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In High and Low (
Japanese title 天国と地獄 Tengoku to jigokuAkira Kurosawa made a political statement by having the main character work as a shoe industry executive who rose from humble origins as a simple leather worker, clearly implying (to Japanese audiences) the main character's burakumin status. The story has the main character selflessly sacrifice his fortune in order to save his driver's son, showing that burakumin are as heroic as anyone else.
Gondo himself, importantly, represents a member of the
burakumin class citation needed who has risen above his caste and eventually validates himself in the eyes of the audience by his virtuous act, providing the ransom for a child that is not his own.
--- (uncited portion from High and Low)
It is perhaps a little dangerous to use another Wikipedia article as a reference when it does not cite its sources. It gives the appearence in the
burakumin article that it is using this article as a reference now and vice versa.
Yomangani09:34, 17 July 2006 (UTC)reply
I agree, it was probably a bit hasty of me to add the information, considering the political motivations some groups in Japan might have to retroactively associate themselves with a Japanese icon. I'm looking for a source, and will replace the language if I find one.
Dhimelright22:21, 20 July 2006 (UTC)reply
Burakumin are known as the underclass who work with dead animals. In this specific case - Gondo is a leather worker who makes shoes. In the “briefcase and color smoke pellet” scene - he talks of his days as an apprentice who also made such cases. It is clear to
Japanese people that even though Gondo has a nice house AKA Heaven - it's still in the burakumin part of town near the Chinese section of
Yokohama. This was a common theme in Kurasawa's films. The Kurasawa statement comes from a film class
Donald Richie of
UCLA gave in the late
1970s or early
1980s. Forgive me for beating people over the head with the obvious. The source is likely an interview done by Richie. -
Sparky02:09, 10 August 2006 (UTC)reply
The problem wasn't that we were disputing whether he was burakumin or not, it was that the statement was uncited in both this article and the
burakumin article, and until we have a
verifiablesource we shouldn't put it back in. You've given me something to work on with regards to finding a source though, thanks.
Yomangani09:27, 10 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Re: the notability of critics, there are voluminous instances of films far less notable than a great film by a great filmmaker with links to minor film blogs. This link is from a major blog site that Wikipedia has its own entry on:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blogcritics; it is written by a film critic that Wikipedia has its own entry on:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Schneider_(writer), about a film released by a DVD company with its own page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criterion_Collection; and about a version of the DVD that is newly released with new features that are detailed in a review that runs some 8 pages long. This is not just a thumbs up or down review. Given these four facts, to call the review non-notable, is absurd, since Wikipedia notes the company that released the dvd, the site that posted the review, and the writer. Given that there is slim linkage, this link provides a valuable resource for filmgoers and dvd collectors.
Guffinmac (
talk)
13:26, 14 August 2008 (UTC)reply