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Toshiro Mifune looks at his victim, possibly
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Rashomon
1950. Director: Akira Kurosawa. Starring: Toshiro Mifune.
This was the first Japanese film to gain real Western attention, when it won the Golden Lion at
Venice. It remains as overt a use of the idea of unreliable narrators as has ever been seen in
movies, with its
four accounts of a noble couple attacked by a bandit (Mifune) in a forest. The woman is
raped and the man is
killed.
It's adapted from two Ryunosuke Akutagawa stories - less from Rashomon
than In The Grove, which is
the one with the multiple contadictory accounts that are never
resolved. There is no way to work
out what really happened, why, or why some of them are lying - note
that the three main participants
all claim to have killed the husband. This was early in a magnificent
run of films by Kurosawa, and is gloriously directed. I am particularly fond of the wrecked temple in
the rain and the fiery performance of Mifune.
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