RHAPSODY IN AUGUST (1991)

Four grandchildren are to spend the summer with their grandmother in Nagasaki as their parents are spending the summer vacationing in Hawaii.  In Hawaii the parents are to meet their grandma's older brother, but she does not remember this brother as she had 11 or more siblings while growing up.  In a letter the grandmother is invited to Hawaii, which excites the kids as they want to go to Hawaii.  However, the grandmother is hesitant to leave, since the remembrance of her dead husband is coming up on August 9th.  The kids learn through their stay in Nagasaki how their grandfather died from the atomic bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki on August 9th, 1945.  This knowledge brings the kids closer to their grandmother as she begin to share her stories about her brothers, which offers the children some excitement.  Rhapsody in August is a melancholic cinematic experience as Kurosawa tells the tragedy of a family that is divided between those who remember the war and those who have only heard of it.  In addition, Kurosawa demonstrates his message with subtle clarity that the agony of the war is being forgotten as family values change toward wealth and prestige where love and care for one another takes a backseat.  In the end, Rhapsody in August is a tragic film that is well balanced as it displays hope through love and affection, which offers a terrific cinematic experience.

DIRECTED BY

Akira Kurosawa

COUNTRY

Japan

REVIEWED
3/1/2004
GRADE


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