





Featured in IMDb Critic Reviews





Dersu Uzala (1975) - By Akira Kurosawa

Our Rating: 10.0 IMDb Ratings: 8.2 Genre: Adventure | Drama Cast : Maksim Munzuk, Yuri Solomin, Svetlana Danilchenko Language : Russian | Chinese

Country: Soviet Union | Japan Runtime: 144 min Color: Color (Sovcolor)

Summary: The Russian army sends an explorer on an expedition to the snowy Siberian wilderness where he makes friends with a seasoned local hunter.



D ersu Uzala is a Russian motion picture directed by Japanese maestro Akira Kurosawa. It is not merely a landmark in art cinema, but it is also a living proof that greatness can be accomplished even with sheer simplicity. And for this very reason, Dersu Uzala also happens to be an all time favorite movie of this critic. Dersu Uzala went on to win the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar in the year 1976. Akira Kurosawa made Dersu Uzala with Russian collaboration at a time when no Japanese producer was willing to back a project involving Kurosawa —this was after Kurosawa's first color motion-picture Dodesukaden had failed miserably at the box office, thereby leaving his newly established production studio in a state of shambles. Storytelling is undoubtedly one of the most potent tools known to man, but seldom has he resorted to simplicity as an epiphanic tool. While man has always found ways to amuse the mankind by spinning the yarn of his imagination, he has almost always resorted to themes of grandeur, fantasy, and resplendence as elements of revelation . Only a handful of storytellers like Akira Kurosawa and Satyajit Ray have shown the grit and perspicacity to use simplicity as the weapon to incite and hence portray the deepest human emotions on the celluloid.





Maksim Munzuk as Dersu Uzala

Widely regarded as Kurosawa's lyrical masterpiece, Dersu Uzala is a poignant tale of compassion, trust, friendship, and respect between two contrasting individuals: a nomadic hunter and an army explorer. Captain Arseniev and his troops are on a topographic expedition, and while camping during a night they get acquainted with Dersu Uzala – an aboriginal (Goldi) tribesman. Arseniev, being fully aware of the handicap of exploring an alien territory without having an indigenous tribesman in the ranks, asks Dersu to be their guide. Humbled by Arseniev's politeness, Dersu obliges his offer almost immediately. We soon witness a great sense of camaraderie developing between the two as Dersu grows in stature from being a mere guide to a stalwart and a friend in the eyes of Arseniev. The long years of experience had equipped Dersu with a great sense of intuition and psychic-like abilities to anticipate change and danger. Dersu uses his skills to good effect as he maneuvers captain and his troops through the harsh Siberian terrain, sheltering and guarding them from the cruelties and wilderness of the Tundra. Behind the façade of a rugged hunter, we get to see a man of profound intellect and deep compassion in Dersu, who risks his own life on several occasions to save Arseniev and his men.





Dersu Uzala: A panoramic view of the Tundra

Dersu Uzala is not just a movie, but is an experience of a lifetime. Dersu Uzala is the only movie that Akira Kurosawa shot in a language other than Japanese. Kurosawa uses his auteurist mastery to bring the memoirs of Russian explorer, Vladimir Arsenyev to life as he inexplicably elevates cinema to new levels of poignancy and pristineness. The cinematography is breathtakingly picturesque and it evokes a sense of melancholy that makes the majestic Siberian wilderness appear hypnotic, and at times surreal. The panoramic shot of Dersu and Arseniev looking at the horizon caparisoned with the juxtaposition of the setting sun and the rising moon is also indicative of their respective lives: Dersu is long past his prime and there is no hope for revival, but Arsieniev's is still in his prime and has a long life ahead. Dersu Uzala is strongly suggestive of the sole consistency in human life: change. It also demonstrates the might of nature as an unforgiving force, potent enough to humble even the most savage of the creatures. Dersu Uzala can also be termed as an allegorical account of the environmental imbalance that the unrestrained human intervention is causing.





Japanese movie-maker Akira Kurosawa

Dersu Uzala is one of those rare cinematic gems which can be relished again and again, each time with a completely different view point. With Dersu Uzala, Kurosawa proved it once and for all that cinema at its most pristine, knows no bounds or barriers. Kurosawa demonstrated the might of simplicity as an element that can pack a punch for the first time in Ikiru , and followed it up with an unending list of pristine cinematic masterpieces including Seven Samurai. But, even Kurosawa's staunchest critic would not find it hard to concede that cinema does not get any purer than Dersu Uzala. Dersu Uzala accentuates the enormous potential of cinema as the most consummate medium of human expression. In fact, there are not many works of cinema that can come close to matching the raw power of this timeless masterpiece by the Japanese master filmmaker. It's a must watch for anyone who loves and understands unadulterated cinema. 10/10



Readers, please feel free to share your opinion by leaving your comments. As always your feedback is highly appreciated!



For Best Films by Akira Kurosawa, please click here



For more information on the title, please click on the following links: