Film Review
Akira Kurosawa's follow-up to his stylish crime-thriller
Drunken Angel (1948) is a
surprisingly low-key affair, a modest hospital melodrama which shows
little of the director's customary cinematic bravura and is consequently
all too easily overlooked. Adapted from a stage play by the
acclaimed Japanese playwright Kazuo Kikuta,
The Silent Duel would appear to fit
more easily into the filmography of more traditional Japanese
filmmakers, Ozu or Mizoguchi, than Kurosawa's. The director's use
of long static takes and theatrical blocking accentuates the film's
staginess, but this approach is undoubtedly the right one for a film
which is focused so intensely on a man's inner struggle to reconcile
his conscience with his desire - the duel referred to in the
title. Made when Japan was under American occupation, the film's
frequent references to a perfect body being polluted by a shameful
disease can be read as a veiled allusion to a nation's shame of having
to live under the control of a foreign power.
After their first successful collaboration on
Drunken Angel, Kurosawa had few
reservations over giving Toshirô Mifune the lead role in
The Silent Duel. It was a
daring piece of casting as Mifune is clearly far better suited for
tough action man roles than those which demand quiet introspection (as
is evident in his later work for Kurosawa). Whilst Mifune is
certainly not the obvious casting choice for the part of a
conscience-stricken medical man, his performance is hard to fault,
arguably one of his best, remarkable when you consider that this is
only his second major role. By containing his energy within his
powerful frame and by suppressing his emotions beneath a mask of
apparent placidity, Mifune gives a very credible portrayal of a man who
has, by necessity, grown accustomed to keeping his feelings from public
gaze. In the scene in which his character finally breaks down and
has his frustration and anger dragged out of him, Mifune is harrowingly
convincing. Mifune's success in this role may have been what
prompted Kurosawa to cast him as another medical man (albeit a
grouchier and older version) in
Red Beard (1965), the last film
on which the two worked together.
Toshirô Mifune may dominate the film with his extraordinary
physical presence but his is not the only creditable performance.
Takashi Shimura, another favourite of Kurosawa, is cast as Mifune's
father (perhaps bizarrely, as the two actors could hardly be more
different) and turns in another of his captivating character
performances. Shimura's main scene with Mifune, in which the
latter's character reveals he has syphilis, exploits magnificently the
difference in the persona and acting styles of the two men and is
arguably the most poignant in the entire film. No wonder
Kurosawa cast them together in roles having a similar kind of
father-son relationship in
Seven Samurai
(1954). Also worthy of a mention are the two principal
actresses, Miki Sanjô and Noriko Sengoku, who are both given
strong, sympathetic female roles - which is unusual for Kurosawa, who
was famous for his ambivalence towards female characters.
In the hands of a less capable director,
The Silent Duel could easily have
been a plodding, lachrymose melodrama, the Japanese equivalent of the
worst kind of Hollywood weepy. Whilst melodrama is hardly his
forte, Kurosawa handles the subject with compassion and sensitivity,
deftly offsetting the film's darker passages with some badly needed
moments of light relief. Occasionally, the film does drift a little
too close to mawkishness, but this is more a fault of Kikuta's somewhat
dated play than a reflection of the performances or direction, which
are never less than impeccably sincere. The film was to have had
a much bleaker ending, with the central character finally losing his
sanity, but the American censors intervened at the script-writing stage
and the dramatic denouement was sadly lost. In spite of this, the
film holds up remarkably well, definitely not in the same league as
Kurosawa's later masterpieces, but nonetheless a humane and moving
little drama - and a genuine eye-opener for anyone who reckons
Toshirô Mifune can only play sword-wielding action heroes.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Akira Kurosawa film:
Rashomon (1950)
Film Synopsis
During WWII, a young doctor named Kyoji Fujisaki contracts syphilis
whilst performing an operation on an infected patient. Two years
later, Kyoji is working in his father's practice, a committed and
well-respected surgeon. Aware that he still has syphilis, he is
unable to marry the woman he loves, and such is the stigma surrounding
the disease that he cannot even admit that he has it to his father or
his fiancée. In the end, Kyoji has no choice but to reveal
this terrible truth, and, heartbroken, his fiancée marries
another man. By chance, Kyoji has a second encounter with Nakada,
the man who infected him, and learns that his wife is pregnant.
Fearing that Nakada may have passed his disease onto his wife and his
unborn child, Kyoji insists that the pregnant woman be examined in his
clinic. Nakada refuses and a bitter enmity develops between the
two men...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.