A cinematic painting
Image courtsey: wikipedia.org
After ‘Red Beard’, Kurosawa found it increasingly difficult to get funding for his projects in
Kagemusha in Japanese means double or shadow. Hence its English title is shadow warrior. The story starts off with the great leader of the Takeda clan- Shingen, being introduced to a thief who had been condemned to crucifixion. Shingen’s brother Nobukado is the one who points out that the thief has an uncanny resemblance to Shingen and believes that it could prove useful in the long run.
Image courtsey: wikipedia.org
Shingen is fatally wounded while his army is besieging a castle of one of his chief rivals Tokugawa Ieyasu. Shingen believes that he will soon succumb to his wounds and die. He therefore fears that his enemies would become bolder at the news of his death and would destroy his clan. Hence he instructs his most trusted generals to keep his death a secret for three more years from both his enemies as well as his subjects.
After Shingen dies Nobukado introduces the thief to the other generals and proposes the idea of making the thief the Kagemusha (double) of Shingen. The fact that Shingen is dead is hidden from even the Kagemusha himself. The Kagemusha on his partfinds it difficult to suppress his own personality and be somebody else all the time. His troubles are further accentuated when he discovers Shingen’s corpse. He is overwhelmed at the thought of being the double for three more years.
In the meanwhile spies of Shingen’s rivals almost finds out that he is dead. However, their conversation is overheard by the thief and he realizes the consequences of his actions. In order to fool the spies as well as to maintain the well being of the clan the thief agrees to be the Kagemusha. He then on manages to assume the role in all sincerity and goes about trying to fool Shingen’s enemies, his family members and even his concubines. The only person who notices a change in the Kagemusha from the original is his grandson who begins to have some affection towards the former. How the Kagemusha manages to play out his role for three years and the clan’s subsequent destiny forms the rest of the movie.
Image courtsey: wikipedia.org
Akira Kurosawa brings to our notice several themes in this movie. Most important of which is the one of identity and image. He makes it abundantly clear of the difficulties of forsaking one’s own identity and assuming that of another. He shows us that the bigger the man the greater the shadow has to be and without the man the shadow (double) becomes meaningless and ceases to exist. Kurosawa also highlights the importance of image. He showcases the impact of image over reality. The Kagemusha is so accepted as the real Shingen that his rivals are cautious in attacking him and his guards are willing to die for him. The Kagemusha even manages to win a battle just by his sheer presence behind his army.
This is also another of Kurosawa’s later movies which has a dark ending. He again showcases the fruitlessness of man’s obsession with power and the ultimate destruction that it brings about. In the end all of shingen’s and the Kagemusha’s efforts are made to be in vain by the ambitions of a single man.
Image courtsey: wikipedia.org
Kurosawa made this movie as a trial run to his later “Ran”. Kagemusha distinctly reminds you about Ran with its picturisation, loud and striking colors, eloborate war scenes and complex characters. Nothing captures the painterly quality of the movie more than the nightmare sequence of the Kagemusha.
To be honest I did not consider Kagemusha to be at par with some of his other classics. I found the movie to be too slow and too long. But it is still better than a thousand other movies that you might have seen. And that is the hallmark of the genius of Kurosawa.
Reviews of Akira Kurosawa's Major works
