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11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Heartbreaking Inner Duel between Conscience and Desire, 27 May 2009
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Author:
Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
In 1944, in WWII, Dr. Kyoji Fujisaki (Toshirô Mifune) cuts his finger
with the scalpel during a surgery in a field hospital and is infected
by spirochete from his patient Susumu Nakada (Kenjiro Uemura). After
the blood test, he realizes that he has contracted syphilis, but he
does not have the necessary medicine to treat the disease. He advises
Nakada to seek medical treatment for his disease. In 1946, after the
war, he breaks off his six years engagement with his beloved fiancée
Misao Matsumoto (Miki Sanjo) but he does not tell the truth to her to
let her go and find another man to get married. The hopeless apprentice
nurse Rui Minegishi (Noriko Sengoku) witnesses Kioji injecting
Salvarsan to treat his syphilis, and first she misunderstands why the
doctor is sick. Later, after discovering the truth about his disease,
she changes her behavior and becomes the confident listener of the
doctor's inner feelings. When Kyoji accidentally meets Nakada in the
police station of his town and finds that his wife is pregnant, he
warns the reckless man about the risk of his lack of responsibility to
his wife and baby.
"Shizukanaru Ketto" is a little and quite unknown gem from Master Akira
Kurosawa, with a heartbreaking tale about the inner duel between
conscience and desire of a pure and good doctor contaminated by a
corrupt and dirty patient. Like in "Yoidore Tenshi" ("Drunken Angel")
from the previous year, the story may be also interpreted in a
metaphoric sense that reflects the moment of after-war society in
Japan, where "a pure man is contaminated by the dirtiness and only
three, five or ten years later he will be healed after a long
treatment". The strong code of honor of Japanese people in the 40's
explains the shame that would be for Dr. Fyoji to disclose that he had
the dishonored syphilis. His sacrifice, hiding the truth from Misao, to
give a chance to his twenty-seven year-old fiancée to find another
husband is awesome. But the emotional scene when Kyoji discloses his
feelings to Minegishi made my eyes wet, and is one of the most
heartbreaking dialogs I have seen in a classic movie. Last but not the
least; the story never becomes a melodramatic soap-opera due to the
superb direction of Mr. Kurosawa. My vote is nine.
Title (Brazil): "Duelo Silencioso" ("Silent Duel")
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Glimpses of things to come in early Kurosawa, 18 June 1999
Author:
jacqui chen (jacqui_chen@juno.com) from Dallas
The Quiet Duel features Mifune's second role for Kurosawa, as a young
doctor
who contracts syphilis from operating on a patient in WWII South Pacific.
This alone constitutes the opening and perhaps most riveting sequence of
the
film. In the little shack
where the operation take place, effects of irritation and discomfort hit a
high note with the leaking roof, pestering flies, and assaulting humidity.
This shabby condition breaks
Mifune's concentration and leads him to cut himself in the patient's
infected blood. There is much beautiful play of light and shadow across
the
virginal white uniforms of the
doctors.
When Mifune goes back to his father's (Takashi Shimura) medical practice
in
Japan after the war, the film staggers in cajoling our empathy for the
hero's incredulous dilemma: How to protect his fiancee - whom he has kept
waiting for six years during the war - from the syphilis he contracted
abroad, yet to be honest with himself and his own physical desires. The
movie strives to be the tragic love story of a sexually unfulfilled man,
an
Unjustifiably Tainted Virgin who pains in silence. He is so saintly that
his
self-denial (abstinence) inspires a single mother (Noriko Sengoku) to
become
a certified nurse. Despite relatively good performance from the actors,
the
story of a saintly individual done wrong by a disease that is symbolically
social restricts itself to melodramatic proportions.
Thankfully, there is a subplot involving the patient, aka the agent of
Doctor Mifune's syphilis. As irresponsible (and promiscuous) as he is, he
gives syphilis to his own wife and
this ends ups killing their first born. The wife is a victim in the sense
that Mifune contracted his disease, and much of Kurosawa's famed humanism
involves the wife's recovery from her stillborn and the promise of her
eventually ridding syphilis.
This film was made just after several labor strikes broke out at Toho,
Kurosawa's home studio. The strikes had devastating effects on the unity
and
creative synergy of film talents in Japan then, and Kurosawa made this '49
film under Daiei-- with a relatively inexperienced production unit and
using
a contemporary stageplay that would not alienate moviegoers. The result is
vastly uneven, aside from the fantastic opening that is classic Kurosawa.
Further, this film continues the cultivation of a Kurosawa-obsession: that
of a saintly doctor who, despite his own faults, tries to be his most
honest
with the world. This can be first seen in Drunken Angel's Dr. Sanada, and
later - most memorably - in Red Beard's Akahige/Dr.Niide.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Splendid actors, 18 November 2006
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Author:
RNQ from Canada
An admonitory melodrama movingly sustained by splendid acting. Toshiro Mifune would later play a different sort of strong and silent character (John Wayne's an unworthy comparison). Here the silence is pulled inward, the head often drooped, the silence a wish not to offend. No wonder it's like the female characters are pounding on the door of this tall, handsome man when he cannot open himself to them. He's doing noble work as a physician, and fortunately the sombre story is sometimes lightened with patients grateful for cure, as it is in a way by his irresponsible double with whom he shares a probably incurable infection. Well set-up scenes often beautifully photographed, like the detail of rainwater dripping into a pan during a wartime jungle operation, coming after the surgeon has asked the patient's pulse to be monitored.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
well-acted melodrama that isn't one of Kurosawa's best, 2 August 2008
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
Every Akira Kurosawa film is at least interesting, and even in a work
like The Quiet Duel, which is designed possible as something of a
'minor' work in the director's cannon, there's things about it that are
striking and exceptional. The opening scene of the doctor, played by
Toshiro Mifune, operating on the patient who will change his life
forever, has a double-sided tension to it about not just the fate of
the operation but of something else (this helps if you don't know what
is going to happen). The way the scene is cut, the effect of the rain
outside, the pan at the floor, the rain falling on the pan and making
the one louder sound, it all amounts of a near-classic Kurosawa scene.
This and the climax are, arguably, the best scenes of what is otherwise
a good if shaky melodrama.
The problem might just be that I'm not tuned into this tearjerker side
of Kurosawa, at least one that isn't as well-cooked, so to speak, as
some of his best efforts. The premise is really good, as a doctor
contracts syphilis by a mistake while operating on a patient during the
war, and has to treat himself with medicine and cannot find a way to
tell his to-be wife about his ailment (or, in fact, why he cannot
marry). And saying that this isn't entirely 'well-cooked' is to say
that the premise, while fascinating, doesn't entirely develop into a
fully fascinating story. There are patches that seem to kind of coast,
like something one might see on day-time television (not quite soap
opera but close), and it's only in the last third that things really
start to pick up dramatically.
Thankfully, Mifune is on his A-game as usual with his best collaborator
at the helm, particularly in a scene where he (uncharacteristically for
Kurosawa) breaks down in tears after seeing his once-possible-wife off
to marry someone else, and there's a strange, cool mixture of musical
instruments on the soundtrack- not quite what one would expect for a
melodrama (i.e. xylophone, harmonica, harps, accordions). By the
climax, as I said, it gets very good with the original patient Takata
coming back in a drunken, syphilis-infected frenzy to the hospital. It
just isn't enough, overall, to recommend it as highly as Kurosawa's
best; Red Beard and Drunken Angel, also starring Mifune, are much
better as medical/hospital dramas. 7.5/10
6 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Brilliant but flawed!, 30 August 2001
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Author:
dorlago from California
As in "Drunken Angel" this film uses illness as a allegory to symbolize Japanese society after WW2. Though not as powerful "The Quiet Duel" does have some fine moments. The beginning sequence is beautifully filmed. All the Kurosawa techniques are there. The play of light, the pounding rain storm, the purposefully annoying fan, and the haunting music give this intro stunning power and make the rest of the film rather pale in comparison. The acting at times tends to be a little melodramatic but the characters are convincing even if their motives are questionable. I won't go into details. I don't want to give the story away. This film contains what I think is one of the best scenes between Mifune and Shimura. It is the magical, simple, and poignant musical cigarette box scene. An interesting point....... Watch this and then watch "Drunken Angel". Many of the same sets and props were used. Shimura's office in "Drunken Angel" and Mifune's office in "The Quiet Duel" are almost identical.
Another great Kurosawa's film, 5 January 2012
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Author:
Luis Angel Gonzalez from Mexico
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This film could easily earn a place up there on the top of my favorite
Kurosawa's films; I really was not expecting such a wonderfully
portrayed story, but I guess I should no longer doubt Kurosawa, as he
never ceases to surprise me.
The story centers on the life of doctor Kyoji (enacted by Great Toshiro
Mifune), who accidentally contracts Syphilis from one of his operation
tools covered in infected blood of a patient undergoing an operation,
in which he was taking part. That incident would bring nothing more
than misfortune and profound despair to his life, for he would restrain
from doing that which he longed for; being alongside the woman he
loved. In a few words, this is really a captivating yet sad story of a
man suffering in deep silence who, in order to not make the life of the
woman miserable, decides not to explain to her that which had befallen
him, for he thought that would slowly conduce her towards renouncing
him.
The acting is astounding and it is actually one of the most important
aspects of the film. Toshiro Mifune, with the obvious help of his
amazing acting skills, executes his role superbly, in that the
suffering of the man seems truthful. Also, in one of the last scenes,
where he lets the woman go to her wedding, his so steady attitude
suddenly falls into absolute despair, bringing all his deep burdens to
light, proof that even the most determined person has their limits.
The camera-work, just as I expected, is of great importance to the
portrayal of the film, it is always in the right place to catch those
expressive moments that are so essential to it.
I definitely consider this film to be as important to Kurosawa's
filmography as many of his other films are. The film deserves a watch.
My Score: 9.3/10
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Despite being a "lesser" Kurosawa film, this is an exceptional film, 12 May 2009
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
THE QUIET DUEL (SHIZUKANARU KETTO) is among the least famous of
director Akira Kurosawa's films. You might assume this is because it's
a "lesser" film--in other words, one of the director's few misfires.
Well, I would disagree strongly. While there are a few small elements
that I didn't love (such as the doctor's almost martyr-like
unwillingness to tell anyone about his infection), there is also so
much to love--and some terrific performances. Perhaps some of the
reason this film isn't as highly regarded is because it lacks the
spectacle of films like THE SEVEN SAMURAI or RAN. However, I usually
prefer the director's quieter and more human films--such as IKARU,
SCANDAL and THE BAD SLEEP WELL (among others).
The film begins during WWII. Toshirô Mifune is a doctor operating on
many wounded soldiers. During one surgery, he removes his surgical
gloves and then gets cut--yet continues operating on a man who turns
out to have syphilis. Now I really wish the film had explained this
scene better, as you either can assume the doctors had a shortage of
gloves OR the doctor is simply an idiot. Based on the rest of the
movie, you'd assume no more gloves were available and if they were,
then operating without them was very reckless.
The film then picks up in 1946. Now Mifune is working at a low-income
medical clinic and no one knows that he now is infected with
syphilis--not even his father or sweet fiancée. All the fiancée knows
is that after being engaged for six years and waiting for him
throughout the war, he inexplicably won't commit to a date for the
marriage now that it has ended. Secretly he continues giving himself
injections of a drug to eliminate this usually sexually transmitted
disease and he knows that if he does consummate his relationship, he
will infect her as well because the treatment regimen at this advanced
state is time-consuming. Now the movie did explain his logic for
keeping this secret to himself but I still didn't buy into this as in
the long run--it would have probably been a lot better just to tell
her.
However, despite the couple plot problems I mentioned, there is so much
to love about the film. Mifune and the rest are great but I was
particularly impressed by Noriko Sengoku who plays a wonderful part. I
say wonderful because like some of the best characters in film, she
isn't exactly who you think she is and her character grows and changes
throughout the film. Despite only being a supporting player, I actually
think her part is the best in the film. She plays an apprentice nurse
who is very lazy and unlikable when you first see her. I naturally
assumed that throughout the film she would continue this way and be a
major thorn in the doctor's side. However, as the film progresses, she
is revealed to have much depth and is a wonderful counterpoint to the
long-suffering doctor. I especially enjoyed her scenes late in the
film, such as when she and the doctor break down and cry about his
predicament as well as the scene where she attacks the man who infected
Mifune. The crying scene was particularly effective, as you rarely see
this sort of raw emotion in film--particularly in the 1940s as well as
from a man.
There is a lot more to this film that I haven't mentioned including a
couple sub-plots. All are superb and show that even though this is a
very muted and understated film, it also is very, very powerful.
Overall, a film made much better by the director's gentle touch and
some riveting performances.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
I have to have the conscience of a doctor, and the conscience of a man. It is hard., 20 March 2009
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Author:
lastliberal from United States
One rarely, if ever goes wrong watching a film directed by Akira
Kurosawa and starring Toshirô Mifune, even if it one of the early ones.
In this film, however, the star is not Mifune, but the man who plays
his father, Takashi Shimura, destined to achieve greater fame in Ikiru,
and The Seven Samurai.
Mifune comes back from the war with Syphilis, a disease he contracted
during an operation. He must make drastic changes in his life starting
with his finance of six years, Miki Sanjo. He finds the man who gave
him the disease, and spends his energy trying to get him to stop
spreading it, horrified that he has a pregnant wife.
Noriko Sengoku (Stray Dog, Drunken Angel, Blind Beast) plays a
self-absorbed nurse trainee and provides comedy to an otherwise
depressing film. She transforms after having a baby she didn't want,
and after learning of Mifune's plight. She is a talented performer in
this film showing many facets.
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