Akira Kurosawa's Dreams (1990)
Directed by Akira Kurosawa / Akira Terao / Martin Scorsese / Mieko Harada / Mitsuko Baisho
Genres - Drama, Fantasy, Children's/Family |
Sub-Genres - Fantasy Adventure |
Release Date - Aug 24, 1990 (USA) |
Run Time - 115 min. |
Countries - Japan, United States |
MPAA Rating - PG
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Synopsis by Jonathan Crow
Following up on his critically acclaimed, blood-splattered epic Ran, master director Akira Kurosawa looks inward with this collection of eight brightly colored dreams. The first section centers on a young boy (Mitsunori Izaki), who witnesses a forest wedding procession of fox spirits in spite of his mother's (Mitsuko Baisho) warning. The second section concerns the same lad who converses with peach-tree spirits after the trees have been cruelly cut down. This is followed by a party of mountain climbers struggling to make it back to base camp in the midst of a terrible blizzard. The fourth dream deals with a man (Akira Terao) -- a Kurosawa stand-in complete with the director's trademark floppy white hat -- who encounters ghosts of Japan's militaristic past in a forlorn tunnel. In the following dream, the same man ventures into a Van Gogh painting called The Crows and meets the artist himself (Martin Scorsese). The sixth and seventh dreams venture into nightmare territory -- one deals with a nuclear meltdown that threatens Japan while the other concerns post-nuclear mutants. In the final dream, Kurosawa meets a 103-year-old man (played by Ozu regular Chishu Ryu) in a utopian rural village.
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Keywords
nuclear, Samurai, Apocalypse, destruction, director, dreams, enchanted-forest, funeral, Holocaust, Japan, master [expert], monster, painting, slice-of-life, social-issues, supernatural-forces, war, wedding