| Index | 3 reviews in total |
9 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Uneven, 29 January 2000
Author:
Gabe (cklinger@earthlink.net) from Chicago
Barely scrapes the surface of what Kurosawa and his films were about. Despite some interesting insights by Japanese film expert Donald Richie and a story by director Arturo Ripstein, all the interviews seem hurried and incomplete. Director Alex Cox doesn't even cover Kurosawa's whole filmography- interviewee Francis Coppola mentions more films than the actual documentary manages to do. But what can really be done in only 50 minutes about such a master? For a more detailed and affectionate approach to Kurosawa, check out Chris Marker's A.K., a documentary of the making of Ran.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
the speed-reader's guide to Kurosawa history, as part eulogy, 23 March 2007
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
Akira Kurosawa's life and films barely got the full time allotted him
in the documentary that came out a year after this one, titled just
Kurosawa, and Cox's film is even shorter, but at least his doc the Last
Emperor gets a couple of interesting bits amid the usual scraps of
facts. For someone who's only seen Rashomon or Seven Samurai from
Kurosawa, or even nothing at all, the film proves to be a suitable form
of speed-reading, in a sense, cause you get to know all the essentials
without the hang-ups of going into all of the little details one
shallow enough might not care for. So it's the opposite of the most
elaborate, painstakingly researched book The Emperor and the Wolf, and
we get a mix of interviews from family, ex-crew members, critics, and
directors who sometimes gush over him, and sometimes point out some
interesting stories. One Russian filmmaker, for example, relays a great
story about how Kurosawa was not the typical Japanese personality by
actually getting very angry during a conversation.
Or when Kurosawa's presence leaving home was almost a sign of relief
(finally, he's out of the house, Kurosawa's daughter was quoted saying
his mother said about him) from the long periods where there was no
work, and almost no nothing really. There's also a very painful story
in the Tora, Tora, Tora scandal that Donald Richie tells, with Cox
putting in little jabs of editing to punctuate it all. Cox, of course,
is choosy in what he puts into the film from Kurosawa's films, and only
leaves in the prestigious works (Rashomon, Ikiru, Seven Samurai, Throne
of Blood, Yojimbo, Ran, etc), without putting any mention to the great
underrated works like Drunken Angel or High and Low (though with a good
little mention to Madadayo). But it does amount to a pretty fair
tribute to one of the masters of world cinema, a man who ate, slept and
breathed movies and seemed to work almost in sync with the world when
he was working. Very short and to the point on the bulletins of
influences for Kurosawa, and whom he influenced, but if you got less
than an hour to kill it's worth the time.
A Must See for Film Enthusiasts, 1 February 2000
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Author:
Patrick J. O'Malley (pomalley@worldnet.att.net) from Chicago, IL
From a talented film maker comes a very respectable and concise documentary on one of the "Masters." In 50 minutes, Cox is able to paint a beautiful portrait of this Master's career and family life, and his body of work. While the length of the documentary is constrained, it still compels the average moviegoer to see all of Kurosawa's films. After all, that is the way it should be - that the viewer do the work. But Cox's documentary provides great motivation to do so. And as an aside, it is extremely interesting to hear some inside stories from the people who worked with Kurosawa. The Last Emperor is a great and important achievement. One would hope for another documentary by the people at Exterminating Angel.
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