Ran: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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** In the opposite direction, Edmund has been turned into a woman.
** In the opposite direction, Edmund has been turned into a woman.
* [[Gorn]]: The battle scenes are remarkably brutal. The sack of the Third Castle inspired the aftermath of Omaha Beach in ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]''.
* [[Gorn]]: The battle scenes are remarkably brutal. The sack of the Third Castle inspired the aftermath of Omaha Beach in ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]''.
* [[Gory Discretion Shot]] You don't need to see a beheading when the results of it are even more obvious. Results in [[High Pressure Blood]].
* [[Gory Discretion Shot]] You don't need to see a beheading when the results of it are even more obvious. Results in [[High-Pressure Blood]].
* [[Henpecked Husband]]: Taro. {{spoiler|Not that Jiro does any better.}}
* [[Henpecked Husband]]: Taro. {{spoiler|Not that Jiro does any better.}}
* [[Heroic BSOD]]
* [[Heroic BSOD]]
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* [[Jidai Geki]]
* [[Jidai Geki]]
* [[Karmic Death]]: {{spoiler|Be honest. Didn't everyone cheer a little when Kurogane treated Lady Kaede to a well-deserved, justified death?}}
* [[Karmic Death]]: {{spoiler|Be honest. Didn't everyone cheer a little when Kurogane treated Lady Kaede to a well-deserved, justified death?}}
* {{spoiler|[[Kill Em All]]}}
* {{spoiler|[[Kill'Em All]]}}
* [[Kill It With Fire]]: What happens to the Third Castle.
* [[Kill It With Fire]]: What happens to the Third Castle.
* [[Lady Macbeth]]: Lady Kaede.
* [[Lady Macbeth]]: Lady Kaede.
* [[Laser Guided Karma]]: Hidetora gets a big, heaping helping of it.
* [[Laser-Guided Karma]]: Hidetora gets a big, heaping helping of it.
* [[Losing Your Head]]: {{spoiler|Lady Sue, then Lady Kaede.}}
* [[Losing Your Head]]: {{spoiler|Lady Sue, then Lady Kaede.}}
* [[Manipulative Bitch]]: Lady Kaede.
* [[Manipulative Bitch]]: Lady Kaede.
* [[Murder the Hypotenuse]]
* [[Murder the Hypotenuse]]
* [[Offstage Villainy]]: Hidetora's bloody conquests. We meet some of the survivors, who are, understandably, rather ticked off.
* [[Offstage Villainy]]: Hidetora's bloody conquests. We meet some of the survivors, who are, understandably, rather ticked off.
* [[Only Sane Man]]: Kurogane plays this role in Jiro's circle. He's the only one maintaining anything resembling a code of ethics. Naturally, his insight - which could have prevented half the tragedy in this movie - is discarded. Instead, [[What an Idiot|Jiro opts to bend over for Kaede.]]
* [[Only Sane Man]]: Kurogane plays this role in Jiro's circle. He's the only one maintaining anything resembling a code of ethics. Naturally, his insight - which could have prevented half the tragedy in this movie - is discarded. Instead, [[What an Idiot!|Jiro opts to bend over for Kaede.]]
** The Jester certainly feels like the [[Only Sane Man]] when he has to look after an increasingly maddened Hidetora.
** The Jester certainly feels like the [[Only Sane Man]] when he has to look after an increasingly maddened Hidetora.
** Among the three brothers, Saburo does not succumb to any lust for power.
** Among the three brothers, Saburo does not succumb to any lust for power.
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* [[War Is Hell]]
* [[War Is Hell]]
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic]]: The boar hunt and the final shots of Tsurumaru.
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic]]: The boar hunt and the final shots of Tsurumaru.
* [[What the Hell Hero]]: His most loyal son gives Hidetora one when he decides to divide the kingdom into three duchys.
* [[What the Hell, Hero?]]: His most loyal son gives Hidetora one when he decides to divide the kingdom into three duchys.
* [[Wise Prince]]: Saburo.
* [[Wise Prince]]: Saburo.
* [[Yandere]]: Lady Kaede.
* [[Yandere]]: Lady Kaede.

Revision as of 21:35, 8 January 2014

Ran (乱, Japanese for "rebellion", "uprising" or "revolt", or to mean "disturbed" or "confused") is a 1985 film by Akira Kurosawa, late in his career. It is heavily influenced by King Lear, relocated to the Warring States period in Japan.

The warlord Hidetora of the Ichimonji clan, once a feared and powerful man, is now in his twilight years. He decides to divide his kingdom between his three sons Taro, Jiro, and Saburo, while he remains a figurehead. Saburo, the youngest, disagrees with the plan and is banished. Sound familiar?

With Saburo away, Taro and Jiro begin feuding over succession as head of the clan. Egged on by his wife, Lady Kaede, Taro uses Hidetora's insolent jester Kyoami as a pretext for stripping him of his powers. Hidetora is made persona non grata and forced to relocate to Saburo's abandoned castle, which is then sacked by Taro and Jiro's forces. Unable to find a blade to commit seppuku with, Hidetora goes mad and wanders, dazed, from the burning castle, as the world crumbles around him.

Kurosawa wrote the screenplay ten years before its eventual release, during which he meticulously painted storyboards for every scene while he sought funding. At the time of its release, it had the largest budget of any Japanese film ever made until then. While it garnered praise from critics worldwide, its box office performance was lackluster, and was passed over for the Academy Awards in both the United States and Japan. In the years since, it has come to be seen as one of Kurosawa's best films, and one of the best films of all time.

Not to be confused with a certain nine-tailed kitsune, nor to be confused with a sex-changing martial artist or a Norse sea goddess.


Ran contains the following tropes: