Friday, August 4, 2006

"Rashomon" (1950)

Starring: Toshiro Mifune, Machiko Kyo, Masayuki Mori

First the Lowdown: A murder in medieval Japan retold from multiple perspectives.

Akira Kurosawa, the John Ford of the samurai movie. That's all I'm going to say about the man. My experience with Kurosawa's films is on the light side and there are far more comprehensive filmographies out there. So if you really want to read up on him, I suggest going to your local library.

When I was watching Rashomon, I was reminded of a Sufi fable: Two men appear before a judge to plead their case. After the first man makes his statement, the judge says "That's right." After the second man makes his opposing statement, the judge says "That's right." Frustrated, the clerk of the court exclaims to the judge, "Both men can't be right!" The judge replies, "That's right."

Rashomon is about the death of a man in a forest, either by murder or suicide. The event is told by multiple perspectives: a famous bandit accused of the murder, the man's wife, even from the murdered man himself as spoken through a medium (in a pretty chilling sequence.) This in turn is being related to an anonymous stranger seeking shelter from the rain (in the ruined gates of Rashomon) by two men who also offered meager testimony.

In a nutshell, a man traveling with his wife are ambushed by the bandit Tajomaru (played by Kurosawa regular Toshiro Mifune). Tajomaru, being smitten with the man's wife is determined to kidnap her. And somewhere along this chain of events, the husband ends up dead.

Those are really the only "facts" that are presented, because they are the only elements in each testimony offered that line up. Who killed the man and why varies from person to person. It's a mystery of Agatha Christie-like proportions, and there's no Hercule Poirot to sort things out.

My favorite aspect of this movie is that the characters testimony is told directly to the camera, as if the audience were the magistrate that is mediating the trial. It's a pretty subtle way of letting the viewer come to their own conclusions, based on the nebulous and contradictory evidence given. All in all, one message that finally stand out is "Everything is both true and false."

Line of the movie: "I even heard that the demon living here in Rashomon fled in fear of the ferocity of man."

Five stars. This package is sold by weight.

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