After learning he is dying, a local bureaucrat (Takashi Shimura) is struck by the pointlessness of his existence.
Searching for something to give his life meaning, he becomes obsessed with a petition that a local community has filed.
Re-energised, our hero turns on the bureaucracy he once upholded.
Will he have the strength to get the project through? Will he have the time? And will it ultimately mean something when he is gone?
A story about finding purpose in life, Ikiru is a fascinating change of pace from what I know of Kurosawa's work.
I had heard of the film’s reputation years ago, but I was always more interested in his chanbara work.
As with the other films I have seen, Ikiru is based around a character affecting the people around him - in this case, the effect is more delayed than the action-focused fare.
We get an omniscient narrator, who sets the stage - placing the ‘protagonist’, as he is labelled, as a seemingly powerless figure.
Shortly after he learns of his terminal diagnosis, our hero tries to change course - first finding himself in company with a drinker at a bar, then anchoring himself to a young woman he works with.
This latter relationship is not a spark for transformation. Our protagonist is almost vampiric, telling the young woman that he is drawn to her youth, and pure joy in life.
Eventually, this disturbs her enough to abandon him. It also breaks what remains of the familial bond with his son, a character who seems more concerned by how this perceived relationship may affect his inheritance.
In the conventional version of this story, the protagonist would use the idea of the children’s park to ultimately heal his relationships with his family.
But the film is too nuanced for such a pat resolution.
At the point when he has the idea to build the children’s park, and become an active protagonist...
…the film cuts to his funeral.
His last days are then pieced together as flashbacks by his colleagues.
Depressingly, his son vanishes after the funeral.
This man’s life, his legacy, is this park, and the community it will serve.
It is hard not to see this film as a metaphor for postwar Japan:
An older generation making a final act to pull the country out of ruin.
The movie shifts from what life means to the protagonist, to how other characters feel about him, before placing the ultimate judgement with the audience.
Not a personal favourite, but it is a powerful film.



