Film Review
The failure of his first colour feature
Dodes'ka-den (1970) came as a
bitter blow to director Akira Kurosawa. Once one of Japan's most
esteemed filmmakers, Kurosawa was now having serious difficulty finding
financial support and an audience. Depression led him to attempt
suicide in 1971 but within two years he was back in business, making
his most ambitious film with the support of the Soviet film company
Mosfilm.
Dersu Uzala
was a spectacular beginning to the mature phase of Kurosawa's career,
an elegiac contemplation on man's relationship with the natural world
that is both visually stunning and harrowingly
humane.
The film is based on the real-life exploits of the Russian explorer
Vladimir Arsenyev, as recorded in his memoirs
Dersu Uzala. The book had
previously been adapted by the Soviet filmmaker Agasi Babayan in 1961
and Kurosawa had been interested in making his own film version for
over twenty years.
Dersu Uzala
had two themes that appealed to the Japanese filmmaker. First
there was the account of an extraordinary friendship between two men
from very different cultures, a Russian topographer and a nomadic
Chinese - two people who, in spite of their differences, grew to
develop a profound understanding and respect for each other that offers
hope for humanity. Then there is the story of man's relationship
with nature, something that was a particular concern for
Kurosawa. "People should be more humble toward nature," he once
remarked, " because we are a part of it and we must become harmonized
with it." In
Dersu Uzala,
Kurosawa shows how small man is when set aside the vastness of nature
and persuades us that it is only by showing humility and respecting the
natural world that humanity will survive.
The only one of Kurosawa's films to be shot on 70mm film,
Dersu Uzala has a visual impact
that surpasses almost anything to be found in his other work. The
most arresting sequence comes towards the end of Part One, with
Arsenyev and his dwarfish companion making a desperate bid to survive,
constructing a makeshift shelter from sea grass as the sun sinks
inexorably towards the horizon. It is a frantic race against
time, and the stark visuals coupled with some frenetic camerawork and
editing conjure up a harrowing sense of urgency. This is life on
a knife-edge - two feeble humans pitted against the awesome might of
nature. Even in his more action-oriented samurai films, Kurosawa
never crafted a more tense and gripping sequence than this.
The pace slows down markedly in the film's second part, as the tragic
final chapter in Dersu's life is recounted with exquisite
humanity. This reveals a new side to Kurosawa's art - more
contemplative, more subtle, more ironic. In the first half of the
film, Dersu shows us how to live with dignity in a hostile world.
In the second half, Dersu becomes a tragic figure, progressively
demeaned by the cruel processes of ageing. Out of place in the
civilised modern world, he must return to nature, but it is here that
he dies, slain not by the savagery of nature but by the thoughtless
greed of man. There is a pointed meaning to Dersu's death that
gives Kurosawa's film a special pertinence. Man's worst enemy is
not nature but himself.
Released in 1975 after a long and gruelling location shoot in one of
the most inhospitable regions of Siberia
Dersu Uzala was a phenomenal
success both in the Soviet Union and abroad. Just when it looked
as if his talents were failing him, Akira Kurosawa came back in a blaze
of glory, deluged with praise from critics the world over. Not
only did the film receive two major awards at the 9th Moscow
International Film Festival, it was also awarded the Best Foreign
Language Film Oscar in 1976, the second time Kurosawa received the
award (the first being for his 1950 masterpiece
Rashomon,
the film that first introduced him to western audiences). Before
his death in 1998, Kurosawa would make five more films, including two
of his grandest samurai films,
Kagemusha
(1980) and
Ran (1984). As impressive
as these late films are, none of them has quite the poetry and
import of
Dersu Uzala - a
film that, in our ecologically conscious era, has a profound resonance.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Akira Kurosawa film:
Ran (1985)