Family and generations In
Rhapsody in August, Kane is shown to model behavior for her grandchildren whereas her own children view her cynically as being old-fashioned. Professor of Japanese and cinema Linda Ehrlich sees the film's perspective as one that focuses on the extremes of age while reducing the middle generation (who were born and raised during the war and its aftermath) to caricature. She comments that Kurosawa connects children and the elderly to an idea of innocence which is associated with the theme of nature. To film scholar
Stephen Prince, the growing connection of the younger generation to Kane advances their historical understanding and reconciliation, whereas Kane's assimilated Hawaiian older brother is thematically forgotten and the middle generation are condemned for their opportunism. Historian David Conrad writes of the connection between the generations and how Clark acts as a medium for growing international cultural exchange. Clark is able to play with his Japanese nieces and nephews, and shames his cousins by freely offering the wealth they sought to cajole from him. Because he is a (second generation) , he represents a possibility for a new geopolitical and familial relationship in a world no longer bound by the framework of the
Second World War and
Cold War. Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto, in his study of Kurosawa's filmography, states that "the present is haunted by the past". He examines how Kane's story about her brother's elopement and subsequent life in the forest near a large tree twisted by lightning is understood by her grandchildren who become taken with the image of the tree when they go searching for it. The grandchildren also tease one another, Shinjiro is told he looks like Kane's youngest brother, and later dresses up like a based on a story Kane tells about her sibling. Because of Kane's self-distancing from her memories, she only remembers just prior to his death that her older brother moved to Hawaii. To Yoshimoto, the death of Kane's brother causes a traumatic reaction where her memories of both her husband and Suzujiro become confused with each other. Prince summarily describes the film's politics as metaphorical for being contained within the family, and not focused on the broader history of the war. Film scholar James Goodwin argues that the introduction of Clark, and his request to view the site where his uncle lost his life to the bomb, reintegrates the family unit and connects them to a social and psychological past.
Death and memory of the atomic bomb In
Donald Richies
The Films of Akira Kurosawa, the author considers Kurosawa's aim to have been for "the viewer to remember and then forgive" the dropping of the atomic bomb. However, he writes that the film's assignment of blame for the destruction caused by the atomic bomb is too simplistic for the subject matter. Similarly, Ehrlich believes that
Rhapsody distorts the form of innocence by undermining its sincerity with simplicity, writing that unaddressed complexities of wartime suffering are not adequately expressed—and so detract from—the suffering inflicted by the atomic bomb. Prince refers to the film's politics as "curiously evasive". Much of the film's dramatic narrative occurs off-screen (e.g. the death of Suzujiro, the parents' trip to Hawaii), which he indicates is also Kurosawa's approach to the history of the atomic bomb due to the fact that it had already occurred. As a result, everything is left to recollection which deprioritizes action in favor of memory. Yoshimoto, in writing on
Rhapsodys political statements on the atomic bomb, considers the film's question of commemoration. He writes that, while the children's perspectives on why America had not donated a memorial to
Nagasaki Peace Park are not treated unequivocally, it is not a historical distortion to question why America had not done so. , and "cosmic" by Goodwin. In
''The Warrior's Camera, Prince identifies Rhapsody in August'' within Kurosawa's late filmography as a form of "psychobiography". On this theme, Conrad notes Kurosawa's casting of a woman as a central character for the first time since the 1940s, which he suggests may have been Kurosawa commemorating his late wife, who died in 1985. As a reference to Kurosawa's former work, Prince examines the director's use of the
axial cut (a jump cut that pushes in to focus on the characters) in the silent conversation between Kane and her friend. He describes its use in
Rhapsody as a form of quotation, a technique whose use is more iconographic than narrative. Kurosawa does not show any direct depiction of the bomb, but uses the depiction of a massive eye overlaid on the mountains as a representation of Kane's recollection and Kurosawa's cinema of memory. For Goodwin, the silent conversation between Kane and her friend is indicative of the bomb's unspeakable horror and an attempt to frame the past in a personal context without using conventional narrative or cinematic forms such as a flashback. He considers the silence itself to express reflection. This personal reflection of memory he likens to a monologue. Yoshimoto likewise comments on the lack of visualization and use of silence by witnesses to the atomic attack as a means of remembering the event and mourning the dead. In a 1991
Kinema Junpo feature upon the release of the film, Reiko Kitagawa wrote on the link between grandmother and grandchildren, seeing in the natural world an analogue to the memory of the atomic bomb itself. The children experience death through the songs they sing, the remains of a large tree (serving as a reminder of the brother who lived in the forest near a large tree struck by lightning), the waterfall, and the twisted jungle gym. To Ehrlich too, the film's natural scenes represent the connection between a micro– and macrocosmic view of the bomb, giving the example of how the expressionistic image of the eye overlaid on the mushroom cloud is mirrored in the eye of a snake seen at the waterfall. Goodwin sees in the image of the 'eye' an abstraction of human consciousness and an awareness of a new age. Writing about the bomb's commemoration, Conrad comments on the film's depiction of smaller, local ceremonies as a form of private practice, rather than large public events to memorialize the bomb victims.
Clark's apology The scene where Clark meets Kane and apologises to her caused significant controversy among film critics when the film was released. The children's parents—Clark's cousins—enamored with the wealth of their Hawaiian family, deliberately fail to tell Clark that his uncle was a victim of the bomb. Richie describes the describes the parents' self-serving behavior—which seeks to forget the effects of the bomb—as impeding the reconciliation between Clark and Kane. Richie reads the apology scene as an atonement for the use of the atomic bombs. However,
Stuart Galbraith IV views the scene instead as an apology from Clark for his insensitivity in asking Kane to go to Hawaii during the anniversary of her husband's death. To him, Clark's apology comes from his acceptance of responsibility for possibly having offended her. Conrad and Prince likewise read the scene as an apology for failing to realize his family's suffering. Yoshimoto similarly states that Clark's apology reflects his status as a family member, and not an American. That is, that Clark is not apologizing for the bomb, but for failing to realize that he and his family had acted selfishly in talking of themselves and not understanding the extent of her pain. Prince goes on to analyse Kane's general anti-war response as indicative of Kurosawa's feelings, but criticizes the film's tone as unpersuasive when the adolescent characters become the voice of conscience and narrate about the city's forgetfulness.
Kane's departure Prince examines the events preceding Kane's departure as a collapse of the past into the present as she relives her experience of the bombing. To Kane, the memory of the atomic bomb becomes indistinguishable from a thunderstorm. Although she is forced to live in the present day, the final sequence embodies her attempt to psychologically return to the past which she has been stuck in. Yoshimoto sees the final scene of Kane's march through the storm as a departure from the film's realism and notes the connection between the past and present that links the death of her husband to that of her older brother in Hawaii. To Galbraith the scene indicates that Kane's endurance in the natural world lasts as long as it is remembered by future generations. Prince continues, viewing the final moments of Kane appearing to march in place as a visual representation of her contradictory and unattainable desire to escape the postwar era, despite centering her concerns on the atomic bomb which defined it. Whereas Kitagawa views the umbrella Kane carries to shield her from the storm to be a symbol of life, the film critic Yuichiro Nishimura views the sequence to be symbolic of her death and ascension to heaven.
Music and religion The scholar Yusuke Kataoka writes on the image of the
Virgin Mary in the film, analyzing how
the "
Stabat Mater" (a piece played during
mass describing Mary's sadness after Jesus' death on the cross) is played when the children visit Nagasaki Peace Park for the first time, and again when Clark visits the site where his uncle was killed. Kataoka describes this repetition as a means of reconciliation between both sides of the family, and Japan and America more broadly. Regarding the scene of ants climbing up a thornless rose while the bomb is commemorated by worshippers chanting the
Heart Sutra, Kataoka identifies the rose as a symbol of Mary, and considers the scene to be a kind of dual religious lament. Richie comments on the use of
Franz Schuberts "
Heidenröslein" as a leitmotif heard throughout the film—in addition to the sudden change in the final scene from choreographed long-shots to a rhythm of fast-cutting—as an affirmation of survival and the human condition. Goodwin examines the use of Schubert's piece in this scene and compares the "rose" referenced in the song to the rose climbed over by a colony of ants, with the flower's color and bloom a reference to the sight of the bomb. Galbraith identifies the lyrics of the song with Kane herself, and suggests that this mirrors the similarly unexplained scene following a train of ants while the atom bomb survivors chant . Yoshimoto also identifies these associations and analyses them as an allegory for the preciousness of life in the aftermath of the nuclear blast. Kataoka sees in the use of "Heidenröslein" a counterpoint to the "Stabat Mater", where the use of music outside the narrative world, and Kane's growing delusions, subvert the image of reconciliation by implying the continued danger of nuclear weapons. == Release ==