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Saturday, Mar 3, 1984
9:25PM
I Live in Fear (Ikimono no kiroku)
(Also known as Record of a Living Being.) Made shortly after the first H-bomb tests in the Pacific caused renewed fear in Japan of nuclear war, this relatively neglected Kurosawa film has only grown in relevance. It also remains a remarkable testament to the versatility and daring of actor Toshiro Mifune, who at the age of 35 took on the role of a crusty, eccentric old patriarch, Nakajima, who attempts to sell his small foundry and move with his family to Brazil, out of range of the nuclear holocaust he envisions as imminent. Like King Lear, he watches, outraged, as his large family (including his mistresses and their children) seek to protect their financial interests by having him declared insane. Kurosawa infuses the film with sun and heat imagery. In the end, the life-giving sun comes to represent only a fiery holocaust, as seen by a sole "living being," Nakajima, who recognizes that greed and inhumanity will mark the ultimate moments of mankind.
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