Dersu
Uzala Movie Review:
Dersu
Uzala is from Japanese director Akira Kurosawa`s later period,
and is a special and unique film, on par with any other
of his acknowledged classics. He was famous primarily for
his samurai epics (The Seven Samurai, Yojimbo, Ran), but
also found time to create some great dramas. The ones I`ve
seen include Ikiru, one of the great films, period, about
a man dying from cancer who attempts one last blaze of glory.
And this one is a sweeping emotional and scenic epic, which
manages to be both subtle and visually appealing. This fact
is impressive when you considered the state Kurosawa was
in at this time. This film was produced in 1974, during
a period of creative and financial difficulty. Kurosawa
was no longer in vogue with the moviegoers of his own country,
and was so despondent he even once attempted suicide. For
the rest of his career he had to search for financial backing
from foreign entities. He had used money from, at any given
point, French producers, American financiers, and even George
Lucas gave him a handout at one time.
Dersu
was even more detached from Kurosawa`s tradition in that
it is not even Japanese. This film was made in Russia, with
Russian money, and with Russian actors speaking in Russian.
The only non-Russian character, a Mongolian, is one who,
in the period the film is set in, would have been living
in a Moscow-controlled area. Yet even with this pressure
of Communist-era film making policies over him, Kurosawa
still made a fine film.
The
story involves a Russian general and his troops, and their
assignment to survey the vast regions of Siberia. One day,
during their travels, they meet a very peculiar old man
named Dersu, of Mongolian decent. The captain is taken by
this interesting fellow, who seems to be a nomad, the vast
landscape his only home. It is clear these two will become
friends.
And
more than just friends, but people who end up saving each
other`s lives during very important scenes. Both events
involve the severity of nature, the most impressive cinematically
during an excursion by the captain and Dersu to a frozen
lake miles from the rest of the surveying party. Dersu is
a bit afraid of going too far away, but is assured they
will be safe. When they arrive at their spot, a windstorm
suddenly breaks. Their footprints are covered, and they
are completely lost. Dersu suddenly tells the captain to
help gather up the long grass around them to form a pile.
The captain, and us, have no idea why they are doing this,
but they keep piling this grass up. Not until later, do
we realize Dersu has done this in order to create a place
to protect them for the night from the bitter winds. The
captain repays Dersu his ingenious favor later on in a rushing
river.
It
is interesting how their friendship works. The presentation
is very quiet, and modest, probably due as much to the necessary
power relationship between the captain and his inferiors
as it does to the style of the filmmaker. It is the little
things which make their friendship undeniably real. The
moment they are finally found after the night of the windstorm.
Their parting when it appears they will never see each other
again, and then the moment they reunite. The way Dersu pleas
with the captain to get him away from the forest when it
seems he has angered the gods. The numerous photos the captain
takes of trivial, everyday things while Dersu tags along
with the troop. The whole friendship is genuine in its own
little, unspectacular way.
Dersu
is a man who truly is a piece of the nature around him,
so attached he refers to all the elements of the world,
from the sun to animals, as "men". He does not feel superior
to any of nature`s creations, but instead feels a responsibility
to follow the rules of the land. He is offended at any kind
of waste, from the bullets used by the Russian soldiers
for target practise, to the shooting of animals for mere
sport. His position in nature creates a great character
in itself, but it also is a crucial part of the full story.
This develops in some great scenes, including a moment when
Dersu hears the sound of a tiger roaming through the woods.
He and the captain search frantically for it, carrying their
rifles. They both go around and around the area, always
seeing new footprints in the snow, but no tiger. Dersu yells
at it as if the animal is a deliberate prowler making Dersu`s
life difficult, or perhaps like a god or a devil. Only later
do we understand the full significance of the tiger`s role.
The Mongolians believe in a spirit of nature called Kanga,
and to kill a tiger is to anger that god, in ways unforeseen
until they occur. Dersu, in the heat of the moment, shoots
another tiger who goes near him and the captain. Dersu believes
he has killed it, and that Kanga will seek vengeance upon
him in some way.
I
will not tell you any more of what occurs. But you may discover,
as I did, a subtle irony in all the events which occur after
this, foreshadowed by the captain`s narration that tragic
things occur from that point on. It is a very subtle twist
of plot which will take a few minutes to think it over,
but I felt it was there. Sure, it`s quite easy to laugh
off such primitive superstitious beliefs as Dersu`s, but
it is far less easy to dismiss fate and circumstance.
The
film encompasses a wide range of experiences. The first
half gives way mainly to spectacle and imagery, especially
in the great windstorm sequence, while the second half concentrates
on the plot. The mood is quiet, reflective, subtle, but
should be easy to understand as a whole. The film also has
a very innocent feel to it. This is not a harsh story with
villains or heroes, or any impossible achievements or events,
but simply a story of two different kinds of people, with
a gentle friendship, who help each other out of respect
and care for their fellow people. On the surface, it is
simple. But Kurosawa does wonders with it.
David
Macdonald
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