| Toshiro Mifune, Setsuko Hara, Masayuki
Mori, Yoshiko Kuga, Takashi Shimura, Noriko Sengoku.
Akira Kurosawa's The Idiot, his only adaptation of a Fyodor Dostoevsky
novel, was a cherished project on which it is claimed he expended
more effort than on any other film. A darkly ambitious exploration
of the depths of human emotion, it combines the talents of two of
the greatest Japanese actors of their generation - Toshiro Mifune
and Setsuko Hara. The Idiot is perhaps the most contemplative of
all Kurosawa's works, a tone which is heightened by the unusual,
trance-like performances.
Kurosawa's electrifying dramatisation uproots the novel's Russian
Summer setting to a memorable, snowbound Hokkaido — the northern-most
island of Japan, closest to Russia in climate and custom. War criminal
Kameda (Masayuki Mori), reprieved from a death sentence, is fresh
out of the asylum, mentally fragile, and prone to epileptic fits.
In turn, his emotional involvement with two women (Setsuko Hara
and Yoshiko Kuga) and his new, increasingly volatile friend Akama
(Toshiro Mifune) leads further into madness and gross tragedy. Cut
by the studio after its premiere, this is a restored, longest extant
version of this rarely seen film. |