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Cinema Japan: A Wreath for Madame Kawakita

Wednesday, November 5, 2008
7:00 p.m. Ikiru
Akira Kurosawa (Japan, 1952)

New Print


Ikiru is a searing portrait of modern society in which individual will is the vassal to an impotent bureaucracy. It tells of a municipal government functionary, Mr. Watanabe (the marvelous actor Takashi Shimura), who wraps red tape around the most urgent entreaty: a mother’s plea for a park where a cesspool now exists. Watanabe is looking at his watch when we meet him, a habitual gesture that gains new meaning when he learns he has terminal cancer. Watanabe’s metamorphosis from Mummy (his office nickname) to conscious being is one of the great transformations in cinema, with no special effects required. As he begins to reject his past, into his life comes a curious novelist, a sort of kinder, gentler Mephistopheles who shows Watanabe a night on the town, dazzling in its possibilities, but also gleaming in mirrored reflections. Ikiru is a cinematic tour-de-force that travels in and out of time-frames like a camera of the mind.

—Judy Bloch

• Written by Shinobu Hashimoto, Hideo Oguni, Kurosawa. Photographed by Asakazu Nakai. With Takashi Shimura, Nobuo Kaneko, Miki Odagiri, Yunosuke Ito. (143 mins, In Japanese with English subtitles, B&W, 35mm, Permission Janus Films/Criterion Collection)