Japanese director Masaki Kobayashi's landmark 1958-61 trilogy about a man's attempt to struggle with his humanity in an inhumane world is a rigorous but deeply rewarding viewing experience.
Human Condition, The - Pt. 1 - No Greater Love (1958)
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Reviews Counted:7
Fresh:6
Rotten:1
Average Rating:7.3/10
Runtime: 3 hrs 25 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Synopsis: This first segment of THE HUMAN CONDITION, Masaki Kobayashi's adaptation of Jumpei Gomikawa's novel NINGEN NO JOKEN, stars Tatsuya Nakadai as Kaji. During WWII, the pacifist Kaji decides to avoid... This first segment of THE HUMAN CONDITION, Masaki Kobayashi's adaptation of Jumpei Gomikawa's novel NINGEN NO JOKEN, stars Tatsuya Nakadai as Kaji. During WWII, the pacifist Kaji decides to avoid the draft by working as a labor superintendent at a mine in Manchuria. His efforts at treating the workers in a humane fashion backfire, blunted by the cruelty of their direct boss, Okazaki (Eitarô Ozawa), with only mine supervisor Okishima (Sô Yamamura) offering support. To complicate matters, 600 ill and starving Chinese POWs arrive at the camp. Naturally, Kaji takes complete responsibility for them but soon finds that Chinese prisoners resent his attempts to treat them with kindness, too traumatized by the harsh treatment they've received from the Japanese to ever trust one of them. Consequently, Kaji's unusual behavior ends up angering both the prisoners and his fellow supervisors. When, after achieving a productivity gain, he decides to take a brief vacation, his enemies arrange for some of the Chinese prisoners to escape, creating an uproar and endangering Kaji's position. Nakadai is, once again, astounding in Kobayashi's attack on the dehumanizing effect of the Pacific war on the Japanese. A brilliantly made film, it's appeal for a measure of compassion in the direst straits remains disturbing in its naked emotionality. [More]
Starring: Tatsuya Nakadai, Michiyo Aratama, Chikage Awashima, Ineko Arima
Starring: Tatsuya Nakadai, Michiyo Aratama, Chikage Awashima, Ineko Arima, Keiji Sada, Eitarô Ozawa, Sô Yamamura
Director: Masaki Kobayashi
Director: Masaki Kobayashi
Reviews for Human Condition, The - Pt. 1 - No Greater Love
It's a richly rewarding visual and human experience in all its bleakness.
In keeping with the grandeur of its title, The Human Condition is anything but modest in scope and ambition.
It’s [star Tatsuya] Nakadai who makes this impressive yet flawed screed worth your time commitment.
Based on Jumpei Gomikawa's ambitious novel and seasoned with Kobayashi's own experiences, this overly melodramatic trilogy set in Japanese-occupied Manchuria depicts the dehumanizing brutality of war with on-the-nose pedantry, never subtext, and offers li
'Although it is set in the past, its universal themes of love, war, and man’s struggle to understand his place in the world are as relevant today as they’ve ever been.'
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