The Michigan Daily- Monday, October 1, 1990 - Page 7 Achieving reality in Dreams4, Akira Kurosawa's Dreams ir. Akira Kurosawa by Mark Binelli A dream is the fruit of pure and earnest human desire... A human is a genius while dreaming. -Akira Kurosawa Yesterday, I was trying to complete a self-portrait. I just couldn't get the ear right, so I cut it off and threw it away. -Martin Scorsese as Vincent Van Gogh M y favorite segment in Akira Kurosawa's Dreams, the acclaimed 80- year-old Japanese director's 28th film, is called "Sunshine Through the Rain." In it, a young boy spies q a fox wedding procession, which is taking place, in accordance with Japanese legend, while the sun is out on a rainy day. The foxes are exquisitely costumed humans doing a magical dance. They spot the boy watching them and he runs home (an exact replica of Kurosawa's boyhood house), only to find that he has been locked out by his mother. She hands Iim a dagger and informs him that he must beg forgiveness from the angry foxes or commit suicide. The dream ends with the tiny boy, who has gone to seek out the foxes, standing in the middle of a field un- derneath a magnificent rainbow. Visually, this dream - and the seven others that comprise this film - are incredible, more like paint- ings than pieces of celluloid, relying more on a combination of music, movement, and images rather than any words or storyline. They are passionate, expressionistic visions, with no clear explanations or neat wrap-ups. In other words, Kuro- sawa's Dreams actually resemble real dreams - he's done the undoable in creating a two-hour dream sequence that works. Kurosawa's main concern is still man and nature, and he manages to convey various truths about the age- old enemies without becoming overtly political and degenerating into some sort of annoying Green- peace diatribe. For instance, in "The Peach Orchard," a group of hina dolls come to life to show a boy the orchard that was cut down by his family; they perform a dance and transform themselves into the peach trees, fully in bloom, before disap- pearing and proving that subtlety is always much more effective than a lecture from Sting. Meanwhile, in "Crows," another of the film's most powerful dreams, the inspiration an artist derives from nature is explored, as a Japanese mu- seum patron (played by Akira Terao, the Kurosawa-dreamer in six of the dreams) is drawn into Van Gogh's "Drawbridge at Arles" and meets the painter at work. American director Martin Scorsese is an obsessed Van Gogh with whom Kurosawa obvi- ously sympathizes, and a wheat field in Hokkaido is remarkably trans- formed into a series of his paintings. Not all of the dreams are Thoreau wet, though. "Mount Fuji In Red" and "The Weeping Demon" are atomic nightmares, the former mak- ing a nuclear power plant explosion seem like a volcanic eruption, and the latter bringing the surreal quality of the entire film to new heights, as Chosuke Ikariya, a member of the Japanese comedy band The Drifters, made up as a demon, laments about the destruction of the world amid giant post-apocalypse dandelions. The final dream is appropriately from an older perspective, and seems to sum up Kurosawa's own philoso- phy of the world. Chishu Ryu plays a 103-year-old sage in "Village of the Watermills." "Some say life is hard," he pontificates amid his natu- ral utopia, a small self-sufficient river village that has no need for The Japanese fox wedding is only one of the surreal scenes in Akira Kurosawa's Dreams. The 80-year-old director brings his dream-life experiences to the screen, creating hours of wonder. electricity and only uses trees that have fallen down by themselves. "That's just talk. In fact, it's good to be alive. It's exciting." AKIRA KUROSAWA'S DREAMS is playing at Ann Arbor 1&2. Too much hype Too Much Joy, the (white) band that got arrested in Florida for playing rock versions of 2 Live Crew songs and whose video "That's a Lie" has been getting some airplay on MW, bring their obscenities to Ann Arbor tonight. Nobody really knows if their music is any good or not because all anybody talks about is the big arrest. Tonight's a chance to see them play and forget about all this censorship bullshit. Group member Sandy Smallens assures that the show will be cleaner than the Crew's. No lewd female dancers wearing (barely) bikinis or anything, he says, "Just our butts." Hopefully the show will have a happier ending than the Florida gig pictured here. The band opens for the Wonder Stuff at the Nectarine. Doors open at 9 and tickets are $9.50 (p.e.s.c.). and the Basement Arts players do a good job of projecting what is a Continued from page S complex and illuminating idea: you can't betray yourself. crashing into the ground. Shepherd -Mike Kolody F!: MtiiganAlumni work here: The Wall Street Journal The New York Times The Washington Post The Detroit Free Press The Detroit News NBC Sports Associated Press United Press International Scientific American Time Newsweek Sports Illustrated USA Today Because they worked here: I I L Details magazine JOIN THE COLLEGE PANEL! WHO SAYS MEN HAVE NO FEELINGS? NOT US. IN FACT, WE THINK MEN HAVE DEFINITE OPINIONS AND WE WANT TO HEAR THEM. DETAILS MAGAZINE IS LOOKING FOR YOUNG MEN WITH STRONG OPINIONS ABOUT CURRENT CULTURE-EVERYTHING FROM SEX TO SOCKS TO SUITS. WHEN YOU JOIN THE DETAILS COLLEGE PANEL, YOU'LL HELP US GATHER INFORMATION BY TRYING NEW PRODUCTS, ANSWERING OPINION SURVEYS, AND ORGANIZING ON-CAMPUS EVENTS. 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