Daily Archives: May 30, 2016

Donzoko (1957)

Donzoko (aka The Lower Depths)donzoko poster
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
Written by Akira Kurosawa and Hideo Oguni from a play by Maxim Gorky
1957/Japan
Toho Company
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental


Everybody lives for something better to come. That’s why we want to be considerate of every man— Who knows what’s in him, why he was born and what he can do? —Maxim Gorky, The Lower Depths

Kurosawa turns Gorky’s tragedy about illusion among the dregs of society into a comedy and produces his best ensemble piece since Seven Samurai.

When people in late 19th-century Japan hit rock bottom, they might have landed in a lodging like the one in this film.  It is basically a flop house where an assortment of the poor share a single room and sleep on the floor.  The owners are grasping and conniving, one rung up the ladder from their pitiful guests .  Landlady Osugi (Isuzu Yamada) runs a tight ship while keeping her eye on her beloved Sutekichi (Toshiro Mifune), a thief.  Sutekichi, however, has tired of her and has his eye on her sister Okayo, whom the landlords treat as little better than a slave.  Other tenants include an alcoholic actor, a tinker and his dying wife, a prostitute, a gambler, a self-styled ex-samurai and their ilk.  All nurture some kind of illusion about a more nobel past and dream of a better life, or after life as the case may be.

Donzoko8

The tenants all see the lies told by the others but not their own.  Into their midst, comes a Buddhist priest (Bokuzen Hidari, Yohei in Seven Samurai) who sees the comfort provided by the lies and dreams and encourages his fellows to hold on to them.  Meanwhile, there is a raging lovers triangle between the thief and the two sisters that constantly threatens violence.

donzoko 3

Mifune and Yamada get top billing but do not have parts much bigger than any of the others.  If there is a central character who ties the piece together, it is the priest.  The action is confined basically to one set but Kurosawa makes the film richly cinematic with his moving camera and masterful editing.  The dialogue is pretty wonderful and the theme is thought-provoking.  Highly recommended.

I reviewed Jean Renoir’s 1936 version of the same play here.

Bizarre clip montage set to “music” – the actual little song and dance the card players do in the movie is one of its highlights

Albert Schweitzer (1957)

Albert Schweitzer
Directed by Jerome Hill
Narration written by Thomas Bruce Morgan
1957/USA
Hill and Anderson Productions
First viewing/YouTube

[box] Do something wonderful, people may imitate it. –Albert Schweitzer [/box]

Albert Schweitzer’s life is an inspiration.  This is a solid documentary about it.

Schweitzer was born in Alsace-Lorraine in 1875 at a time when the province was part of Germany, though he considered himself to be French.  His father was a Lutheran minister.  He decided at a young age to devote himself to music – he was a fine organist -, teaching and preaching until he was 30 and the rest of his life to the service of others.  Unlike many with dreams, he did exactly that.  At age 30, he started medical school and after he graduated went to French Equatorial Africa (now Gabon) where he built a hospital.  He spent the rest of his life – with a significant interruption when the French authorities interred “Germans” in WWI – tending to the needs of the Africans.   Schweitzer received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1952.  The film is narrated by Burgess Meredith; Fredric March is the voice of Schweitzer.

This is nothing exceptional cinematically but is a wonderful summary of Schweitzer’s life and work.  The final half shows a day in the life of his hospital.  Schweitzer had a little of The White Man’s Burden common to his time but was basically a generous soul and a renaissance man.

Albert Schweitzer won the Academy Award for Best Documentary, Feature.