Ran Blu-ray features mediocre video and solid audio in this enjoyable Blu-ray release
With 'Ran', legendary director Akira Kurosawa reimagines Shakespeare’s King Lear as a singular
historical epic set in sixteenth-century Japan. Majestic in scope, the film is Kurosawa’s late-life
masterpiece, a profound examination of the folly of war and the crumbling of one family under
the weight of betrayal, greed, and the insatiable thirst for power.
For more about Ran and the Ran Blu-ray release, see the Ran Blu-ray Review
Akira Kurosawa's legendary "Ran" (1985) arrives on Blu-ray courtesy of British distributors Studio Canal. Amongst the supplemental features on the disc are: "AK", a French documentary film by director Chris Marker; "Akira Kurosawa: The Epic and the Intimate", a French documentary exploring the Japanese director's rich legacy; "The Samurai", a fascinating documentary on Samurai art, Samurai rituals, and the history of Samurai culture; "Akira Kurosawa by Catherine Cadou", trailer and more. With optional English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish and Swedish subtitles. Region A/B "locked".
Betrayed
The great Lord Hidetora (Tatsuya Nakadai, Kagemusha) announces that he has decided to step down and let his three sons - Taro (Akira TeraoDreams), Jiro (Jinpachi Nezu, Farewell to the Land and Saburo (Daisuke Ryu, Lake of Illusions) - take over his land. Taro, the eldest one, would inherit Lord Hidetora's biggest castle and become the leader of the Ichimonji clan while Jiro and Saburo would support him. In return, Lord Hidetora asks that his sons allow him to spend the rest of his days with them.
Saburo openly criticizes his father's decision and urges him to reconsider it. He believes that it is unfair, and that eventually it will force his brothers to confront each other. Angered by Saburo's criticism, Lord Hidetora banishes his youngest son and vows to never see him again. Taro and Jiro reluctantly accept his decision.
Lord Hidetora arrives at Taro's castle hoping to forget about his altercation with Saburo, but is soon faced with a new dilemma - after he foolishly kills one of Taro's guards, he is asked to renounce his title. Enraged, Lord Hidetora heads to Jiro's castle - where Jiro and his most trusted man, Kurogane (Hisashi Igawa, Rhapsody in August), are plotting to kill Taro and take over the Ichimonji clan. When Lord Hidetora learns about Jiro's plan, he loses his mind.
Ran is not a perfect film, though it is often regarded as such. It is beautifully made and incredibly well acted, but also notably episodic, resembling a giant panorama of moving pictures united by a common theme. Ran is also a uniquely personal film - Kurosawa shot it at the age of 75, after years of preparation - one that many film scholars believe reflects a variety of issues the Japanese director struggled with during the course of his life.
Ran is based on William Shakespeare's King Lear, but also incorporates elements of traditional Japanese samurai stories. Unsurprisingly, large portions of it feel like an elaborate theater play with an emphasis on detail that is often mind-bogging. The film also has an exceptionally complex narrative structure that demands utmost concentration from its viewers.
In one of the supplemental features offered on this Blu-ray disc, Vittorio Dalleore, trainee assistant on Ran and Kurosawa's assistant on Dreams, recalls how incredibly demanding and specific the Japanese director was in terms of how he wanted certain parts of Ran to look like. Quite a few of the massive battles, for example, were shot at locations that were hundreds of kilometers apart from each other (Kurosawa was also one of the first directors to use several cameras at once).
An integral component of Ran is Toru Takemitsu's music score. In a way, the music is very much like a real character - it has a pulse of its own. Some of the most memorable scenes in Ran, for example, would have not been as effective as they are without those soaring, incredibly moving flute solos.
In 1986, Ran won an Academy Award for Best Costume Design (Emi Wada) as well as Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Picture.
Note: I would like to encourage those of you who are about to see Ran for the first time to pay close attention to the dialog. While the film's visuals are indeed mesmerizing, the poetic beauty of the dialog is far more fulfilling.
Presented in its original aspect ratio of 1.85:1, encoded with VC-1 and granted a 1080p transfer, Akira Kurosawa's Ran arrives on Blu-ray courtesy of British distributors Optimum Home Entertainment. Please note that the disc's main menu can be set in one of the following languages: English (Australian territories), Danish, German, Spanish, French, Dutch, Italian, Norwegian, Finnish, Swedish, English (UK territories) and English (North America).
Ran is the only entry in the Studio Canal Collection that I am not overly enthusiastic about. From what I could tell, this VC-1 encoded high-definition transfer is very similar, if not identical, to the one Studio Canal used awhile back when they released the film on HDDVD in France. And, unfortunately, this is quite disappointing, given that there are a number of issues with it.
The most serious one is the presence of mild to strong edge-enhancement throughout the entire film - there are key scenes in Ran where detail and clarity suffer greatly because of it. The film's color-scheme is also problematic; I noticed numerous color pulsations, and, in particular, bleeding reds and greens. Furthermore, many of the darker scenes in the film reveal a good dose of digital noise that will undoubtedly annoy those of you with larger than 50-inch screens. Film grain has also been tampered with. On a positive side, the transfer is fairly clean - I did not see any large cuts, scratches, or stains. To sum it all up, given that Studio Canal control the rights for Ran in a number of key territories, it is quite disappointing to see that this would likely be the only transfer in circulation that different distributors - Optimum Home Entertainment, Kinowelt, LionsGate - would have access to. (Note: This Blu-ray disc has been coded for Regions A and B. Therefore, you must have a native Region A or B, or Region-Free player in order to be able to access its content).
The following audio tracks are included on this Blu-ray disc: Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1, Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0, French DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0, German DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0, Italian DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0, Spanish DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 and English DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0. Optimum Home Entertainment have provided optional English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish and Swedish subtitles for the main feature.
I opted for the Japanese DTRS-HD Master Audio 2.0 track and was fairly pleased with it. The dialog is crisp, clear and very easy to follow, and there are no balance issues that I detected with Toru Takemitsu's music score. The flute solos, in particular, sound a lot more convincing on this Blu-ray disc than they do on my French R2 SDVD.
The Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track offers an improved dynamic amplitude - and many of the massive battles benefit greatly from it - but I am not particularly fond of it. I felt that during a few of the quieter scenes the sound was spread out quite unevenly. Still, the dialog is just as clean, crisp and easy to follow as it is on the Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 track.
Note: All of the supplemental features on this Blu-ray disc are encoded in 480/60i. Therefore, they are perfectly playable on Region-A PS3s and SAs.
AK - a French documentary feature by director Chris Marker focusing the production history of Ran. In French and Japanese, with imposed English subtitles. (72 min, 480/60i).
Akira Kurosawa: The Epic and the Intimate - a French documentary exploring the Japanese director's rich legacy. In French and Japanese, with imposed English subtitles.(42 min, 480/60i).
The Samurai - a fascinating documentary on Samurai art, Samurai rituals, and the history of Samurai culture. In English. (53 min, 480/60i).
Akira Kurosawa by Catherine Cadou - Japanese cinema expert and translator Catherine Cadou recalls her encounter with Akira Kurosawa at the premiere of Ran at the Cannes Film Festival. In French, with imposed English subtitles. (15 min, 480/60i).
Art of the Samurai - renowned French specialist on Japan's ancient warfare art Jean-Christophe Charbonnier talks about the weapons and costumes used in Ran, samurai art and rituals, etc. In French, with imposed English subtitles. (42 min, 480/60i).
Trailer - a French theatrical trailer for Akira Kurosawa's Ran. (2 min, 480/60i).
BD Live functionality -
Booklet - a 20-page illustrated booklet containing David Jenkins' essay "World Gone Wrong: An Introduction to Akira Kurosawa's Ran".
I believe that there are a couple of things one has to consider when one determines whether or not it is worth adding this Blu-ray release to one's collection. First, it is the fact that it is unlikely, at least in a foreseeable future, that Ran would be fully restored and rereleased on Blu-ray. Studio Canal control the rights for the film in a number of key territories, and I simply don't see it happening. Hopefully, I am proven wrong, but I have a feeling that this flawed transfer would be in circulation for a very, very long time. Second, unlike what some of my colleagues have claimed on other sites, I don't find the Criterion SDVD release to be better than this Blu-ray disc. Finally, like the rest of the Studio Canal Collection discs, this one has some terrific supplemental features.
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