Our Rating: 10.0 IMDb Ratings : 8 .3 Genre: Action | Drama | War Cast: Tatsuya Nakadai, Akira Terao, Jinpachi Nezu Country: Japan | France Language: Japanese Runtime: 162 min Color: Color

Summary: An elderly lord abdicates to his three sons, and the two corrupt ones turn against him.







R an, which literally means 'mayhem', is probably cinema's greatest rendition of a Shakespearean Epic, manifested ironically by an Oriental movie-maker. Adapted by Akira Kurosawa from Shakespeare's King Lear, Ran undoubtedly features amongst the best works of the master auteur. Kurosawa, however, got the inspiration for Ran from a Japanese parable about a ferocious warlord that he read in the 1970s. It was only later on that he became aware of the plot’s peculiar similarity to King Lear. He himself found it inexplicable the way the two ostensibly different plots got entwined giving rise to a magnum opus called Ran that would go on to become the epitome of Japanese heritage in the world of cinema.





Tatsuya Nakadai in Kurosawa's Kagemusha (1980) Kurosawa wrote the script for Ran shortly after completing his lyrical ode, Dersu Uzala in 1975, only to let it brew for seven more years. During the hiatus, he painted storyboards for each and every shot in the movie, while simultaneously searching for funds. Kurosawa made his great Samurai masterpiece, Kagemusha (The Shadow Warrior) in the year 1980. The movie’s gradual success eventually bagged Kurosawa the financial backing of French producer Serge Silberman for his dream project, Ran. It is for this reason that he often referred to Kagemusha as a 'dry run' for Ran. Ran captures with sheer vividness the true essence of human struggle for survival, highlighting the cruelties associated with life. Ran is strictly indicative of the sole consistency of life: change—an attribute that not only makes the humans vulnerable, but also equips them with the courage to rise after a fall.



Tatsuya Nakadai as Lord Hidetora in Ran The story focuses on a senile warlord, Hidetora, who is on the verge of losing his strength, and his ferocious grandeur that he had earned through years of relentless savagery and ruthless slaughter. Consequently, he renounces to his three sons, hoping them to establish a triumvirate with the eldest one at the helm. His two elder sons accept the proposal with rapturous glee, but his youngest son seems bemused and questions the wits of the patriarch for taking the untimely decision. Though, terribly annoyed by his son's defiance, he still tries to console him only to find him inconsolable. Deeply hurt by his son's impertinence and censure, he reluctantly banishes him, and enthrones the two elder sons. The rest is rather worth a watch than a read, for there is nothing that can match the beauty of Ran as a motion picture.





Delirious Hidetora with the Royal Jester in Ran

The abysmal decline of Hidetora into delirium is highly reminiscent of Kurosawa’s own slump as a moviemaker during the 70s after his two decade-long tryst with success in the 50s and 70s, during which he made more than twenty motion-pictures, most of which attained the status of a masterpiece. Post Red Beard (1965) , Kurosawa struggled to keep abreast with the changing trends in cinema and challenges thrown by the growing popularity of television, or so his critics and rivals deceptively projected. Kurosawa, realizing that he needed a thinking lease to contemplate on his moviemaking prospects, took a five year break. In 1970, the Japanese master directed the highly acclaimed Dodesukaden , his first colour motion-picture. Unfortunately, the movie failed at the box-office, which bankrupted his newly established production studio. Many deemed Dodesukaden’s failure as the end of Kurosawa. Overwhelmed by the bankruptcy and disillusioned by the lack of trust of the very people for whom he had developed his Art and made obvious its infinite realms in cinema, Kurosawa made an unsuccessful attempt at ending his own life by slashing his wrists.





Coppola and Lucas pay a visit to Kurosawa

It’s indeed astonishing to note that Kurosawa is revered much more in the West than he is in his own country. Eminent Hollywood directors like George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, and Steven Spielberg regard Kurosawa as a role model and revere him as the greatest artist that the world of cinema ever produced. Lucas, whose epic Star Wars franchise took inspiration from Kurosawa’s Hidden Fortress , used his influence on more than one occasion to procure funding for Kurosawa’s later movies like Kagemusha and Ran. Francis Ford Coppola once said of Kurosawa, “He should be the first film maker to be given the Nobel Prize.” Steven Spielberg said of the master auteur, "Kurosawa was the visual Shakespeare of our time. He is the only director who right until the end of his life continued to make films that were, or will be, recognized as classics. He was a celluloid painter—he was as close to an impressionist as you can get in film.”





Hidetora's castle being razed to ground

The brilliantly captured scenes in Ran are breath-taking to say the least, especially the war scene that depicts fate casting the final blow to the ruthless reign of the warlord. The brutality and the bloodshed depicted in the very scene can make even a cold-blooded appear jittery. Ran portrays poetic justice in such a relentless and abominable fashion that one can't help but sympathize with the narcissistic warlord, who had spent all his life arrogating and annihilating innocent souls. Tatsuya Nakadai as Hidetora gives a performance of a lifetime. He meticulously takes care of the nuances and subtleties needed to play a multifaceted part like Hidetora’s—a ferocious warlord tamed by the vicissitudes of time. The complex relationship that exists between Hidetora and the royal Jester is not merely fascinating, but it also serves to a great learning experience to all those who tend to forget the leveling aspect of life.





Mieko Harada as Lady Kaede in Ran Mieko Harada as the manipulative, vindictive queen, Lady Kaede epitomizes the dark side of womanhood. Kaede, with her clairvoyant charm and interminable hatred, is an exact antithesis to the prototypical caricature of a female depicted in the world of cinema, and is an extreme exaggeration of the antagonistic caricature of the women of the West. Ran’s plaintive score and highly detailed cinematography gives it a much desired tone, a mood that not only supports its melancholic backdrop, but also immensely adds to its poignant beauty. The final scene depicting a blind boy—deeply clutched by his haplessness and gross solitude—may not feature an utterance of a single syllable, but the playback of the mystical flute makes the scene haunting as well as mesmerizing, and worth a thousand words.





A Still from Grigori Kozintsev's Korol Lir Over the last five decades, several stalwarts from the world of cinema including Orson Welles, Laurence Olivier, and Peter Brook have tried adapting this timeless tale but only Kurosawa's Ran, perhaps with the likely exception of Soviet filmmaker Grigori Kozintsev’s Korol Lir (1971) , has succeeded in coming this close to perfection. It's incredible to note that during the filming of Ran, Kurosawa was almost completely blind, and his assistants had to solely rely on his verbal direction and the many canvases he had painted prior to the start of movie's production. Ran is a classic example of Akira Kurosawa's mastery as a movie-maker, and perhaps a consummation of his apotheosis. Ran is a must watch for eclectic viewers, and true admirers of pristine cinema.



P.S. Ran is now available in the stunning 4K restoration.



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