Nathan Pensky

Power, Loss, and Madness in Kurosawa’s Ran and Shakespeare’s King Lear

Power, Loss, and Madness in Kurosawa’s Ran and Shakespeare’s King Lear

By identifying King Lear with the ancient Japanese warlord Hidetora, whose violations emerge from a breach of publicly identified self-hood, Akira Kurosawa plays with the quintessentially Shakespearean focus on individual personality.

Akira Kurosawa Films 101: 1963 – 1970

Akira Kurosawa Films 101: 1963 – 1970

These three Kurosawa films represent the end of one phase of his career and the beginning of another. High and Low is a police procedural that is regarded as one of his greatest films, while Red Beard represented the end of his so-called “Creative Period”.

Akira Kurosawa Films 101: 1949 – 1950

Akira Kurosawa Films 101: 1949 – 1950

Today’s Kurosawa 101 films include the director’s only effort at bringing a contemporary Japanese stage play to the screen (the rarely seen The Quiet Duel), a police procedural that was the finest Kurosawa film to date (Stray Dog), and a scree against tabloid journalism that resulted in one of the weakest films he would ever direct (Scandal).

The Best Twitter Comic on the Planet?: An Interview with Rob Delaney

No Formula for Funny: An Interview with Nick Kroll

The Hippie That Wasn’t: An Interview with Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips

Absurdity Writ Small: ‘Mark Twain’s Autobiography 1910-2010’

Michael Has Issues: A Sad Sad Conversation with Michael Ian Black

Trickster-Heroes in ‘Buffy’ and ‘Sir Gawain and the Green Knight’

‘Childrens Hospital’ Season Three – Alicia Silverstone Arc

‘Attack the Block’ Engages the Brain and Quickens the Pulse

‘Shark Week 2011’ (24th Annual)