Stealthborn's Foreign Film Review: Dersu Uzala
Indoor. But when you have a joint venture when it comes to making films, sometimes special things happen. It's certainly true with Akira Kurosawa's Dersu Uzala failed leader, who came much late in their careers. He has worked with the Soviets at the time and created a special film based on the memory of 1923, the Russian explorer Vladimir Arseniev. The film begins with the Russian explorer Vladimir Arseniev in open forest and finding an unmarked grave. The film goes through a series of flashbacks that tell the story of Arseniev with a surveying expedition in this area in 1902 before the record straight.This shipment is in a nomad from an aboriginal tribe Nanai (Nanai is a Tungus people who hails from northern China) named Dersu Uzala. He decides to help the expedition passed through the difficult conditions in their path. First looks at all as uneducated and eccentric, but everyone over time to warm up to him as they discover he is intelligent, skilled at life in nature and how he cares about others. This is evident when he actually saves the lives of Arseniev and his men.Even after the men reached their destination, five years later, faces Arseniev, Dersu back into the desert and they face another trial if they fall into a river with swift currents while in a raft. Dersu uses his survival instincts This film was directed by Kurosawa, after a period of successful films of the 1950s and 1960s. He had Toshiro Mifune to play in his films and had to do things by itself thereafter. The 1970s were not a great decade for him with Dodes'ka'den not be a critical success in Japan. Kurosawa decided to get away for a moment and take a new production.He worked there several characters in the film, but it seems to focus more on Vladimir Arseniev and Dersu Uzala Considering that it is from his memoirs. The rest of the characters are just there to help demonstrate the link between these two men....
Among them is the Soviet-Japanese film "Dersu Uzala", cinematizing the works of the
The Guardian (blog)Russian Far East celebrates Kurosawa'sBased on the memoires of Russian explorer Vladimir Arsenyev, the film got the 1975 Oscar for the Best Foreign Language Film and it also won the 




