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Dodes'ka-den (1970) Clickety-Clack REMASTERED
Posted By :
LezDawson
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Date :
21 Jun 2009 13:23:17
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Comments :
3
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Dodes'ka-den (1970) Clickety-Clack REMASTERED
XviD/AVI | MP3-160kbps mono | 640x480 (4:3) | Japanese | Subs: ENG srt | 2h 20m | 1.52 GB
Art House
XviD/AVI | MP3-160kbps mono | 640x480 (4:3) | Japanese | Subs: ENG srt | 2h 20m | 1.52 GB
Art House
If you take the title of Akira Kurosawa's first color film, Dodes'ka-den (1970), and translate it into English, what you get is "Clickety-Clack." In the movie it's the sound made by a mentally challenged adolescent (Yoshitaka Zushi) who clickety-clacks on foot through his Tokyo slum pretending to be the conductor of an invisible streetcar.
He hand-brakes at imaginary trolley stops through the vast shantytown dump site that is home to an eccentric society of poor and desperate residents just barely getting by, trapped there among the landscape's trash heaps and ash piles. They look out for the affably deranged "trolley freak," and it's their stories that Kurosawa reveals to us with a bleak, darkly shaded humanism. And like the driver of the invisible streetcar, most of them try to escape their lives through the only things they have left -- fantasy, alcohol, and idle gossip about their fellow slum-dwellers.
There's the beggar and his sickly son living in a Volkswagen yet "building" their imaginary dream house, complete with a swimming pool. A blind "man with dead eyes" who obsesses that his wife is unfaithful. The women who gather at the water spigot to trade gossipy commentary on the others. The niece who loses herself in vibrant colored paper flowers to offset the sexual brutality of her repulsive uncle. The businessman with the jerky, stork-like walk and who dotes (to the point of murder) on his harpy of a wife. And so on as they lift their grim, gray, interwoven lives with tragicomic dramas in their minds. We see Kurosawa's empathy for their downtrodden state, most memorably through the Technicolor hues -- he was a painter as well, and the DVD box art is one of his pieces -- that add striking brush strokes to the symbolic and dramatic impact of his characters' individualized set pieces.
Shot in 28 days at a real Tokyo dump site, Dodes'ka-den is not a major work from the great Kurosawa. Although at the 1971 Academy Awards it was nominated for Best Foreign Film, its critical and financial failure only deepened the director's long-building depression, and we're fortunate that his suicide attempt - cutting himself over two dozen times with a razor - was also a failure. It was five years before he made another film.
But we are talking Kurosawa, and while his unfortunate characters are rather too plainly representative of "the human condition," Dodes'ka-den is in its own right a haunting interior look at society's outcasts, failures, and rejects. (Even if you've never before heard of Kurosawa, if you like Jim Jarmusch you should give this one a spin and spot the possible influences.) Its smattering of social realism mixes deftly with a strange melancholic whimsy. Dodes'ka-den need not be a grand-scale "Kurosawa film" on the order of Rashomon, Seven Samurai, or Ran to give us much that's effective, emotive, and beautiful. Followers of the master should seek it out as a telling work from a critical time in his personal and professional life. There's never a doubt that what you're seeing is a master craftsman putting his passions and labour onto a canvas that meant a lot to him.
An easy pick-up for Kurosawa devotees, the Criterion Collection's new DVD gives Dodes'ka-den a customary stellar presentation, with the film newly remastered to a colourful brilliance and vividness not seen before on home video editions. Criterion has likewise improved the Japanese soundtrack (Dolby Digital mono) and the translation subtitles. Mark Bourne, Mar 18, 2009
RS Links
Part 01|Part 02|Part 03|Part 04|Part 05|Part 06|Part 07|Part 08
Part 09|Part 10|Part 11|Part 12|Part 13|Part 14|Part 15|Part 16
Booklet
Part 01|Part 02
No password required. Thanks to CerealRipper for the DVD9.
Part 01|Part 02|Part 03|Part 04|Part 05|Part 06|Part 07|Part 08
Part 09|Part 10|Part 11|Part 12|Part 13|Part 14|Part 15|Part 16
Booklet
Part 01|Part 02
No password required. Thanks to CerealRipper for the DVD9.
Find this and other Kurosawa/Criterion DVD extras here:
Dodes'ka-den, Seven Samurai, The Bad Sleep Well, High And Low, Yojimbo, Sanjuro, Redbeard, Kagemusha and Ran.
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Posted By:
pyrolysebred
Date:
28 Jun 2009 10:35:38
Thanks for this :)
Posted By:
klag
Date:
05 Jul 2009 12:27:45
Thanks a lot!
Posted By:
kidclam
Date:
03 Aug 2009 02:54:24
Thanks for the extras in the other post.
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