"Living". Phoenix Picturehouse
This review was written for Daily Information, and appears on their website . Western filmmakers have for decades plundered the works of Akira Kurosawa for new ideas. Most famously Seven Samurai provided the template for The Magnificent Seven , and when Sergio Leone brazenly plagiarised Yojimbo for the first of his Dollars trilogy he ended up in court. Even Star Wars feels the force of Kurosawa, taking inspiration from The Hidden Fortress with its tale of a battling princess aided by two droid-like comedy lackeys. So it’s a relief to see that Living openly declares itself to be ‘based on’ Kurosawa’s Ikiru ( ‘To Live’ ). However, even that statement falls somewhat short of full disclosure, because Living is not just based on the Japanese original. It’s a translation of it – and a clever one too. Ikiru is possibly Kurosawa’s most powerful film. It’s not an epic, and it’s not a period piece about Samurai warriors. It’s set in the time and place where it was made (195