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I Live in Fear

Ikimono no Kiroku

Japan

1955

103 Min
Black and White
Japanese
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
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DIR Akira Kurosawa

PROD Shojiro Motoki

SCR Shinobo Hashimoto, Akira Kurosawa, Hideo Oguni

DP Asakazu Nakai

CAST Toshiro Mifune, Minoru Chiaki, Masao Shimizu, Eiko Miyoshi, Kyoko Aoyama, Haruko Togo, Yutaka Sata, Kamatari Fujiwara, Takashi Shimura

MUSIC Fumio Hayasaka

Synopsis

Both the final film of this period in which Akira Kurosawa would directly wrestle with the demons of the Second World War and his most literal representation of living in an atomic age, the galvanizing I Live in Fear presents Toshiro Mifune as an elderly, stubborn businessman so fearful of a nuclear attack that he resolves to move his reluctant family to South America. With this mournful film, the director depicts a society emerging from the shadows but still terrorized by memories of the past and anxieties for the future. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Akira_kurosawa

Akira Kurosawa

The son of an army officer, Kurosawa studied art before gravitating to film as a means of supporting himself. He served seven years as an assistant to director Kajiro Yamamoto before he began his own directorial career with Sanshiro Sugata (1943), a film about the 19th century struggle for supremacy between adherents of judo and jujitsu that so impressed the military government, he was prevailed upon to make a sequel (Sanshiro Sugata Part Two). Following the end of World War II, Kurosawa’s career gathered speed with a series of films that cut across all genres, from crime thrillers to period dramas. Among the latter, his Rashomon (1951) became the first postwar Japanese film to find wide favor with Western audiences. It was Kurosawa’s The Seven Samurai (1954), however, that made the largest impact of any of his movies outside of Japan. Although heavily cut for its original release, this three-hour-plus medieval action drama, shot with painstaking attention to both dramatic and period… read more

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Rüdiger Tomczak

15Dec09

Even though far away from being one of my favorite films by Kurosawa, it is one of the most interesting films he made in the 50s. One big theme of Kurosawa the fear which deforms the human psyche appears here. A films which should be seen together with his late masterpeace Rhapsody in August. And by the way, the end of I LIVE IN FEAR is probably one of Kurosawas two or three most disturbing endings with an apocalyptic…  more
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Roy Baugher

27May09

With a story such as this, I can almost believe this movie could be remade today with the modern day equivalent: the threat of a small nuclear device, a "dirty bomb," being detonated.  
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brent

31Mar09

This is possibly Mifune's most prestigious performance. This is one in which he is completely into character to the point where one can't even distiguish the actor. The plot is so simple and yet its so expansive that there is always something new to be seen. Possibly the best of Kurosawa's postwar era.  

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By Adam Suraf on December 14, 2008

The final film in Akira Kurosawa’s post-war period to be directly influenced by the war and the reconstruction economy, with Toshiro Mifune as an elderly family patriarch whose neurotic paranoia over…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.