Forgettable Kurosawa Film
Hidden Fortress is the only Kurosawa film I have watched so far that I did not enjoy. The reasons I thought this Kurosawa film was lackadaisical:
1) Story very slow to unfold:
Only after a full hour does the characters journey to smuggle the princess to Hayakawa commence. The first hour is monotonous and mostly consists of Tahei and Matakashi annoyingly bickering with each other while wandering about an equally monotonous landscape. Even when the plot finally starts to unfold, nothing much happens. The action scenes are few, and the few present are apathetic. For example, in the duel between Makabe and Tadokoro the choreography is too apparent and the fight itself is very dull. But a lack of action can easily be overshadowed by intriguing characters. Unfortunately, Hidden Fortress lacks both.
2) Highly annoying characters:
I simply did not care for any of the characters. Tahei and Matakashi are the comic relief of the film, but after a while their ignorance and incessant bickering seizes being funny and starts being irritating. Princess Yuki is by far the most annoying character of the film, but the actress Misa Uehara is to blame. Her acting is completely awful! Her strident voice and stiff mannerisms is unbearable. Also, after that scene when she is crying, mourning the death of her decoy, it's no surprise that she didn't win any awards for best actress. She might have won a Razzie if it existed when the movie was made. Her acting was so "powerful" and "moving" that she made me cry when towards the end of the movie she sings a poignant song...I was crying from laughter, though. Mifune is also a disappointment in Hidden Fortress, but this is Kurosawa's fault. Mifune is too restrained as the obedient, loyal servant and doesn't display his terrific swordplay or justified arrongance as much as in his other roles. The best scene of the film is when Mifune finally releases the inner lion inside him and chases down and eliminates two guards on horseback. The prostitute/maid Princess Yuki rescues is also irritating. She should have let Matakashi and Tahei "have their way" with Princess Yuki. They drew sticks…It was fair and square. The butch prostitute should just have waited her turn.
3) Lack of a definite antagonist/threat:
At one point of the movie, Gen.Tadokoro (Susumu Fujita) appears to be the antagonist, but the viewer later finds out he is not. But during and before the duel, when I believed Tadokoro was the main antagonist, I thought that Fujita was badly cast. Fujita’s Tadokoro looked emaciated and is much older (or at least looks so) than Mifune. Judging on appearance and physique, I felt that Tadokoro did not pose much of a threat to Mifune’s Makabe and so, the little challenge he does provide during the duel was unrealistic. But the real antagonist of the film is the Yamana Tribe. But through out the movie Kurosawa depicts the army and its commanders as inept and craven. Therefore, the lack of any real menacing threat denigrated my concern for the characters, since I did not feel as if their journey was as dangerous as it was made out to be. Also, why was the Yamana Tribe necessarily bad? In the movie they are never shown to be corrupt, depraved or unjust. So what if they beheaded the decoy who they believed to be the princess; she is an enemy to them. And also, where in the movie does it depict the Princess' Akizuki tribe as being benevolent and kind-hearted? For all I know, she could be the evil one.
The whole effectiveness of the story relies heavily on the conditions that the viewer cares for the character, especially the well-being of the princess, which I did not; and also on the fact that the viewer perceives that the characters are in grave danger, which I also did not.
Therefore, I did not appreciate Hidden Fortress as much as other Kurosawa films. Only merit of this movie is that it "influenced" Lucas in his Star Wars saga. I place quotes on influence because it's not so much of an influence as it is a source pool from which Lucas exhaustingly siphons.