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Rashomon
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Directed by Akira Kurosawa
This landmark film is a brilliant exploration of truth and human weakness. It opens with a priest, a woodcutter, and a peasant taking refuge from a downpour beneath a ruined gate in 12th-century Japan. The priest and the woodcutter, each looking stricken, discuss the trial of a notorious bandit for rape and murder. As the retelling of the trial unfolds, the participants in the crime -- the bandit (Toshiro Mifune), the rape victim (Machiko Kyo), and the murdered man (Masayuki Mori) -- tell their plausible though completely incompatible versions of the story. In the bandit's version, he and the man wage a spirited duel after the rape, resulting in the man's death. In the woman's testimony, she is spurned by her husband after being raped. Hysterical with grief, she kills him. In the man's version, speaking through the lips of a medium, the bandit beseeches the woman after the rape to go away with him. She insists that the bandit kill her husband first, which angers the bandit. He spurns her and leaves. The man kills himself. Seized with guilt, the woodcutter admits to the shocked priest and the commoner that he too witnessed the crime. His version is equally feasible, although his veracity is questioned when it is revealed that he stole a dagger from the crime scene. Just as all seems bleak and hopeless, a baby appears behind the gate. The commoner seizes the moment and steals the child's clothes, while the woodcutter redeems himself and humanity in the eyes of the troubled priest, by adopting the infant. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
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chrismorrellchrismorrell Rashomon Iconic or what?
by chrismorrell in chrismorrell Blog
loved it.
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"'Very Rashomon' ,or 'Rashomonlike' has become a shorthand movie term,of course...and it's not difficult to see why...the concept of the multi-perspective story, entered the mainstream cinema language...Some of the aspects of some of the story threads may seem arcane ,or incredibly corny,but that would be to critcise them completly out of context...drawn together by the three 'misfits' sheltering from the rain,the conclusion is incredibly contrived,but ,somehow,also, amazingly mo " [More]
BigJeffLebowskiBigJeffLebowski “We are all witnesses.... We sh ...
by BigJeffLebowski in BigJeffLebowski Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Witnesses, the latest film by Vinko Bresan, has been compared to Rashomon. It is not the first film to draw comparisons to Akira Kurosawa’s masterpiece, but it is one of the few films for which the comparison is more than superficia " [More]
jlgdrdjlgdrd True Truth: The 24th Day
by jlgdrd in Wicked Fun
hasn't rated it.
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"Pretty early in The 24th Day, it becomes apparent it was taken from a play, a dodgy proposition at best. Adhering to a key location, as plays often do, can be a successful approach, or it can crash and burn. Very slowly. It depends on the nature of the piece. The 24th Day has, essentially, two characters and it can be difficult to transfer a prolonged confrontation to the big screen. In a theater, we can see how they stand in relation " [More]
jlgdrdjlgdrd Strange Flowers: Proteus
by jlgdrd in Wicked Fun
hasn't rated it.
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"Proteus is an historical drama, shot directly on video in the style of many past PBS specials, more comparable in experience to theatre than film. In the wrong hands stiff and self-conscious, in the right ones understated and dynamic. Filmmakers John Greyson and Jack Lewis have found in actual records of incidents emerging from Robben Island, a penal colony of Cape Town, " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Which of these films written ...
by Risselada in Movie Polls
"Although Harakiri is just amazing and the movie that caused me to look into this writer and make this poll, I still think I have to reserve Rashomon for my favorite. It's stunning to think that amazing piece of work was Hashimoto's first film! " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Which of these films written by ...
by Risselada in Movie Polls
"Please reference this thread for the rules of this group. I recently watched the amazing Harakiri. It's one of the best films I've seen in a while. I just discovered that a man named Shinobu Hashimoto was a screenwriter on this film and some of the greatest and " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALI ...
by Risselada in Filmgaming
"1. The 7 Up series. Ok, I haven't even seen it all yet, but so far it seems to say more about humanity, it's journey, it's internal and outward struggles and joys more than anything else. 2. Planet Earth. Let's not be so conceited to only present them with HUMAN life on earth. Of course David Attenborough's narration will re " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Akira Kurosawa
by Risselada in Real movies
"I've seen 5 Kurosawa movies but wish it was more.I think Seven Samurai would be a fantastic place to start!Rashomon is my other favorite.If you like Shakespeare check out Ran or Throne of Blood (I " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Filmspotting #171: Bourne U ...
by Risselada in Filmspotting
"HOW! I mean absolutely HOW can you not have Rashomon on your list??????!!!!!!! " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Rashomon's winning the Golden Lion in the 1951 Venice Film Festival is one of the key events of world cinema. Not only did it establish director Akira Kurosawa as one of the masters of the medium, but it compelled European and American audiences to look seriously at non-Western cinemas. Without Rashomon, the international critical successes of Kenji Mizoguchi, Satyajit Ray, and others are difficult to imagine. The film's structure, which replays the same event though different characters' eyes, layers ambiguity atop ambiguity. Not only are the witnesses' testimonies completely incompatible but the reliability of the film's primary narrator, the woodcutter, is seriously questioned. If the woodcutter initially lied about his role in this crime, then what else could he be lying about? The film comes precariously close to nihilism--the denial of all objective truth and the utter senselessness of existence. Yet Kurosawa pulls back from the abyss in the film's final moments. Though most of Rashomon is adapted from two short stories by famously misanthropic Japanese author Ryunosuke Akutagawa, Kurosawa himself penned the final sequence, an elegant summation of his signature humanism. The truth may be inscrutable, even unknowable, Kurosawa argues, but hope and compassion remain. This vision struck a chord in European audiences for whom the horrors of war were still fresh and the existentialist philosophies of Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus were gaining popularity. Kurosawa's dynamic editing and swaggering camerawork seemed vibrant and sophisticated for a national cinema thought at the time to be second-rate, and the film proved influential to several generations of filmmakers. Ingmar Bergman included a sequence in The Virgin Spring (1960) strongly reminiscent of the film's most memorable sequences--the woodcutter's walk through the forest--and Alain Resnais acknowledged Rashomon's influence on the bold plot structure and existential content of his art-house classic Last Year at Marienbad (1961). In both artistic achievement and historical importance, Rashomon remains one of the masterpieces of cinema. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 

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