Ran was Kurosawa's last epic film and by far his most expensive. At the time, its budget of made it the most expensive Japanese film in history, leading to its distribution in 1985 exceeding the budget of $7.5 million for his previous film
Kagemusha. It is a Japanese-French venture The 1,400 uniforms and suits of armor used for the extras were designed by
costume designer
Emi Wada and Kurosawa, and were handmade by master tailors over more than two years. The film also used 200
horses. Kurosawa loved filming in lush and expansive locations, and most of
Ran was shot amidst the mountains and plains of
Mount Aso, Japan's largest active volcano. Kurosawa was granted permission to shoot at two of the country's most famous landmarks, the ancient castles at
Kumamoto and
Himeji. For the castle of Lady Sue's family, he used the ruins of the custom-constructed Azusa castle, made by Kurosawa's production crew near
Mount Fuji. Hidetora's third castle, which was burned to the ground, was a real building which Kurosawa built on the slopes of Mount Fuji. No miniatures were used for that segment, and Tatsuya Nakadai had to do the scene where Hidetora flees the castle in one take. Akira Kurosawa's wife of 39 years,
Yōko Yaguchi, died during the production of the film. He halted filming for one day to mourn before resuming work. His regular recording engineer
Fumio Yanoguchi also died late in production in January 1985.
Crew •
Akira Kurosawa – director, co-writer •
Ishirō Honda – associate director • Kunio Nozaki – assistant director • Ichiro Yamamoto – assistant director • Okihiro Yoneda – assistant director •
Teruyo Nogami – production manager • Takeji Sano – lighting • Yoshiro Muraki – production design • Shinobu Muraki – production design •
Emi Wada – costume design • Ichiro Minawa – sound effects Personnel taken from
The Criterion Collection.
Development Kurosawa conceived of the idea that became
Ran in the mid-1970s, when he read a parable about the
Sengoku-period warlord
Mōri Motonari. Motonari was famous for having three sons, all incredibly loyal and talented. Kurosawa began imagining what would have happened had they been bad. Although the film eventually became heavily inspired by
Shakespeare's play
King Lear, Kurosawa became aware of the play only after he had started pre-planning. According to him, the stories of Mōri Motonari and Lear merged in a way he was never fully able to explain. He wrote the script shortly after filming
Dersu Uzala in 1975, and then "let it sleep" for seven years. During this time, he painted
storyboards of every shot in the film (later included with the screenplay and available on the
Criterion Collection DVD release) and then continued searching for funding. Following his success with 1980's
Kagemusha, which he later considered a "dress rehearsal" or "dry run" for
Ran, Kurosawa was finally able to secure backing from French producer
Serge Silberman. Kurosawa once said "Hidetora is me", and there is evidence in the film that Hidetora serves as a stand-in for Kurosawa. Roger Ebert agrees, arguing that
Ran "may be as much about Kurosawa's life as Shakespeare's play".
Ran was the final film of Kurosawa's "third period" (1965–1985), a time when he had difficulty securing support for his pictures, and was frequently forced to seek foreign financial backing. While he had directed over twenty films in the first two decades of his career, he directed just four in these two decades. After directing
Red Beard (1965), Kurosawa discovered that he was considered old-fashioned and did not work again for almost five years. He also found himself competing against television, which had reduced Japanese film audiences from a high of 1.1 billion in 1958 to under 200 million by 1975. In 1968, he was fired from the
20th Century Fox epic
Tora! Tora! Tora! over what he described as creative differences, but others said was a perfectionism that bordered on
insanity. Kurosawa tried to start an independent production group with three other directors, but his 1970 film ''
Dodes'ka-den'' was a box-office flop and bankrupted the company. Many of his younger rivals boasted that he was finished. A year later, unable to secure any domestic funding and plagued by ill health, Kurosawa attempted
suicide by slashing his wrists. Though he survived, his misfortune continued to plague him until the late 1980s. According to Stephen Prince, medical treatment and Mosfilm's offer to make a film in Russia (
Dersu Uzala) helped Kurosawa's eventual "spiritual recovery." Kurosawa was influenced by the
William Shakespeare play
King Lear and borrowed elements from it. In
Ran, Lady Kaede, Lady Sue, and Tsurumaru were all victims of Hidetora. Whereas in
King Lear the character of Gloucester had his eyes gouged out by Lear's enemies, in
Ran it was Hidetora himself who gave the order to blind Tsurumaru. The role of the Fool has been expanded into a major character (Kyoami). Kurosawa was concerned that Shakespeare gave his characters no past, and he wanted to give his version of
King Lear a history. The complex and variant etymology for the word
Ran used as the title has been variously translated as "chaos", "rebellion", or "revolt"; or to mean "disturbed" or "confused".
Filming The filming of
Ran began in 1983. He believed that, despite all of the technological progress of the 20th century, all people had learned was how to kill each other more efficiently. In
Ran, the vehicle for
apocalyptic destruction is the
arquebus, an early firearm that was introduced to Japan in the 16th century. Arquebuses revolutionized
samurai warfare. Kurosawa had already dealt with this theme in his previous film
Kagemusha, in which the Takeda cavalry is destroyed by the arquebuses of the
Oda and
Tokugawa clans. In
Ran, the battle of Hachiman Field is an illustration of this new kind of warfare. Saburo's arquebusiers annihilate Jiro's cavalry and drive off his infantry by engaging them from the woods, where the cavalry are unable to venture. Similarly, Taro and Saburo's assassination by a sniper also shows how individual heroes can be easily disposed of on a modern battlefield. Kurosawa also illustrates this new warfare with his camera. Instead of focusing on the warring armies, he frequently sets the focal plane beyond the action, so that in the film they appear as abstract entities.
Casting The description of Hidetora in the first script was originally based on
Toshiro Mifune.
Acting style While most of the characters in
Ran are portrayed by conventional acting techniques, two performances are reminiscent of Japanese
Noh theatre. Noh is a form of Japanese traditional theatre requiring highly trained actors and musicians where emotions are primarily conveyed by stylized conventional gestures. The heavy, ghost-like make-up worn by
Tatsuya Nakadai's character, Hidetora, resembles the emotive masks worn by traditional Noh performers. The body language exhibited by the same character is also typical of Noh theatre: long periods of static motion and silence, followed by an abrupt, sometimes violent, change in stance. The character of Lady Kaede is also Noh-influenced. The Noh treatment emphasizes the ruthless, passionate, and single-minded natures of these two characters.
Music Craig Lysy, writing for
Movie Music UK, commented on the strengths of the film soundtrack's composer for Kurosawa's purposes: "
Tōru Takemitsu was Japan's preeminent film score composer and Kurosawa secured his involvement in 1976, during the project's early stages. Their initial conception of the score was to use tategoe, a "shrill-voice" chant style without instrumentation. Over the intervening years, Kurosawa's conception of the score changed dramatically. As they began production his desire had changed 180 degrees, now insisting on a powerful
Mahleresque orchestral score. Takemitsu responded with what many describe as his most romantic effort, one that achieved a perfect blending of Oriental and Occidental sensibilities." Takemitsu has stated that he was significantly influenced by the Japanese
karmic concept of
ma, interpreted as a surplus of energy surrounding an abundant void. As Lysy stated: "Takemitsu was guided in his efforts best summed up in the Japanese word
ma, which suggests the incongruity of a void abounding with energy. He related: 'My music is like a garden, and I am the gardener. Listening to my music can be compared with walking through a garden and experiencing the changes in light, pattern and texture. Kurosawa had the orchestra play up to 40 takes of the music. The running time of the soundtrack is just over an hour and was re-released in 2016 after its original release in 1985 by Silva Screen Productions. It was produced by Reynold da Silva and David Stoner. ==Reception==