All Thinkers

Akira Kurosawa

Akira Kurosawa (1910-1998) was a Japanese film director, screenwriter, and editor whose thirty completed feature films include some of the most influential works in the history of cinema. He was born in Tokyo, the youngest of seven children in a family descended from samurai. His older brother Heigo, a narrator for silent films, took him to see European and American movies and introduced him to Western literature; Heigo's suicide in 1933 marked Kurosawa deeply. Kurosawa had initially wanted to be a painter and studied Western art before entering the film industry as an assistant director in 1936. He learned his craft under the veteran director Kajiro Yamamoto and directed his first film in 1943, during the Second World War. After the war he emerged as a major figure in the revival of Japanese cinema. His 1950 film Rashomon won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, bringing Japanese cinema to wide international attention for the first time. Over the following four decades he directed Seven Samurai, Throne of Blood, The Hidden Fortress, Yojimbo, Ikiru, High and Low, Ran, and many other films, adapting Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, and Japanese sources, and producing original works set in both historical and contemporary Japan. He faced career setbacks in the 1970s, including a suicide attempt in 1971, but continued working into his late eighties. He was awarded an honorary Oscar in 1990 and died in 1998 at eighty-eight.

Origin
Japan
Lifespan
1910-1998
Era
20th century
Subjects
Film Cinema Japanese Culture Storytelling 20th Century Art
Why They Matter

Kurosawa matters because he brought Japanese cinema to world attention and because his formal innovations reshaped how films are made across many national traditions. In 1950 he released Rashomon, which told a single event from several different and irreconcilable viewpoints. The film won the Venice Golden Lion the following year and was the first Japanese film to be widely seen outside Japan. The international success of Rashomon opened a global audience for Japanese filmmakers and introduced narrative techniques — the multiple viewpoint story, the unreliable narrator — that have been used repeatedly since. Kurosawa's Seven Samurai (1954) was an epic study of a small group of warriors defending a village of farmers, executed with a formal mastery that has influenced action cinema ever since; it was remade in the United States as The Magnificent Seven and has echoes in countless later films. Throne of Blood transposed Macbeth to feudal Japan with a formal rigour that many regard as the finest screen Shakespeare. His long career included remarkable works on contemporary themes as well — Ikiru, about a dying bureaucrat trying to do one good thing with his remaining life, is one of the most humane films ever made. Kurosawa's cinema, rooted in deep study of both Japanese traditions and Western literature and painting, is one of the clearest examples of how serious art can cross cultural boundaries without losing its specific origins.

Key Ideas
1
One event, many truths: the Rashomon problem
In Rashomon (1950), a samurai has been killed and his wife assaulted in a forest. Four witnesses give accounts of what happened: the bandit, the wife, the dead samurai speaking through a medium, and a woodcutter who saw part of the event. All four stories are different. Each narrator presents themselves in a more favourable light than the others allow. The film does not finally tell us which version is true. The viewer is left with the realisation that accounts of the same event can differ fundamentally, often according to the interests of those who tell them. The Rashomon effect has entered ordinary language to describe situations where several plausible accounts of the same event cannot all be correct.
2
Seven Samurai: the group as moral protagonist
Seven Samurai (1954) tells the story of a village of farmers who hire seven masterless samurai to defend them against bandits. The film is three and a half hours long and devotes careful attention to each of the seven warriors and to the villagers they defend. None of the seven is the hero in the conventional single-protagonist sense; the group is the hero. The film studies how individual characters contribute to a collective task, how differences in temperament and skill fit together, and what it costs to protect people who are not your own. The decision to treat a group rather than an individual as the moral centre of an epic film has influenced much later cinema.
3
Ikiru: an ordinary life facing death
Ikiru (1952) is one of Kurosawa's most personal films. It tells the story of an ageing city bureaucrat who learns he has terminal cancer. He has spent thirty years stamping forms without doing anything he can point to with satisfaction. He tries different kinds of pleasure, none of them satisfying. In his last months he commits himself to a single achievable task: helping a group of local women convert a mosquito-infested waste ground into a small park. The film shows him achieving it, dying, and being unevenly remembered by his colleagues afterwards. It is one of the most honest films ever made about what it might mean for a small life to do one meaningful thing.
Key Quotations
"To be an artist means never to avert one's eyes."
— Something Like an Autobiography, 1982
Kurosawa is describing the basic discipline of making serious art. An artist must look at what is actually there, including things that are painful, ugly, or unwelcome. The temptation to turn away — to choose a safer subject, or to soften what one sees — is constant, and giving in to it produces weaker work. The remark has been widely quoted because it names a commitment many artists recognise: the willingness to keep looking at difficult material long enough to see it clearly. Kurosawa's own work, which handles war, death, and human cruelty without either flinching or sensationalising, is a practical demonstration of what the saying means.
"I like silent movies, and I always have. They are often so much more beautiful than sound pictures are."
— Interview, 1960s
Kurosawa's older brother Heigo had been a narrator for silent films, and Kurosawa grew up attending silent cinema. Even after sound was available, he retained an affection for what silent films had been able to do — tell stories through image and movement alone, without the help of dialogue. Many of his own films contain long sequences that work as silent cinema works, carrying meaning through composition and action rather than through speech. The remark is worth pausing on because it points to a discipline often lost: the ability to tell a story through image alone, when all the resources of dialogue are tempting easier ways out.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When introducing the idea that the same event can be told in different ways
How to introduce
Describe the premise of Rashomon without showing the film: a crime has occurred, and four different people tell four different stories about what happened. Ask students to think of a situation from their own life — a disagreement at home, an incident in a playground, a misunderstanding — where different people gave different accounts of what happened. Did all the accounts agree? Could they all be correct? Introduce the idea that stories of events are shaped by the position and interests of those who tell them. Ask: how can we decide what really happened? Are there tools for this? Connect to the broader skills of evaluating testimony.
Ethical Thinking When discussing what makes a meaningful life
How to introduce
Summarise the story of Ikiru: an ageing bureaucrat learns he has terminal cancer and decides, after trying various pleasures, to spend his remaining months helping a group of local women build a small park. Ask students: is this a successful life? What does the film seem to be saying about meaning? Discuss the difference between large achievements — fame, wealth, recognition — and small but real ones. Is doing one difficult good thing before dying enough? Connect to the ethical traditions that have engaged with this question from different angles: Stoicism, Confucian ethics, Christian and Buddhist teachings on vocation.
Further Reading

For a short introduction

Donald Richie's The Films of Akira Kurosawa (1999, University of California Press) is the standard English-language treatment.

For Kurosawa's own voice

Something Like an Autobiography (1982, Vintage), translated by Audie Bock, covers his life up to the making of Rashomon and is readable and illuminating. The Criterion Collection's editions of his major films include careful supplementary essays and documentary material.

Key Ideas
1
Adapting foreign sources into Japanese settings
Several of Kurosawa's greatest films adapt foreign literary sources into Japanese settings. Throne of Blood (1957) transposes Shakespeare's Macbeth to feudal Japan, with the witches replaced by a forest spirit and the blasted heath by an ancestral fortress. Ran (1985) transposes King Lear to the same period. The Idiot (1951), The Lower Depths (1957), and Ikiru all draw on Russian sources, primarily Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. These are not illustrations of the originals; they are independent works that let the source material do new things in a different cultural frame. The practice of adaptation worked in both directions: Kurosawa's own films were later remade as Hollywood Westerns, showing how a story can move repeatedly between cultures.
2
The craft of the image: composition, weather, and the long take
Kurosawa had trained as a painter before entering film, and his compositions show a painter's discipline. He organised the screen carefully, placed figures deliberately within landscapes, and used weather as an active element. Rain falls through Rashomon; fog rises through Throne of Blood; snow slows down The Idiot. His long takes allow actions to develop in real time, so that the viewer experiences the full weight of what is happening. The famous battle in Seven Samurai was staged in real rain, with real mud, and Kurosawa used multiple cameras to capture the chaos from several angles at once. The image is treated as a serious expressive resource, not a simple container for dialogue.
3
Working with Toshiro Mifune and the stable company
Kurosawa directed sixteen films with the actor Toshiro Mifune, who became his central collaborator through the 1950s and 1960s. They worked also with a consistent group of actors, writers, and technicians who formed what is sometimes called the Kurosawa-gumi, or Kurosawa company. This kind of sustained ensemble allowed the work to develop; the actors knew the director, the director knew their capacities, and the collaborators could anticipate each other. Many of cinema's most sustained artistic achievements have been produced by such stable working groups. Recognising this resists the director-as-lone-genius model and places the work within the collaborative reality of film production.
Key Quotations
"In a mad world only the mad are sane."
— Interview, on Ran, 1985
Kurosawa was speaking about his film Ran (1985), a reworking of King Lear set in feudal Japan. The film ends with most of its characters dead, castles in flames, and the remaining survivor a blind orphan alone on a cliff. The remark applies to the world of the film but carries a wider thought. In a world that has become systematically irrational — through war, through cruelty, through collective delusion — the people who still see clearly may look mad to those around them, while those who have adapted to the madness may seem sane. The inversion is not romantic; Kurosawa was not celebrating madness. He was describing what happens to perception in badly disordered times.
"I suppose all of my films have a common theme. If I think about it, though, the only theme I can think of is really a question: why can't people be happier together?"
— Interview, late career
Kurosawa is offering a candid account of what his films are about. Looking across thirty films — historical epics, contemporary dramas, literary adaptations, detective stories — he finds that the underlying question is always the same. Why do people, given the capacity to help each other and to build decent lives together, keep ending up in conflict, misunderstanding, and avoidable harm? The question is simple. It has no easy answer. Kurosawa thought the question was worth asking again and again in many different settings, and his films are the long attempt to stage it honestly.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Creative Expression When examining how a group rather than an individual can be the subject of a story
How to introduce
Introduce Seven Samurai: seven warriors, each given distinct character, none the sole hero. Ask students: why tell a story this way? What does treating a group as the protagonist allow a storyteller to do that focusing on one hero does not? Discuss contemporary examples — ensemble films and television series, team sports stories, group-quest stories. Ask: what are the challenges for a writer or filmmaker handling many significant characters at once? What is lost, and what is gained? Connect to Audre Lorde's insistence that movements against injustice cannot be reduced to single figures.
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining how stories move between cultures
How to introduce
Tell students that Kurosawa's Seven Samurai was remade in Hollywood as The Magnificent Seven, a Western set in the American Southwest. Kurosawa's Yojimbo was remade as Sergio Leone's A Fistful of Dollars, an Italian Western set in Mexico. Kurosawa's Throne of Blood had itself adapted Shakespeare's Macbeth. Ask students: what moves between these versions, and what changes? Is a story the same across cultures, or does it become a different story each time? Discuss the broader question of how narratives travel — from Sanskrit tales to Greek plays to Arabic frame-stories to European novels. What does a story bring with it, and what does it pick up from each new setting?
Research Skills When teaching the analysis of a visual work
How to introduce
Show students a single scene from a Kurosawa film — the opening of Seven Samurai or the castle scene from Throne of Blood work well. Watch it twice. The first time, ask students to notice what happens; the second time, ask them to notice how Kurosawa directs the viewer's attention through framing, movement, weather, and sound. Discuss what they see. This is the skill of looking carefully at a visual work, which is valuable beyond cinema. Connect to the similar skills of reading a Hokusai print attentively or a Kahlo painting. Careful looking is a practice, and practice makes it deeper.
Further Reading

Stephen Prince's The Warrior's Camera (1991, Princeton University Press) is a substantial scholarly study. James Goodwin's Akira Kurosawa and Intertextual Cinema (1994, Johns Hopkins University Press) examines his adaptations in detail. For the visual dimension: Teruyo Nogami's Waiting on the Weather (2006, Stone Bridge Press), by Kurosawa's long-time script supervisor, gives an insider's view of his working methods.

Key Ideas
1
The debate over Western influence
Kurosawa has been criticised by some Japanese critics as too Western, and praised by some Western audiences as offering a Japan they could understand. Both descriptions oversimplify. Kurosawa drew deeply on Western sources — Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, John Ford, American genre film — while also drawing deeply on Japanese sources — Noh theatre, jidaigeki historical drama, the painting tradition in which he had trained. His films are not Western works in Japanese costume or Japanese works with foreign influences. They are works by a specific Japanese artist who had absorbed materials from many traditions. The debate about how to describe his cinema reveals assumptions about cultural purity that few serious artists of any country actually meet.
2
The difficult later years and Dersu Uzala
Kurosawa's career hit serious difficulties in the late 1960s and 1970s. His 1970 film Dodes'ka-den was a commercial failure; in 1971 he attempted suicide. Japanese studios became reluctant to finance his large-scale projects. He was rescued, in a sense, by an invitation from the Soviet Union to direct a film there: Dersu Uzala (1975), based on the writings of a Russian explorer about a Siberian hunter, won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Later in life, further international support from George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, and Steven Spielberg made possible Kagemusha (1980) and Ran (1985), two of his late masterpieces. The pattern — an artist of international stature unable to secure funding at home — illustrates how difficult sustained serious filmmaking can be, and how much it depends on support that is not always available.
3
The ethics of depicting violence
Kurosawa's films include substantial violence — battles, duels, assassinations, the destruction of whole castles. He was careful about how he filmed violence. He treated it as serious rather than spectacular, typically showing the cost — the wounds, the grief, the wasted lives — rather than celebrating the mastery of the warrior. The climactic battle in Seven Samurai kills four of the seven defenders; the film ends with the survivors reflecting that it is the farmers, not the samurai, who have won, because the village will continue while the samurai will move on. Kurosawa's ethic of violence — violence as real, costly, and usually tragic — offers a pointed contrast with the treatments of violence common in much contemporary cinema.
Key Quotations
"Unless you start from the negative that you have, you can never create anything."
— Something Like an Autobiography, 1982
Kurosawa is making a point about the place of limitation in creative work. An artist begins with what they do not have — not enough money, not enough time, not the perfect cast, not the ideal weather. Trying to wait until conditions are ideal is one of the surest ways never to finish anything. The negative, the lack, is the actual starting point. Working with what is missing, rather than against it, is how real work gets made. This is a practical insight from someone who spent decades making large-scale films under all kinds of constraints. It applies far beyond filmmaking.
"I still have much to learn."
— On receiving the honorary Academy Award, 1990
Kurosawa was eighty years old and had been making films for nearly fifty years when he received his honorary Oscar in 1990. His acceptance remarks were brief; this was the heart of them. A lifetime of work at the highest level had not produced, for him, the sense of having arrived. He still saw how much more there was to see and make. The attitude is consistent with Hokusai's similar insistence, after a lifetime of drawing, that he had only just begun to grasp the shapes of things. Both artists resist the idea that great achievement leaves nothing further to do. It leaves an artist with a clearer view of how much remains.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When examining the ethics of filming violence
How to introduce
Present Kurosawa's approach to violence: real in consequence, usually tragic, never glorified. Show a scene that illustrates this — the final battle of Seven Samurai with its muddy rain, the suicide in Throne of Blood, the castle burning in Ran. Compare with contemporary cinema that treats violence as spectacle. Ask students: what is the difference between showing violence honestly and showing it for entertainment? Does either approach reduce actual violence in the world, increase it, or have no effect? Discuss the ethical questions film makers face about what to put on screen and how. Connect to wider discussions of representation and its effects.
Creative Expression When discussing how to work within serious constraints
How to introduce
Introduce Kurosawa's late career: his films became difficult to fund in Japan; he attempted suicide in 1971; he was rescued by a Soviet invitation to make Dersu Uzala and later by American collaborators who helped finance Kagemusha and Ran. Ask students: what does this story reveal about how serious creative work gets done? Is the mythology of the artist who makes work from pure inspiration accurate? Discuss the practical matters — funding, studio support, collaborators, mental health — that make sustained creative work possible or impossible. Connect to Fazlur Khan's career within a specific professional structure and to the broader question of how cultural work is always embedded in material conditions.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Kurosawa is too Western to be a real Japanese filmmaker.

What to teach instead

This criticism, sometimes raised by Japanese commentators, rests on an unrealistic idea of cultural purity. Kurosawa drew on Western sources throughout his career — Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, John Ford — but he also drew deeply on Japanese sources: Noh theatre, the jidaigeki historical drama, Japanese painting, and traditional ethics of loyalty and duty. No serious modern Japanese artist could be purely Japanese in the sense the criticism demands, because modern Japan has itself absorbed many influences. The criticism applies an impossible standard that would disqualify most serious artists of any culture. Kurosawa's Japanese identity is no more in doubt than Bach's German identity is compromised by his use of Italian musical forms.

Common misconception

Kurosawa is too hard to be an accessible introduction to film.

What to teach instead

Kurosawa's films, for all their length and seriousness, are notably accessible. The stories are clear, the characters vivid, the emotional stakes immediate. Seven Samurai has kept audiences engaged for three and a half hours for seventy years. Rashomon is often the first Japanese film many students encounter and usually works well as that first encounter. The reputation for difficulty may come from the general unfamiliarity of black-and-white subtitled foreign cinema in many markets, rather than from the films themselves. Students who watch a Kurosawa film with even minimal context usually find they can follow it without strain.

Common misconception

Kurosawa's samurai films accurately depict historical Japan.

What to teach instead

Kurosawa's jidaigeki films draw on Japanese history, but they are not historically exact reconstructions. He used historical settings to tell stories about moral and political questions that mattered to him in the present; the period detail served the story rather than dictating it. Costumes and weapons were researched, but the behaviour and ethics of characters often reflect modern concerns. This is not a flaw. It is how historical fiction generally works — from Shakespeare's Rome to modern historical novels. Treating Kurosawa's films as history textbooks misreads what he was doing.

Common misconception

Kurosawa's films are primarily about male characters and have little to offer on women.

What to teach instead

Kurosawa's films are often organised around male protagonists, reflecting both the conventions of the genres he worked in and the historical settings of many of his films. But dismissing his work as uninterested in women misses a great deal. The wife in Rashomon is a central figure whose testimony the film takes seriously. The older sister in Dersu Uzala, the dying bureaucrat's daughter-in-law in Ikiru, and the queens and concubines in Ran are carefully observed. Several of his later films have strong female leads. A fair criticism would note that women often appear within frames set by male characters; a less fair one misses the care Kurosawa usually took with the women his films do include.

Intellectual Connections
Develops
Hokusai
Kurosawa, who had trained as a painter before entering film, drew on the visual traditions of Japanese art including the compositional habits that Hokusai helped establish. The strong diagonals, the use of weather as a compositional element, the willingness to place figures off-centre, the attention to landscape as an active participant — all these appear in both Hokusai's prints and Kurosawa's cinema. Kurosawa's films are sometimes described as moving pictures in the most literal sense: sequences of carefully composed images organised in time. The inheritance is real but indirect, a shared visual tradition rather than direct citation.
In Dialogue With
Natalie Zemon Davis
Davis's microhistorical method — the careful reconstruction of a specific historical life from fragmentary evidence, with attention to multiple viewpoints — has a cinematic counterpart in Rashomon. Davis's scholarly practice and Kurosawa's film both insist that accounts of past events are shaped by the positions and interests of those who tell them, and that taking multiple perspectives seriously is not relativism but rigour. Reading them together shows two different disciplines — academic history and narrative cinema — arriving at a similar methodological recognition through different paths.
Complements
Frida Kahlo
Kurosawa and Kahlo, contemporaries in very different media and cultures, both produced bodies of work in which serious formal discipline supports serious emotional and political content. Kurosawa's careful compositions carry complex ethical situations; Kahlo's carefully constructed paintings carry complex personal and political meaning. Both absorbed foreign influences while remaining deeply rooted in their national traditions. Both are sometimes treated as exotic in international reception, as if their main significance were that they came from elsewhere. Reading them together resists that framing and places both as major twentieth-century artists whose work continues to reward close attention.
In Dialogue With
Albert Camus
Camus and Kurosawa were near-contemporaries who both spent decades asking how a person should live in a world that can feel absurd, dangerous, and indifferent. Camus's essays and novels and Kurosawa's films arrive at similar conclusions through different forms. Neither offered easy answers. Both recommended a form of committed attention to the work in front of one — the task at hand, the specific other person, the single achievable good — as what was available to finite people in difficult conditions. Ikiru and The Myth of Sisyphus can be read as parallel investigations of the same question.
In Dialogue With
Confucius
Kurosawa's films are deeply interested in duty, loyalty, hierarchy, and the relationships between individuals and the communities they belong to — themes that the long East Asian Confucian tradition has developed for over two thousand years. This is not a matter of Kurosawa directly citing the Analects; it is the broader cultural inheritance in which his Japanese world was formed. The samurai code of duty, the obligations of rulers to subjects, the tension between personal desire and collective good — all these are Confucian-inflected concerns that animate his historical films. Reading them together clarifies how deeply Confucian ethics shaped Japanese cultural production even long after direct religious or political Confucianism had receded.
In Dialogue With
Toni Morrison
Kurosawa and Morrison both worked at the highest level in storytelling traditions — cinema and the novel — while insisting that their work remain rooted in the specific cultural experiences they came from. Neither adjusted their material to flatter an international audience. Both made demanding art that nonetheless reached wide readerships and viewerships. Both insisted that serious art could do political work without becoming didactic. Reading them together shows the different forms this commitment can take, and how serious storytelling from specific cultural locations has been one of the richer modes of twentieth-century art.
Further Reading

For scholarly depth

Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto's Kurosawa: Film Studies and Japanese Cinema (2000, Duke University Press) challenges Western-centred readings of his work and places him carefully in Japanese cinema history. The Japanese-language literature on Kurosawa, including Tadao Sato's multi-volume studies, is extensive.

For the collaboration with Mifune

Stuart Galbraith IV's The Emperor and the Wolf (2002, Faber) examines the two careers together.