IkiruWritten by Akira Kurosawa, Hideo Oguni, Shinobu Hashimoto
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
Japan, 1952
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Akira Kurosawa’s 1952 film Ikiru is the type of movie that can change a life, or at least change a person’s way of looking at life. It is an extremely moving work, standing as a superb example of the emotional and inspirational power of cinema.
Ikiru is also an exceptional vehicle for Takashi Shimura, an actor known for his astonishing range over the course of 200-plus films. In Ikiru, while Kurosawa makes great use of faces in close-up throughout, there is none more expressive than that of Shimura as the cancer-ridden Public Affairs Section Chief Kanji Watanabe. Every emotion and every thought is transparently written on his aged and weary face—it’s hard to believe the actor would embody the vigorous leader of the rag-tag samurai team two years later in Seven Samurai. Here, he effectively goes from gut-wrenching concern at the doctor’s office, to sheer terror hidden away in the darkness of his room, to total bewilderment when he is thrust into the Tokyo nightlife. But then, there can be a smile, particularly when he is with Toyo Odagiri (Miki Odagiri), a much younger former coworker, which suddenly gives his character great warmth and positivity.
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Ikiru (4)These scenes of Watanabe and Odagiri together are some of the best in the film. These are times when the terminally ill old man finds joy and refreshment in the simplicity of youth (“They make you that happy?” he perplexingly asks Odagiri about her new stockings). She represents to him so much possibility, a possibility that had existed with his own son but has since been lost with their increasingly strained relationship (the early flashbacks of his reminisces with his boy do suggest a touching past). Not finding satisfaction from a night of wild abandon and drunken revelry, the contentment he shows just watching this silly girl eat noodles and play games is powerfully conveyed by Shimura. She, and we, truly begin to understand this character through the development of their unorthodox connection.
Kurosawa’s narrative strategy with Ikiru is also noteworthy, not just in the splitting into two of the story structure (he had done that before and would do it again), but in the way he concurrently manipulates emotional expectations. In the beginning of the film, the viewer is instantly confronted by sadness (the first image shown is an x-ray of Watanabe’s cancer) and it essentially gets worse from there as Watanabe’s familial relationships dissolve and he ultimately dies. But then, the second half of the film, with about an hour left in the picture, is comprised of a series of flashback vignettes eliciting exultation as we see Watanabe’s determination, his drive, and his defiance (standing up to the yakuza by simply entering a room, for instance). Typically, in stories like this, dealing with someone’s illness then death, characters are shown happy in the beginning and then we see their demise; that is what creates the sadness and the sympathy. But Kurosawa knows life does not necessarily follow that progression. Instead, sometimes there is bliss and acceptance only after the worst has happened.
Ikiru (1)The above also follows with Kurosawa’s general penchant for shifting tone throughout the film. Right away, we find out Watanabe has cancer with just months to live. Then comes a sequence of tragically amusing bureaucratic absurdity, as Watanabe is seen hunched over his desk amidst stacks and stacks of paperwork, dwarfing the worker in some sort of orderly disarray. “He’s only killing time,” says the detached, rather insensitive narrator. “He’s never actually lived … This isn’t even worth watching.” What are we to make of this callous remark, a subjective acknowledgement of our very viewing of a film? Or, later, after we see Watanabe so happy with Odagiri, the next scene is of him getting ignored by his son; it’s a continually fluctuating balance of highs and lows for Watanabe. Then there is the key scene when he decides he can make a difference. He is rejuvenated. A chorus of “Happy Birthday” from a nearby party plays over his sudden inspiration—this, too, is a rebirth, a new start, a turning point. He goes back to work and opens up the case about the cesspool in the park. In these sequences of swiftly variable behavior and action, the good, bad, or indifferent, Kurosawa depicts the unpredictable nature of what it is like “to live,” as the title of the film translates. Sometimes up, sometimes down, these are the realities, to say nothing of the complexities, of life, of living.
Correspondingly, and in a fashion similar to many of Kurosawa’s best films, this aching humanist drama tackles severe existential questions, some literally voiced by the characters, all amplifying Ikiru’s emotional weight. Two particularly significant lines of dialogue recognize this. The first is when Odagiri, referring to Watanabe’s behavior with her, asks, “What’s the point?” As simple as it is, and though it is said in a different context, that sort of provocative question lies at the heart of the film. Of everything he has done and is still doing, for Watanabe, what is the point, what does he hope to gain? The second exchange, another that lends the film its introspective impact, is when one of the city workers notes at Watanabe’s wake, “Any one of us could drop dead,” the argument being that Watanabe made good only after the realization of his impending death. That is essentially the film’s message, for lack of a better word. We all know our death is imminent—Watanabe knew he was for sure, he even had a timeline—so basically, we had better get busy doing something worthwhile as long as we are still here.
Ikiru (5)The author who takes Watanebe on a whirlwind tour of bars and clubs says the old man is an extremely rare individual. He admires the way the cancer has opened his eyes, and while Watanabe stumbles about in a blurred state of regret and panic, the author appreciates the way he seeks to rebel against his past self, as he puts it. Yet there are hints that while he is now part of a monotonous routine of managerial busywork, he at one point had ambition and did want to do something substantive with his life. It is also made clear that Watanebe’s insipidly stagnant life is not unique to him. The type of existence that has led to his basic nonexistence is systemic as much as it is self-induced. And the sad part of it all, or rather, one of the sad parts, is that by the end of the film, even after those who paid their respects to Watanebe declare a desire to change their ways (those who aren’t busy taking credit for his public service, that is) the same repetitive, cruel world carries on, and no lessons have been learned: the same habits remain, the same routine, the same runaround between various governmental agencies.
This type of bureaucratic uniformity is reflexive of post-war modernity in Tokyo, a period that is also illustrated in Ikiruby way of the city’s dirty, gritty, crowded, and hectic state of transitional disrepair. So many of the settings in the film are in shambles, and there is a persistently disturbing portrait of the sick, the poor, and the destitute (surely drinking from a communal cup at a doctor’s office is a notably unhygienic arrangement indicative of a poor social condition). Some of this is economic, some certainly political, but some is obviously a result of societal ill—these people live terribly depressing lives. It is therefore easy to see how one like Watanebe can simply lose interest.
In his seminal text on Kurosawa, Donald Richie recalls being told by a representative to David O. Selznick that while the famed producer liked Ikiru, he felt it could drag a bit, particularly during the funeral scene. As Richie was preparing to screen the film, the gentleman wondered, “Don’t you think we might shorten it a bit?” Obviously, the idea of someone tampering with a master filmmaker’s work is worthy of scorn, but Selznick may have been on to something. The final half of the film is markedly slower. It certainly does not warrant cutting, and for the most part, what is there is nevertheless essential, but by comparison to the first part of the picture, things do rest at a stately pace. Part of this has to do with how intensely realized the first section of the film is. Kurosawa edits quicker, he moves the camera more, and frames are dense, textured, bursting with a composite of surrounding elements. He employs a number of stylistic flourishes, visually and aurally, as when the sound drops out after Watanebe receives his diagnosis, only to abruptly return as he steps out onto the streets and the chaotic world around him loudly carries on regardless of his condition. The film’s emotional significance may reside in its latter half, but its first half is admittedly more robust.
Ikiru (3)
Kurosawa worked on Ikiru with several familiar behind the scenes figures, most commendably, co-writers Shinobu Hashimoto and Hideo Oguni, who helped construct this intricately layered portrait of a man during a time of tremendous stress, despair, and determination. And there is also cinematographer Asakazu Nakai, who with the director composes moments of astonishingly sublime beauty, prominent against the pervading anguish: the tranquil, reserved image of Watanabe on a swing set in the snow, for example.
Winner of a special prize at the 1954 Berlin International Film Festival, Ikiru is an extraordinary achievement, one of Kurosawa’s finest for sure. It is an empathetic work of life’s pleasures, sorrows, and everything in between.
The HurricaneWritten by Dudley Nichols
Directed by John Ford
USA, 1937
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“My name is John Ford and I make Westerns,” so the legendary filmmaker once declared. As has been pointed out (by Martin Scorsese among others) that statement in a sense discounts the great director’s non-genre works, like the four features for which he won Academy Awards: The Informer (1935), The Grapes of Wrath (1940), How Green Was My Valley (1941), and The Quiet Man (1952). But with more than 140 directing credits on his résumé, it also sidesteps many lesser known, though quality, Ford films, those that either fall into the middle of the road category or those that are very good, if not quite great. That’s where his 1937 romantic drama The Hurricane comes in.
Produced by Samuel Goldwyn, directed by Ford (two years after The Informer and two years before his groundbreaking Stagecoach [1939]), and written by Dudley Nichols, himself an Oscar-winner for his writing The Informer, The Hurricane obviously has talent behind it. This to say nothing of a cast that includes Dorothy Lamour, Jon Hall, Mary Astor, C. Aubrey Smith, Thomas Mitchell, Raymond Massey, and John Carradine, who all do a fine job, even if they are essentially playing standard types. Further credit of note also goes to James Basevi, Ray Binger, R.T. Layton, and Lee Zavitz for their special effects work, not a common point of recognition in 1937. While there is a satisfying story for about three-quarters of the film, at the end of the picture it is the titular storm that steals the show (and it better, having cost hundreds of thousands of dollars and taking more than five weeks to shoot). A little clunky at times, and with some visibly flimsy back projection, this final disaster sequence is nonetheless successful and certainly looks exceptional by such early standards.
Technical achievements notwithstanding, to get to The Hurricane’s emotional poignancy there has to be a worthwhile story and engaging characters, and here, we have both. The story essentially revolves around newlywed South Sea natives Terangi (Hall) and Marama (Lamour), who must part not long after their wedding, as he sets off to his work on a schooner and is soon thereafter imprisoned. A central conflict is with the pitiless French governor, Eugene De Laage (Massey), who is joined on the island of Manakoora by his more sympathetic wife (Astor). Then there is the drunken Dr. Kersaint (Mitchell), serving as something of an arbiter between the island natives and the governor.
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The Hurricane (2)When Ms. Laage first arrives, greeting her generally unfeeling managerial husband, there is a clear love between the two, so we know De Laage is not totally callous. But it is a romance with far less evident passion than that between Terangi and Marama. Is this distinction due to the comparative youth of the two locals, or is it something inherent in their uninhibited culture? Aside from being compared to children (insofar as innocence on the plus side and ignorance on the negative), the other most common point of reference as far as how the French occupants view the natives is that they are akin to animals, in the way Terangi swims, for example, or the way he moves about the boat. It is rather demeaning, and even the understanding Dr. Kersaint, who respectfully identifies with their way of life, still regards their simplicity as childish. On a more positive note, this analogy also suggests the instinctual ability of the native people and their natural vitality. Terangi, who is held in high local esteem for his personality as well as his good looks, is also repeatedly acknowledged for his physical prowess—at one point, we see him wrestle, kill, and gut a shark, all while in the water…and then he eats it, raw.
In any case, there is a pronounced disparity in how the indigenous people live and view the world and the way they now grapple with the rules and regulations of the “civilized” foreign governance. Further contrast is clear just after the wedding ceremony. As Terangi and Marama make their way out of the church, a clamoring throng of natives, who are yelling, running, jumping, happily and playfully celebrating the occasion, quickly abduct the somber wedding march and turn it into a buoyant party. There is a markedly more lighthearted liveliness in their existence, which will fly in the face of expected convention.
Such instinctive energy is also why it is so difficult for Terangi to remain incarcerated. After getting into a scuffle that quite unwittingly carries political ramifications, Terangi is subsequently locked up in Tahiti. The situation may have resolved itself with reasonable due process, but Terangi, the wildly free spirit, refuses to stay put (further spurred on in part by the injustice of his confinement to begin with, and in part by the knowledge of Marama’s pregnancy). Each time he attempts to escape, his sentence grows longer and his punishment more severe. His initially minor penalty is eventually increased to 16 years in prison, eight years into which he again tries to flee and this time succeeds. Unfortunately, during this jailbreak his situation goes from bad to worse as, with apparently a single blow, he kills a guard on his way out.
The Hurricane (3)As Terangi makes his way back home, the impending storm coincides with the growing tumult on the island. Contributing to the animosity while Terangi has been away is the fact that De Laage held in his hands the ability to bargain for the captured hero’s release. His heartlessly law-abiding refusal sets him at odds with nearly everyone. Once Terangi returns and is promptly hunted down by De Laage, the hurricane makes landfall, which sends everyone into a death-defying panic.
Though they first appear as the washed-out, storm-damaged leftovers of a former paradise in flashback, the South Sea islands that serve as the film’s primary setting are shown in their pictorially resplendent beauty, more in line with what the travel folders would say, as Dr. Kersaint puts it. It is key that the islands are presented as such, for while there is the main character-driven drama of the film, the movie is just as much, if not more, about the islands themselves and their aboriginal inhabitants. Ford thus includes a number of sequences showcasing details of cultural flavor. Sure, it may be a generally Hollywood-ized take on the setting (filmed predominantly on a massive Goldwyn set), but for someone who knows next to nothing about the authenticity of the location and its citizenry, like myself and presumably much of the film’s 1937 audience, it is attractive and effective.
The Hurricane (4)Few have ever been able to compose a shot like John Ford, but in a film of this lesser caliber, while nothing is necessary displeasing, some of the interiors are rather underwhelming, shot adequately but nothing more (though Ford’s filming of Lamour might rank just below his treatment of Maureen O’Hara as the finest of his glamorous female depictions). Once outside, however, Ford and cinematographer Bert Glennon, who would shoot other films for the director likeStagecoach, Young Mr. Lincoln (1939), Drums Along the Mohawk (1939), Wagon Master (1950), and Rio Grande(1950), really seem to let loose. Not to the extent of his authentic Western locations, but with a similar flair for the majesty of environment, Ford’s imagery in these sequences is outstanding; the second unit footage from the shooting on genuine South Pacific locations sets the visual scene and is incorporated nicely into the perception of naturally appealing regional realism.
While the end of The Hurricane is, in some ways, still a happy one, it is mostly unbelievably so, being built from a series of lucky coincidences and absurdly fortunate chance. There are also a few sequences in the film that falter under hokey sentimentality, occasionally setting the picture back for a moment or two (as when the local priest acknowledges God’s ultimate judgment, which is then followed by some wondrous sky-gazing and the sounds of angelic harmonizing). Still, for a film by a master who was perhaps not at his best—having already established high expectations—this is a solidly entertaining motion picture.
Pather Panchali/Aparajito/Apur SansarWritten and directed by Satyajit Ray
India, 1955/1956/1959
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The Criterion Collection set of Satyajit Ray’s Apu trilogy has been one of the more eagerly anticipated releases in recent years. These masterworks of world cinema, widely acclaimed for decades, have been long overdue a much-deserved superior treatment on home video. Now though, benefitting from a 4K digital restoration by the Academy Film Archive and L’Immagine Ritrovata, and with a wealth of bonus features, these exceptional films are available in the superb presentation so many have been waiting for.
But to start at the source, such a treatment would not have been warranted in the first place were the films themselves not so remarkable, and that they most certainly are. As no less an authority than Akira Kurosawa puts it, “To have not seen the films of Ray is to have lived in the world without ever having seen the moon and the sun.”
Pather Panchali (Song of the Little Road, 1955), Aparajito(The Unvanquished, 1956), and Apur Sansar (The World of Apu, 1959), the first two based on novels by Bibhutibhusan Banerjee, the third on an original story by the author, follow Apurba Ray—Apu—from childhood through his early 20s. Apu is played by Subir Banerjee, Pinaki Sengupta, Smaran Ghosal, and Soumitra Chatterjee, in four key phases of his life, and while he is not always the main subject of every drama that occurs, he is the only figure consistently present, and it is through his eyes and emotions that the films poignantly register.
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TTD.Apu460It would seem in Pather Panchali that Apu’s older sister, Durga (Shampa Banerjee at first, then Uma Das Gupta at a slightly older age), acts as the primary protagonist. She is the one who drives along much of the story, mostly because of her penchant for stealing, which repeatedly lands her in trouble. It is more than 20 minutes into the film before the charming young Apu is given his phenomenal introduction, rising up with wide-eyed youthful exuberance as Durga wakes him one morning. Aside from some basically innocuous childhood shenanigans, the school-aged Apu ofPather Panchali is frequently on the margins, simply bearing witness to the world around him. Still, his relationship with Durga is the most complex and interesting in the film, and when their occasional sibling rivalries subside, the two share in several extremely touching moments of intimacy.
Dramatic tension in the first two films also weighs down upon Apu’s mother, Sarbojaya (Karuna Bannerjee), while Harihar (Kanu Bannerjee) is the relatively carefree father. In a characterization repeated later in Ray’s work, the man of the house is the idealist, the generally laidback layabout, while it is the wife and mother who suffers the anxieties of everyday life. She is also often the disciplinarian of the children, while the father is himself likened to an immature adolescent, at least in temperament. Harihar makes ends meet by being a priest, but on the side, his passion is writing plays and poetry, and it is to those endeavors that he devotes most of his time and effort. While such artistic goals undeniably have their cultural value, in Pather Panchali they contribute to a spousal clash of pragmatism versus naïve optimism. His art is important, but will it pay the bills? That, he does not so much worry about, but Sarbojaya does, for she has no such lofty devotion, at least not any longer; he still has his dreams, she only had hers. The conflict of aspirations and harsh realizations sets up a recurrent narrative challenge awaiting Apu, who, over the course of the three films, will face any number of obstacles thwarting his objectives, those short-term and life altering.
Also established early on, and again resonating throughout the trilogy, oftentimes directly influencing the realization or abandonment of idyllic ambitions, is the natural progression of life: births, deaths, weddings, funerals. As these three films follow several years in the life of one character and give ample attention to many of those around him, a major motif is subsequently that of youth versus old age, how the two differ and simultaneously compliment one another. This is first embodied by Durga, with her mischievous behavior, and by the defiantly stubborn elderly aunt, Indir Thakrun (Chunibala Devi), who lives with the family. Sarbojaya scolds the old woman for acting at times like a child, with the implication in this instance being that the very young and the very old are connected in a way those of middle age are not, that they both view things in a similar fashion, act accordingly, and are correspondingly chided (after all, it’s usually for the aunt that Durga steals fruit). The young and old are, in a sense, free from the burdens and the worries of middle age; they either are not yet there or have lived long enough to surpass such concerns. In those central years is where the trouble lies, though, as seen by Sarbojaya’s varied anxieties and the struggles of Harihar, and that is where we leave Apu by the time of Apur Sansar, with a tumultuous adult life ahead of him. “There are always good times and bad,” says Harihar, and so it goes that in the Apu trilogy; death is ever present and ever varying. There is the prolonged process of the aunt’s gradual passing in old age, the sudden and irrevocably fatal sickness of Durga and Harihar, and the death of Sarbojaya, most likely spurred on by emotional turmoil. Life and death, the trilogy shows, do not discriminate by age.
419623-apu-trilogu7003For all of Harihar’s faults, and however much Sarbojaya may deride his seemingly frivolous ambitions, by the end of Pather Panchali it is he who paves the way for the family’s move and a new chapter in the lives of all involved. Following the premature death of Durga and Harihar’s attainment of a new job, Aparajito picks up with the Ray family in the city of what is now Varanasi. Harihar continues his part-time religious work but soon succumbs to illness, which leaves Sarbojaya again under great duress. For a substantial portion of the film, Apu is not yet the primary point of focus, as that revolves around his mother and father. But it is still by way of his sense of sideline curiosity that much of what is seen is understood and chronicled.
Following his father’s passing, and his mother’s decision to move back to the village, Apu does gradually become the central figure, and he is now faced with his own decisions to make, particularly as they relate to his education. His detached childhood innocence and cheerful way of life is slipping away. Now he is concerned about his studies in Kolkata, which leaves him at odds with his mother, who frets about being left alone. He therefore has to choose between leaving her and their relative comfort in order to act on his own dreams, or to remain and become a village priest, like his father, with his goals relegated to merely what might have been, like his mother.
In Pather Panchali‘s Bengal village, Ray and cinematographer Subrata Mitra find and express an extraordinarily complex beauty in the natural simplicity of the forest. The nature photography glistens with images of sprinkling sunlight, textured foliage, and scenes of tranquil stillness. In this rural tableau, structures organically grow from, and meld with, the environment in a synchronicity of wilderness and settlement. In certain interior sequences, Ray adds to the realism of the location by retaining unrelated, though reasonable, background sounds and voices, never abandoning the notion that there is continually vigorous life beyond the frame. It’s what Ray biographer Andrew Robinson calls a “living backdrop.” While this may make for a richly authentic setting, it is often more than Sarbojaya can stand. For her, “it’s like living in the jungle.” For better or worse then, by the time ofAparajito such a setting seems a million miles away. The soft lushness of their bucolic village has given way to an urban hardness. The family’s new neighbors move freely around and are generally congenial (though perhaps a little too forward), but they remain strangers, and the Ray family, too, are strangers in a strange land.
APARAJITO_MAIN2050Later, when Apu arrives in Kolkata, he is similarly stricken with an eager bewilderment, marveling at unexpectedly commonplace features of modernized civilization, like electricity. Though only hinted at in Pather Panchali, the conflict of primitivism and modernity is front and center in Aparajito, as is the blending of the natural and the artificial. One gets this sense right away, as the film opens with residents bathing in the Ganges river as it flows along the man-made banks of Varanasi (we see it again even in Kolkata, as pigs roam free right outside Apu’s multi-storied apartment building). The split division of the natural environment and that of urban development visually reflects the half-and-half position of Aparajito itself, which ultimately finds Apu at a personal crossroads. The surroundings also signal a tonal shift, with an urban location that is intimidating and even frightening in its newness. For this and in other ways, Aparajito is clearly a transitional film and does not work quite as well as a stand-alone feature. Having seen where Apu is coming from, we relate to his perception of foreignness, and do so with considerable anxiety. Ray thus films this middle feature with less obvious vitality, replacing it with the feeling that there is nothing beautiful or magical here.
When the somewhat older Apu is successfully on his own, his mother remains concerned for his safety and for his health. She becomes a solitary, tragic figure, even more than she already was, and the sadness registers prominently on Bannerjee’s face (she, along with the child actors of Pather Panchali, gives the best performance of the trilogy). When Sarbojaya purposely doesn’t wake the visiting Apu one morning, hoping he will miss his train back to the city, her pathetically guilt-ridden expression speaks volumes.
ptaher-3After Sarbojaya dies, and with Apu finally left by himself, he is now free to act on his life without the constraints of familial responsibility, with no attachments, no ties to bind him to his previous existence. One thing that remains, however, is the enigmatic majesty of trains, that perpetual symbol of movement, progress, and modernity—three key themes of the Apu trilogy, and also a feature that carries connotations of Apu’s steadily dissipating childhood wonderment; one of the finest scenes in Pather Panchali, the first scene actually shot, involves Apu’s astonished viewing of a passing train. (In Aparajito, the opening shot is taken from a train, and in Apur Sansar, Apu lives near a rail yard. But by this point, the thrill is gone.)
The adult Apu in Apur Sansar is a talented writer (following in that half of his father’s footsteps), who has earned something of a reputation for his college work on village life. This, it would seem, is the one way for Apu to keep his upbringing alive, for now he is fully entrenched in modern life, a life of restaurants and movie theaters, slacks and button-up shirts. Still, he lives modestly, and still he struggles to find his way. While attending the wedding of a friend’s cousin, Apu quite unexpectedly finds himself in the midst of an unraveling ceremony. Seen to be in the right place at the right time, and despite the fact he initially decries the proposal as being from the “dark ages,” Apu reluctantly steps in to take the reticent groom’s place. His unanticipated marriage is no doubt a major step in his life, and it is a step he is drastically ill-equipped to take, emotionally and financially. But Aparna (Sharmila Tagore), his new bride, is beautiful, and besides, it is nevertheless another, perhaps inevitable step in life, a way to accomplish some semblance of mature, adult stability.
Dem-3 Photo. Helene Jeanbrau © 1996 cine-tamaris.tifFor a time, Apur Sansar takes the shape of a common, modern domestic drama. Though Aparna is less educated than Apu, she pleasantly assumes her new role and together the two share some of the trilogy’s most pleasantly tender moments. Apu’s life is destined to be marred by tragedy, however, and this too is not meant to be. When Aparna dies during childbirth, Apu abandons the boy, and after he spends time in a period of bearded, nomadic wandering, he is faced with yet another decision about the next path to take.
Apur Sansar ends with a beautifully arranged final sequence, a satisfying conclusion to the series, one that conveys, for the first time, Apu’s now full engagement in a world of his own (hence the third film’s subtitle). It is, as critic Terrence Rafferty writes, “a passage that both evokes the past and implies a future—a moment in which two people, one grown, one not, stand on a threshold.”
Far more of an amateur production than the latter two films, Pather Panchali was created with a small, inexperienced crew. It also has a less straightforward narrative than the following two features, opting instead for a fluid slice of life depiction of the Ray family, with a perceptive authenticity in detail (setting, clothes, props, habits, etc.) rather than plot. This first installment, a groundbreaking leap forward for Indian cinema, is likewise therefore less reliant on classically effective emotional cues (though Aparajito and Apur Sansar are by no means melodramatic), and stylistically, as in the nature scenes noted above, it is also the most visually dynamic. For these reasons, it is the best of the three films. Regarding its liveliness and intensity, Chatterjee says the movie is, “like an eagle swooping down and carrying our hearts up to the sky.” It is no surprise Pather Panchali had a successful New York premiere even though it was shown sans subtitles. There is no translation required to such visual resonance.
world-of-apuGenerally though, while his films are always aesthetically pleasing, Ray frequently films without any blatant synthetic flourish, but with a background as a graphic artist and having worked under the tutelage of Jean Renoir, he was fully capable of elegant pictorial compositions, striking camera movements, and emphatic editing when necessary. There are times when he incorporates an explicitly stylized punctuation to the already dazzling intrinsic imagery. In Pather Panchali, for example, there are two such shots: when he dollies alongside the aunt in an unconventional profile close-up as she walks in front of hanging rugs, and when Sarbojaya is seen walking inside her darkened house by candlelight, shot from the nighttime shadows outside.
Enhancing Ray’s masterful writing and direction, a number of other individuals played integral roles in the greatness of these three features. First, and perhaps foremost, is Ravi Shankar, whose stirring score is inseparable from the imagery and tone of the films. Then there is cinematographer Mitra, editor Dulal Dutta, and production designer/art director Bansi Chandragupta. Ray may have been the guiding force behind the scenes, but without the contributions of these and other key figures over the course of several years, what distinguishes this trilogy would never have been so fully and magnificently realized.
While a trilogy was not his original intent, it’s good Satyajit Ray ultimately chose to continue following Apu. Pather Panchali stands on its own as an exceptional motion picture, Aparajito carries further the themes and complex character relations, and Apur Sansar rounds everything up, but the three films together, as one universally affecting document, make the trilogy the incomparable cinematic accomplishment that it is.
Bad Boys/Bad Boys IIWitten by Michael Barrie, Jim Mulholland, and Doug Richardson/Ron Shelton and Jerry Stahl
Directed by Michael Bay
USA, 1995/2003
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Say what you will about Michael Bay—and people have said a lot about Michael Bay—the man knows how to make an action movie. Bad Boys, from 1995, his first feature film, and its sequel, from 2003, which is making its Blu-ray debut as part of a 20th anniversary collection from Sony Pictures, are just two notable examples. These films are bursting at the seams with car chases, gunfights, explosions, and more, much more. There isn’t a whole lot beneath the surface, but there doesn’t really need to be. What these two films set out to do, they do very well, and what Bay does best, he does better than anybody. That may not always (hardly ever) be critically acceptable in terms of “quality cinema,” but the result is skillful, vigorous, generally entertaining, and extremely profitable. Cases in point: the two Bad Boys films.
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Bad Boys (6)Before getting to the action, though, which is the most impressive and laudable element of every Michael Bay movie, Bad Boys is built on a standard buddy film template, with a clash of personalities joining together when necessary in the interest of professional duty. Will Smith and Martin Lawrence play Miami narcotics detectives Mike Lowrey and Marcus Burnett. While they have differing tactical methods, the two prove essentially efficient, even if they leave in their wake a trail of dead bodies and collateral damage. Neither work exactly by the book, but the movies wouldn’t be much fun if they did. Their character contrast is not only in temperament and methodology, but also in their individual history and their private social status: Marcus is fairly domesticated with a wife and children, relying on his paycheck, and keen to play it safe; Mike is a bachelor, a ladies man, from a wealthy family, and more than willing to take risks. Marcus is high-strung and anxious; Mike is smooth and confident.
In the first film, when Mike and Marcus must swap lifestyles, this disparity perfectly sets up the humor latent in their conflicting personas, thus serving the purpose of the movie’s primary comical conceit. In the second Bad Boys, Marcus’s sister Syd (Gabrielle Union) enters the picture. She works for the DEA and, unbeknownst to Marcus, is in a relationship with Mike, which suggests his womanizing ways have passed since the prior film. That is one point of tension between the partners. But further complicating their relationship is the revelation that Marcus has apparently had enough of Mike’s recklessness and has put in for a transfer.
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This is about the extent of the films’ character development and evolution. The deepest example of Mike and Marcus achieving any sort of profound realization is in the loyalty, the brotherhood, that despite antagonism nevertheless remains. By comparison, the bad guys in the two films, who are hardly worth mentioning, are simply bad and generally inconsequential…save for them being the bad guys. Their major point of differentiation is that in the first movie they deal in heroin while in the second they deal ecstasy. Compared to this standard nefarious triviality, Mike and Marcus are reasonably substantial individuals.
Still, nothing about any of this is particularly earth shattering, and Bay himself acknowledges the poor script he was working from with the first Bad Boys. But what kept his interest, and indeed, what makes the films entertaining (along with Bay’s visual initiative—more on that later) are the charismatic Smith and Lawrence. While there is no heartfelt association between these men and the audience, we don’t mind spending a few hours with the two of them. There may be an overabundance of the incessantly chaotic bickering that occurs in most partners-in-opposition film scenarios, but there is a strong chemistry that works. To make up for the initially lackluster screenplay, Bay allowed for Smith and Lawrence to improvise a good deal of their confrontational agitation. Their corresponding talents show in the naturally humorous combative banter and the amusing interactions with others, from their colleagues to the hapless boy showing up to take out Marcus’ daughter. Sometimes the two, especially Smith, strut and pose to play up the visual coolness of their swagger, but it’s all in good fun. In fact, while it’s perfectly understandable that Will Smith would want to broaden his range and venture into more dramatic opportunities (though the success of that outcome has been debatable), there is obviously a reason why roles like these are what made him a star.
Bad Boys (5)The main attraction for any Michael Bay film, though, and the two Bad Boys are no exception, is Michael Bay. Some may argue with justification that Bay’s cinema is all style and no substance, and true enough, Bad Boys is a largely cosmetic series, but it does undeniably have style. Bay has an extraordinary knack for visual flair, and in this sun-kissed Miami setting, the films are sleek, glamorous, and spectacularly realized. Bay’s mobile camera, his integration of low and canted camera angles, his use of dramatic slow motion, it all works superbly in this cinematic milieu of hyper-dynamic action. With this is Bay’s music video aesthetic, accentuating frenetic editing, fluorescent coloring, embellished lighting, and a largely effective sense of pacing. Though he notes the quick cutting in the first film was partially a result of his having to cover up some of the faulty sets (he comments on the film’s “low” $19 million budget and points out he personally put up $25,000 in order to get one explosion), both films proceed at a satisfactorily expedient tempo. A criticism regarding some of his more recent films is that their length borders on self-indulgent gratuitousness (the last Transformers was 165 minutes long), but for both Bad Boys, he keeps things dynamic, building on a steady momentum.
These stylistic hallmarks are all evident in the first Bad Boys film, which is flashy but never overly so. But for better or worse, Bay turns the visual voltage up to eleven with Bad Boys II. Everything about the second Bad Boys is slicker and more extravagant: there are better cars, and more of them; better car chases, and more of them; better stunts, and more of them. The violence, pursuits, and explosions are gloriously over the top and the action sequences are lengthier and much more elaborate. WithBad Boys II, Bay was working off a considerably higher budget (about $130 million), which, along with nearly 10 years of technical advancement, also increased the amount of digital imagery. This he seamlessly and creatively integrates to admirable effect. Most impressive in the sequel are the digitally enhanced single takes, Bay using the CGI at his disposal to have the “camera” seemingly swoop in, out, above, below, and through realistically impossible structures, often without a perceived cut. The films are also increasingly expansive in terms of settings and set pieces, with the action tracking over large portions of the Miami area (and beyond, in the case of the sequel). Less remarkable, though nonetheless vital to Bay’s overarching approach toward action, are common elements like glass breaking, water spraying, and debris flying. It may not all be substantive, but it is expertly accomplished.
Bad Boys (3)Now, of course, the above is not to suggest the Bad Boysfilms are great works of cinematic art. Though enjoyable, they have more than their fair share of flaws. Leaving the narrative issues aside (Bay says the first film has logic you could drive a truck through), there is a treatment of women that is questionable at best. Bay by no means holds a monopoly on such a liability, and (male) filmmakers have been doing this since the advent of the medium, but with the lingering close-ups, suggestive angles, and mostly clichéd presentations, both Bad Boysfilms are marred by an objectifying sexualization or a demeaning physical portrayal of most featured females (a holdover from Bay’s Victoria’s Secret commercials?). I don’t believe there is any maliciously sexist intent in any of this, but it is present. There are also issues with the comedic tone of both Bad Boys, which ranges from good-natured wisecracks, often punctuated by funny pop culture allusions, to sophomorically crass commentary. The jokes in the two films, either voiced or visual, include a host of dubious material: gay jokes, rat sex jokes, erection jokes, ethnic and racial jokes, cadaver jokes, fart jokes, and, when Marcus accidentally downs some ecstasy, drug jokes. Some admittedly work; some most certainly do not.
Bad Boys (4)Perhaps something like 13 Hours will change this, but one of the easiest and most common charges against Bay is that for what his films are worth—for those who are even willing to give his films some worth—their value is largely derived from superficial qualities. They look good, the characters are amusing enough (if occasionally annoying and not heavily engaging), but the films are, ultimately, frivolous exercises in overblown action and special effects. Be that as it may, and the Bad Boys films do skirt this territory, though they are less reliant on effect-driven exhibition than theTransformers series, for example; I can’t help but find his work immensely enjoyable.
Bay was not yet 30 at the time of production on the firstBad Boys, and he had years of successful and widely acclaimed music video and commercial experience behind him. It’s with this background that he developed the type of artistry I admire, one of pure visual bravado. Without getting into a whole theoretical/historical justification of Bay’s filmmaking, movies like Bad Boys fall in line with a cinematic concept going back to the purpose of movies at their inception: inventive imagery, pure spectacle, in Tom Gunning’s immortal words, “the cinema of attractions,” where story and character are secondary to simply seeing something incredible, technically if not logically. With Bad Boys and elsewhere, the argument I go back to with Michael Bay is that even if his films aren’t serious, aren’t especially well written, and do get carried away in terms of their barrage of action content, they ultimately still look amazing. Is that enough? I don’t know, sometimes I think it is.