on the harsh realities of life, and the redemptive power of imagination and individuality. 1. My Life as a Dog - a second helping of the lessons of The Tin Drum, this masterpi ... " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re: Most Interesting, strange, ...
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
liked it.
"Another very strange, interesting movie I saw was Akira Kurosawa's Dreams. I'm putting this as a scary movie too because there were a few stories about ghosts and one was a demon after a nuclear holocaust, etc. It was a little spooky in some parts. I can tell you that it moved very slow in some places but the scenary was really breathtaking. It is definately worth watching just because of that and to see Japanese culture and folk legends come to life. It was very cool and very bizarre at the same time, I guess that is why it is called his dreams...just don't watch it when you are really hyper. " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Stunning Images
by divinemsjunebug in divinemsjunebug Blog
liked it.
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"These stories were so interesting and so beautiful. I absolutely loved the colors and the landscapes...just gorgeous. It did move a tad slow for me but it was definately worth seeing, I think my favorites were the story about the peach blossoms and the last story. It was so cool. I loved how they made some Japenese folk stories come to life and how they showed that man was destroying the beauty of nature all around us... " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re: Seven Samurai and Kurosawa
by divinemsjunebug in FRESH
liked it.
"I have another Kurosawa movie on my Netflix Queue coming up. It looks really good because it is several short stories - here is a little bit of what it says about Akira Kurosawa's Dreams:Eight enchanting short stories from the Japanese master director. In "Sun Under the Rain," which emerges from director Akira Kurosawa's personal memories, a child spies a fox's wedding ceremony in a magical forest. George Lucas's Industrial Light and Magic special effects group shines in the "Crows" segment, in which an art admirer finds himself living within the paintings of Van Gogh (played with verve by Kurosawa enthusiast Martin Scorsese). " [More]
jane_be_janejane_be_jane dreams
by jane_be_jane in jane_be_jane Blog
loved it.
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"absolutely beautiful! i haven't seen the movie in nearly 10 years, but the memory will always stick with me. i wish i owned it. i should have jumped at the chance when it first came out on dvd, i remember seeing it on the shelf. i can't imagine a more haunting or captivating film. " [More]
PuhnnerPuhnner Re: Lack of Updates
by Puhnner in From Asia With Love
loved it.
"Here are a couple that I have seen recently that were just great.Sex and FuryDeadly Outlaw: RekkaA Scene at the SeaBranded to Killand here are a few more for your list:Akira Kurosawa's DreamsVisitor QGozuUgestuRed BeardThe Bad Sleep WellBlackmail is my LifeBrotherChaosDodes Ka-denGo, Go Second Time VirginHarakiri just my thoughts... " [More]
PuhnnerPuhnner Akira Kurosawa's Dreams
by Puhnner in Puhnner Blog
loved it.
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"The Dreams:Sunshine through the RainThe Peach OrchardThe BlizzardThe TunnelCrowsMount Fuji in RedThe Weeping DemonVillage of the Watermills What do dreams tell us? What do these of Kurosawa tell us? From what stuff are Dreams constructed? Mine, never as lyrical as these in this film, typically take the events of the day, mix them up a bit, add a bit of extraneous information, pour on some garbled insight, add some emotional coloring, and then become sort of an amalgam of what has occurred during the day offering new and I would hope fresh insights about that which has transpired during the course of my day. Of course, in Kurosawa's Dreams, none of the dreams are disjointed like mine. All the dreams are much more structured, and follow a discernible narrative, but all are nonetheless, clearly magical. Of the eight, I am hard pressed to make a choice of a favorite; it seems so difficult (the clouds of drifting peach blossoms like a blizzard of snow, in “The Peach Orcha ... " [More]
 



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