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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great for Kurosawa fans but not the best intro to his work.
I am a Kurosawa fan and enjoyed it very much. It starts out a little uneven, and in fact had to rewind at the beginning to double-check character names and some confusing plot explanation in the subtitles (but not as confusing as Dostoyevsky's character names!). After this however, I thought it was very good. There are also some interesting scenes in which new western...
Published on January 5, 1999

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6 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Yikes
I love a lot of Kurosawa's films and his worst is probably better than some directors' best. But The Idiot, in my opinion, really misses its mark. The beauty, depth and humor of the original Dostoevsky novel are totally lost in this film version. (Perhaps they would be in any film version.) I found the acting of the lead character in particular, to be stilted and even...
Published on August 25, 2002 by N.N.


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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great for Kurosawa fans but not the best intro to his work., January 5, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Idiot [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I am a Kurosawa fan and enjoyed it very much. It starts out a little uneven, and in fact had to rewind at the beginning to double-check character names and some confusing plot explanation in the subtitles (but not as confusing as Dostoyevsky's character names!). After this however, I thought it was very good. There are also some interesting scenes in which new western influence on post-war Japan is seen (though this has nothing to do with plot). I recommend it highly, although non-fans may find it a little long. The Maltin review mentioned that it wasn't edited per Kurosawa's wishes and it shows, but a good movie and still has many Kurosawa 'trademark' shots and touches.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How To See Beauty, January 5, 2006
This review is from: The Idiot [VHS] (VHS Tape)
In 1951 the Shochiku film studio released Akira Kurosawa's adaptation of Dostoevsky's "The Idiot" in a much-cut and rather mangled form. It flopped, and when Shockiku insisted the film be cut it again...Kurosawa said, "Next time cut it down the middle...lengthwise!" In other words, cutting would destroy the film. Anyway, the original Kurosawa-cut version was lost, and what remains is this much-pared-down version....


And, somehow, like a damaged soul, it is unbelievably affecting. It is a film that shows great nobility of spirit, contrasted against the tragic consequences of one's choices and actions based on fear, loathing, avarice, hate, and yes, love.

What a strange film! Kurosawa chose Hokkaido, the northernmost of Japan's islands, and the most European-like. The houses look like European houses, and the weather! Snow covers the windowsills and blows in from open doors. What a desolate and deeply affecting visual...the windows with crescents of snow, while inside, near a stove, the tragic human dramas unfold.
Utterly fascinating. I cannot tell you how lovely and strange and disturbing a film this is! Maybe that overlay of Christianity, transplanted to Buddhism, is able to take the Christ-like central "Prince Myishkin" figure into a new realm of possibility of meaning: a universal secular application of the principle of loving one another.

Suddenly, in this film, everything is re-made: new and at the same time resonant of our own shared histories.

I have a memory of being in the Peter and Paul fortress in St. Petersberg and seeing a cell, and being told that Dostoevsky had been imprisoned, brought before a firing squad, blindfolded, the shots rang out...but the whole thing had been a cruel joke..they had not shot the novelist, he had been reprieved.

I know that Dostoevsky lived in St. Peteresberg, and I know that he had been in the army, and that he suffered from epilepsy and this reprieve from death, well, it would be pretty much the history (or to use film lingo, "backstory") of the central character in "The Idiot".

The acting is the kind of heated, overwrought acting you might expect in a silent film (and this is not to belittle the acting..! A silent film must communicate visually, and here, Kurosawa does the nearly impossible: allows us to enter into the pained and tortured souls of the characters through their eyes and how they hold their bodies, how they react to one another. These are people at the edge of sanity, desperate and full of self-loathing and fear. Their passions, even, are a source of pain. And, you will feel it, viscerally!).

Setsuko Hara is amazing. You will never see her like this in an Ozu film! Imperious, tortured.

Despite some awareness that the film was damaged and incomplete
(according to Kurosawa's original vision), and despite a disagreeable
encounter with the initial scenes where there are abrupt cuts, intertitles as elipses for lost footage, and some jumpy discontinuity-I attribute most of this to Shochiku's insistence on paring down of the film for time, and find, that, by the second half of the film, I've been won over, completely, and haunted and deeply moved.

In comparing this with another Kurosawa adaption of a Russian author;
Gorky's "The Lower Depths", one is immediately aware of the different
approach, and the masterful handling of the latter is so easeful and sure. In comparison, "The Idiot" is flawed, difficult.

But, for all it's flaws, I found "The Idiot" to be one of the best films I have ever seen!

Masayuki Mori, as the Prince Myishkin character (Kameda in the film) is deeply affecting. It is the surprise of his sudden smile, coming like sun on snow, or a light in a dark room, of his humility when he's said something painfully honest that shocks everyone, and he puts his hands to his head and apologizes..he is "damaged", and meant no harm by his words. In the scene where he takes the now-mad Toshiro Mifune's head in his hands (Mifune plays Akama..the Rogozhin character from the novel) his hands, even, seem to be imbued with a gentle love. By that point in the film, though, I completely believe in him! So beautiful, those deep, pained and loving eyes!

Setusko Hara, as Taeko (the Nastasya character in the novel) is utterly unlike anything we've seen in Ozu! You know, every short synopsis of the novel mentions the character as capricious...but, here, in this film, it so much more!!! We feel her motivations, her pain, her fury and desperation. We especially feel her pain through Mori's eyes. When she is at the point of tears, forcing Mori to choose her over another...there is an electricity...she holds her head back proudly, trying not to cry...imperiously raising her hand and telling Mori he must choose her and abandon his other love...and there is so much tension, everyone is at the breaking point, and it is truly her face, at this moment that terrifies! I have never seen her so desperate and in such pain! She is magnificent, heartbreaking.

Takashi Shimura is here, and it's always good to see him! Bokuzen Hidari, with a "Hitler-esque" moustache is here...being funny, as usual...the mom from "Tokyo Story" is here-her solid frame, those wonderful eyes (she feels like a family friend, doesn't she? Everyone has an aunt or mom or relative like her), and good 'old Minoru Chiaki, playing an uncharacteristically crummy guy (he's usually loveable in most of his roles).

This film has suffered from a bad rap. If you really love film, this is brilliant, so see it without prejuduice, forget what anyone might have told you about it, just remember the ways in which films are different from books, and remember that Kurosawa loved the book deeply, and trust him-he was even a better director than you thought he was.


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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still Crying..., July 19, 2005
By 
Marye Eveland (Mattoon, IL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Idiot [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I would never critique Kurosawa and I would never take a pass on any of his films. This movie's not perfect, but how could you ever give him less than 5 stars? Either you want to see every Kurosawa film ever made or you don't want to see any.
This was beautiful, sad, and terrifying. I'd love to see it as originally shot. This was my first of his "modern" films. How exciting to see other actors I'd only seen in Ozu films-it made me appreciate them even more. See it if you get the chance!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars To say always the truth is hazardous, because will always hurt somebody!, March 10, 2007
The profound gaze of Akira Kurosawa about a simple man, naïve and idiot, considered by the doctors as a dement epileptic, will face the world with his only weapon; the truth and nothing more the truth. But as you know, in this world of wolves, you must sleep with an eye open and just a few persons are capable to accept the awful truth that can make you blind.

This powerful dramatis personae will involve two women who will love him from different perspectives. Inspired in the famous work of Dostoievsky, this another great gem of this master filmmaker.

Watch it and you will experience the crude reality of the madness and feel what it means to be just in the razor's edge.

Extraordinary and one of my top one hundred desert island films.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, Beautiful and Sad, November 29, 2003
By 
DAVID DAHL (Longmont, Colorado USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Idiot [VHS] (VHS Tape)
To me this film only used the framework of Doestoevsky's tale. Instead to me it shows the tragedy of postwar Japan. My favorite moment is when Kameda and Akama walk through the streets of
Hokkaido and they see the image of Taeko Nasu and Kurosawa makes the portrait our focus and the two men are merely the reflections in the glass. It foreshadows the pending tragedy beautifully. The music in the background is haunting and it too captures the sadness of all three of the characters.
I loved Doestoevsky's novel, but to me this film brought it to life. Made it accessable and ultimately painful because as the film moves on I came to love Kameda in a way I couldn't with Prince Myshkin.
I am sad this film is out of print I would love to get this on DVD.
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9 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This is a hard one!, July 20, 2001
By 
Penny N. Vilela (Oakhurst, California United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Idiot [VHS] (VHS Tape)
"The Idiot" is a very complicated story and fitting all the characters and subplots into a two and a half hour movie does not work. I read that the studio that released it cut the film from six hours to the length we see. They should have left it alone. The characters are fascinating. The acting is a bit over the top. Mifune can get away with chewing the scenery but some of the other actors are not as fortunate. Don't let this review turn you off. It is an engrossing film with some memorable moments!
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6 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Yikes, August 25, 2002
By 
N.N. (Albuquerque, NM, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Idiot [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I love a lot of Kurosawa's films and his worst is probably better than some directors' best. But The Idiot, in my opinion, really misses its mark. The beauty, depth and humor of the original Dostoevsky novel are totally lost in this film version. (Perhaps they would be in any film version.) I found the acting of the lead character in particular, to be stilted and even a bit ridiculous. Kurosawa somehow turned a rich, dynamic and very realistic psychological exploration into a weepy melodrama. And I can't imagine the film will seem much better if you haven't read the novel. You are much better off buying the book, one of the most perfect, profound and entertaining stories ever written, and leaving this movie alone.
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The Idiot [VHS]
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