The revered Japanese
director Akira Kurosawa only made one feature film in a language other than his
native tongue, and it was this poetic character study about the impact a
soulful primitive has on a man from the civilized world. Painted on a broad
canvas comprising myriad widescreen vistas of the natural world and unspooling
at epic length (144 minutes), Dersu Uzala
takes place mostly in the wilderness of Russia’s section of the Far East. Spoken
entirely in Russian, the movie begins in 1910, when government surveyor Arsenev
(Yurly Solomin) travels to Siberia upon hearing that his old friend, frontier
guide Dersu (Maksim Munzuk), has died. Revisiting the place where they met,
Arsenev remembers his long acquaintance with Dersu, triggering the lengthy
flashbacks that provide most of the picture’s running time.
The movie’s central
relationship begins in 1902, when Arsenev first travels to Siberia, tasked with
mapping the area for the Russian government. Aresnev eventually stumbles across
Dersu, a Nanai mountain man who travels alone because he lost his family during
an outbreak of smallpox. Expert at survival and reverential toward the natural
world, Dersu escorts Arsenev’s survey team through remote terrain and quickly
evolves from an object of ridicule (Arsenev’s people initially mock Dersu’s
superstitious beliefs) to a valued colleague. In the film’s most riveting
scene, Aresenev and Dersu find themselves lost and alone on a frozen field just
before nightfall, so Dersu leads his friend in a desperate endeavor to gather
stalks of tall grass with which to build a makeshift shelter, thereby saving both
of them from certain death overnight. Although Kurosawa’a visual style
throughout much of Dersu Uzala is
frustratingly static, with lugubriously long takes of people talking, the great
artist’s consummate skill emerges when he uses quick-cut angles of two men
fighting for their lives amid the golden hues of twilight.
Based upon a
nonfiction book by the real-life Vladimir Arsenev, Dersu Uzala gains potency in its second half, when Arsenev returns
to Siberia for a subsequent mission and discovers that Dersu’s failing
eyesight has eliminated his value as a guide and endangered his ability to
survive in his beloved wilderness. This plot development motivates another
standout sequence, during which Dersu reacts with terror after he shoots at but
misses a tiger that’s bedeviling Arsenev’s men; in Dersu’s superstitious mind,
the spirit of the tiger will hunt him down because Dersu has failed to fulfill
his role in the natural order of things. Arsenev nobly brings his friend home
to the city, but Dersu is too much a creature of the frontier to blend into the
modern world. During the passages depicting Dersu’s decline, Kurosawa laces the
film with lyrical narration about loss that sums up not only the key themes of Dersu Uzala, but also metaphysical
tropes that ran through myriad Kurosawa masterpieces, from Ikiru (1952) to Ran
(1985).
Although Dersu Uzala won
considerable acclaim, including an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language
Film, it might be a stretch to call the picture one of the essential works in
Kurosawa’s towering filmography. It’s a soulful film, but also an unwieldy one
that would have benefited from judicious editing. Nonetheless, it represented a
creative rebirth after a dark time in the filmmaker’s life (Kurosawa attempted
suicide in the early ’70s), and he would soon return to the samurai milieu of
his ’50s and ’60s classics with the poetic Kagemusha
(1980).
Dersu Uzala: GROOVY
Peter, thank you. I took a date to this and we were both impressed. She said that Dersu looked evil at first but as the movie progressed he kept becoming cuter. (Interesting that you choose "Nanai," as I just recall him being designated as "Goldi.") The movie is indeed slow but I found that appropriate. In one long sequence you sense that Dersu has been unwittingly reduced from a dear friend to some mere living souvenir, and as he finally rises up to say he simply has to go, you can see the misery in him. My mother loves "Ikiru," and I can see that, but I have to give it up for "Dersu Uzala."
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