Posts Tagged ‘War’
Friday, April 23rd, 2010
William Benker
Yojimbo – 1961 – dir. Akira Kurosawa
It’s common Kurosawa knowledge that Japan’s greatest director was a huge fan of American westerns. The wandering warrior often casually walks into a village at war. What Kurosawa delivers in Yojimbo is a western all its own. Complete with stand offs, hostages and a local brewery, the film encompasses a variety of talents at work. Along with the usual duo of Kurosawa and Toshiro Mifune, Yojimbo exemplifies the valiant efforts that go on behind scenes, raising the film above most western/gangster stories to an experience so entertaining, it illustrates the significance it plays in later American cinema.
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Tags: American westerns, blood, brewery, caricature, cinematography, Clint Eastwood, composer, conflict, contrast, fire, gangster, genre, gunslinger, hostages, melody, moral code, protagonist, sake, score, silk factory, stand offs, valient, village, War, warrior, water, wind
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Monday, March 29th, 2010
By William Benker 
Seven Samurai – 1954 – dir. Akira Kurosawa
The philosophical insight Akira Kurosawa unleashes in his epic Seven Samurai stands above most war films ever produced. Though the portrayal of war is common among films, the true essence of conflict itself is often times overlooked. The manner and tempo with which Kurosawa delivers his epic is where the message emerges. With a steady pace and extensive view into every facet of struggle, the director breaches the threshold of cinematic philosophy into a new realm of artistic meaning. In 16th century Japan, the framework of conflict is embodied within seven selfless warriors who use all of their abilities to defeat a clan of bandits. Kurosawa’s stark vision of life itself is extrapolated in the picture. Constantly put into question by smaller battles along the way, the director paints a decadent landscape of morality, giving audiences the very essence of cinema and story in its most ancient form. Seven Samurai is a perfect step-by-step guide into the very heart of conflict.
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Tags: anger, bandits, battles, cinema, conflict, destitute, epic, farmers, fear, insight, Japan, morality, philosophical, philpsophy, pity, salvation, seven, struggle, War, warriors
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Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
By Peggy Nelson 
Nashville – 1975 – dir. Robert Altman
Set in Nashville, Tennessee, home of the Grand Ole Opry, Nashville (dir. Robert Altman, 1975) follows musicians, con artists, politicians, and weirdos as their lives overlap and intersect over the course of a fateful few days. The film showcases Altman’s signature style of combining multiple story lines, noisy, overlapping dialogue, and realistic, scattered camera angles into a complex yet consistent narrative whole. Considered by many to be Altman’s best film, it sashays between dialogue and song, the individual and the political, and humor and tragedy, without missing a beat.
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Tags: Academy Award, airport, Altman, America, Barbara Baxley, Barbara Harris, BBC, cameo, character, chopper, Comedy, counterpoint, country, country music, Dallas, David Arkin, dialogue, Drama, Elliott Gould, establishment, Geraldine Chaplin, Grand Ole Opry, Jeff Goldblum, JFK, Karen Black, Keenan Wynn, Keith Carradine, Kennedy, Lily Tomlin, Loretta Lynn, motorcade, Musicals, musicians, Nashville, Ned Beatty, Nixon, politicians, post-Nixon, reporter, Robert Altman, Ronnie Blakley, Shelley Duvall, Tennessee, traffic jam, Vietnam, War, Watergate
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Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
By Peggy Nelson 
The Last Picture Show – 1971 – dir. Peter Bogdanovich
The Last Picture Show (dir. Peter Bogdanovich, 1971) presents the enigma of the old western wrapped in the mystery of the new. Set in the early 1960s in a windswept Texas town — the kind of small town that springs up on the way from somewhere to somewhere else — the story focuses on two high school seniors, Sonny and Duane, co-captains of a football team so monumentally inept that at one point they manage to lose 121 – 14. The future they face seems as bleak as the empty streets in the town and the endless flat plains of the surrounding land. They sense it as they stumble through the paces of late adolescence: girlfriends, jobs, uncertainty.
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Tags: adolescence, America, Bresson, caldera, change, cinema, Cloris Leachman, confrontation, cowboy, cultivation, Cybill Chepherd, desire, distance, Drama, emptiness, existentialism, femme fatale, film, fishing, football, freedom, future, Godard, habitat, high school, identity, imagination, Indians, introspection, Jeff Bridges, John Wayne, Korea, landscape, Larry McMurtry, Peter Bogdanovich, pragmatism, Pulitzer Prize, Red River, relationships, Ruskin, silence, small town, sublime, Texas, theater, time, Timothy Bottoms, uncertainty, vista, War, Western, Yellowstone
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Thursday, January 15th, 2009
By Peggy Nelson 
Dr. Zhivago – 1965 – dir. David Lean
There are many characters in David Lean’s Dr. Zhivago (1965), the sprawling, epic portrayal of people caught up in the Russian Revolution, the least of which is, surprisingly, Dr. Zhivago himself. In addition to Zhivago, Lara, Komorovsky, Pasha, and a host of others, there is the land, the weather, the first World War, the mountains, the interminable train ride, the tide of political events, the Five-Year Plans, even the giant posters of Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin, all playing their parts and threatening to upstage the action. Beside all these a small story about love and betrayal should pale; as Strelnikov claims in the film, “the personal life is dead in Russia.” But it is Lean’s achievement that it is not: it more than holds its own, and forms the core around which the rest crash and swirl.
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Tags: Academy Award, Alec Guinness, autobiography, beeswax, betrayal, Boris Pasternak, Carlo Ponti, cinematography, Civil War, David Lean, doctor, Drama, epic, Geraldine Chaplin, history, Julie Christie, Lenin, love, Maurice Jarre, Nobel Prize, October Revolution, Omar Sharif, Oscar, poet, poetry, politics, purges, Rod Steiger, romance, Russia, Russian Revolution, snow, Sophia Loren, Soviet Union, Spain, Stalin, Tom Courtenay, trains, Trotsky, Varykino, War, widescreen, WWI
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