The Most Beautiful
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
一番美しく The Most Beautiful |
|
---|---|
Directed by | Akira Kurosawa |
Produced by | Motohiko Ito Jin Usami |
Written by | Akira Kurosawa |
Starring | Yoko Yaguchi Takashi Shimura |
Music by | Seiichi Suzuki |
Distributed by | Film Distribution Inc. |
Release date(s) | 13 April 1944 |
Running time | 85 min. |
Language | Japanese |
Budget | ? |
IMDb profile |
The [One] Most Beautiful (aka Most Beautifully) is the English title for 一番美しく (Ichiban utsukushiku), a 1944 film (docudrama) written and directed by Akira Kurosawa.
The film is set in an optics factory during the Second World War. The U.S. film Twelve o'Clock High was directly influenced by it.
It is considered by many to be a war propaganda film from wartime Japan, but it does show Kurosawa's developing talent as a director. Inexpensive copies with English subtitles are easily found online. No examples of the original movie poster exist for this film. What is shown in place of the poster are newspaper advertisements. Some of the backgrounds are valuable for showing conditions in war-time Japan. At one point the Marine Corp theme song "Semper Fi" is heard in the background. When the women complain of Japan's enemies, they list Britain ahead of America, but it was the USA that was preparing to invade. One of the leading actresses in the film later became Kurosawa's wife.
The central struggle is to achieve very high production targets, but much of the drama centers upon workers in the dorm/factory setting hiding their illnesses to prevent being sent home to get well. It's an interesting insight into the challenges people faced inside a society that, like all countries at the time, was fully mobilized for military production. Kurosawa's story also shows Japanese management approaching the issues of quality and productivity from a scientific standpoint. It is a revealing look into management science generally and the motivating factors for the workers are not negative views of Americans and Europeans, but the desire to meet the challenges they face as individuals, workers, and citizens.
The climax of the film occurs when a supervisor cannot locate a lens that did not pass quality control, and therefore must re-check an entire production lot. As she re-checks each lens, footage of Japanese fighter pilots looking through the finished product to aim their machine guns is shown. Another high point in the drama occurs when a worker is urged to return home to care for her father after her mother has died. She politely refuses, explaining that her mother had urged her to continue her work at the factory before she died. The supervisors do not enforce the request of the father to have the daughter return home, which appears to be a break with tradition. Kurosawa's use of the camera to frame this scene is characteristic of his later work.
[edit] External links
- The Most Beautiful at the Internet Movie Database
- The Most Beautiful at All Movie Guide.
- "Triumph of The Past" a review of The Most Beautiful by Michael Lane
- Brief description of The Most Beautiful
- Image of the poster for The Most Beautiful
Japanese Cinema | ||
Films directed by Akira Kurosawa | ||
1940s | Sanshiro Sugata | The Most Beautiful | Sanshiro Sugata Part II | The Men Who Tread On the Tiger's Tail | Those Who Make Tomorrow | No Regrets for Our Youth | One Wonderful Sunday | Drunken Angel | The Quiet Duel | Stray Dog | |
---|---|---|
1950s | Scandal | Rashomon | The Idiot | Ikiru | Seven Samurai | I Live in Fear | Throne of Blood | The Lower Depths | The Hidden Fortress | |
1960s | The Bad Sleep Well | Yojimbo | Sanjuro | High and Low | Red Beard | |
1970s | Dodesukaden | Dersu Uzala | |
1980s | Kagemusha | Ran | |
1990s | Dreams | Rhapsody in August | Madadayo |