The
film has few peers among the major communications media created by advances
in science and today molding human aspirations and behaviour. So pervasive
is its influence that the film now often supersedes the novel and the
dramatic stage as a means of enabling the individual to perceive a deeper
reality in his own existence. When used in documentation of contemporary
society it becomes a kind of journalism.
Yet in Asia as elsewhere, this powerful medium has often served to disguise
consequential issues. Entertaining and diverting, films frequently foster
expectations without awareness of the demands upon the individual for their
realization.
It is AKIRA KUROSAWA's matching of mastery of his art, in all its technical
sophistication, with unrelenting concern for the "humanism" of the
individual that lends his work a special quality. His sensitive treatment of
this intrinsic element has sharpened the awareness of those he has reached.
Now 52 years old, this accomplished film director has devoted a quarter of a
century to the sustained, inspired labor that is requisite for achievement
of any high goal. Starting as a young artist-apprentice with the Photo
Chemical Laboratory, one of Japan's pioneer movie makers, he was fortunate
in finding as his teacher Kajiro Yamamoto, a director then second to none in
the country.
Long before KUROSAWA's film, Rashomon, won the Grand Prix at the Venice
International Film Festival in 1951, he had painstakingly evolved his method
for coaxing the best from actors using scripts he had helped write. In the
detailed, precise effort he devotes to editing, he reveals the conscientious
craftsman. Fame from a succession of superior films produced since then has
not tempted him to slacken his standards.
Quiet, intense and stubbornly determined, KUROSAWA shuns the publicity that
easily engulfs luminaries in the film industry. He lives unpretentiously
with his wife and their two children, cultivating his liking for antiques
and his friends. The same concern for being genuinely and zestfully human is
as evident in his personal life as it is in his art
In electing AKIRA KUROSAWA to receive the 1965 Ramon Magsaysay Award for
Journalism, Literature and Creative Communication Arts, the Board of
Trustees recognizes his perceptive use of the film to probe the moral
dilemma of man amidst the tumultuous remaking of his values and environment
in the mid-20th Century.
|