Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Seven Samurai and lessons from Sun Tzu's 'Art of War' review and analysis


Seven Samurai is a 1954 Japanese Samurai epic co-written by Akira Kurosawa, Shinobu Hashimoto, Hideo Oguni, and directed by Akira Kurosawa. 

The film takes place during the Sengoku Period of Japanese history and follows 7 masterless samurai--or ronin as they are called--who are hired for the price of 3 meals a day by farmers to defend their harvest from bandits. The film stars Toshiro Mifune, Takashi Shimura, Yoshio Inaba, Daisuke Katō, Seiji Miyaguchi, Minoru Chiaki, and Isao Kimura. At 207 minutes, Seven Samurai is Akira Kurosawa’s longest and arguably best film, and serves as the template for team films such as The Magnificent Seven and Marvel’s Avengers. The film was nominated for 2 Academy Awards in 1957 for Best Art Design and Best Costume Design. Major critics such as Roger Ebert and polls such as Sight and Sound rank Seven Samurai among the greatest films ever made. In this presentation, I will cover the film’s plot, its themes, and offer my personal thoughts at the end.
Plot
Seven Samurai is set in Japan in the early 16th century, a period of uncertainty plagued by debt, high taxes, civil wars, and now bandits, a group of which on a high hill look down upon a farming village lying prone, plump, juicy, and almost ripe. But not yet, not until the harvest, only then will they return to steal the hard-earned fruit of the farmers' labor.
Down in the village, the farmers are fearful and full of despair. There are disagreements about whether they should avoid bloodshed and surrender their crops to the bandits or whether they should fashion their bamboo poles into spears and fight the bandits. The farmers go to see the village elder who tells them to fight. Of all the villages looted and burned, those that survived had 1 thing in common: samurai. But the farmers have no money to pay for proud samurai to which the elder tells them to hire hungry samurai who will work for 3 meals a day. Even a bear, the elder tells them, will come out of the forest when he gets hungry.
Four farmers, Rikichi, Yohei, Manzo, and Mosuke go to the nearest town to find four samurai. But after 10 days and no samurai, things seem hopeless until the 4 farmers come upon a crowd surrounding a priest and a samurai. The samurai takes out a knife and cuts off his topknot. The samurai then hands a sharp razor to the priest who uses the razor to shave the hair off the samurai’s head. Kimbei, the samurai, then puts on the tattered robe of a priest. He then asks the villagers for 2 rice balls to go inside of a barn to rescue a child from a thief. Farmers surround the barn and all of them have weapons; but they are afraid. The front door is open and Kimbei offers the thief a rice ball in exchange for the child. The thief agrees. Kimbei tosses a rice ball to the thief and rushes in behind it. Moments later, the thief stumbles out of the barn, falls to the ground, and dies. Kimbei comes out of the barn with the boy and drops his bloodstained sword. Kimbei walks away; no one thanks him. A young samurai named Katsushiro bows to Kimbei asking to be his disciple. The farmers hire their 1st Samurai.
Kimbei recruits 6 more samurai to work for 3 meals a day and they return to the village. Kimbei looks around in horror; the village is wide open and easily accessible from every direction. He and his fellow samurai get to work and over time the village and farmers become stronger, fortified walls are erected, bridges are torn down, and crops are gathered. The harvest passes and soon the fear of the bandits is replaced by dancing, forgetfulness, and ingratitude. With the reaping all done, the farmers think that the bandits have gone away. But Kimbei knows that peace is the most dangerous season of all.
Themes
Honor is at the center of Seven Samurai. At the beginning of this film, a thief holds a child hostage inside of a barn surrounded by a crowd of armed villagers who feel helpless. A samurai named Kimbei cuts off his topknot, the very feature that identifies him as a samurai; he then hands a sharp razor to a priest to shave off his hair. Kimbei then dresses himself in the robe of a monk and asks for 2 rice balls to go into the barn and save the child.
Proverbs 18:12,
“Humility comes before honor.”
Kimbei tosses the rice balls to the thief and rushes into the barn by himself. Moments later, the thief stumbles out of the barn and falls to the ground, dead. How was Kimbei able to do what the crowd of people outside the shack couldn’t do? 1) he cut off his topknot to hide the fact that he was a samurai; 2) he assumes the non-threatening disguise of a priest to gain the thief’s trust; 3) he has a priest to cut off all of his hair with a razor, a gesture incorporating 2 virtues: sacrifice and humility; 4) he then tosses the rice balls the villagers gave him to the thief when the villagers thought that the rice balls were for him; and finally, Kimbei rushes into the barn, subdues the thief, and saves the child--all by himself--a feat of courage that so impresses a young samurai named Katsushiro to ask to be his disciple.
Machiavelli’s ‘The Prince.’ What A Prince Must Do To Be Esteemed:
“Nothing wins so much esteem for a prince as embarking on great enterprises and giving rare proofs of his ability.”
Honor seeks no reward but is, within itself, a reward. A farmer named Rikichi volunteers to go into the bandits' camp and steal their guns. Rikichi is eager to win honor to himself but he is also inexperienced and stands a good chance at failing. Kyuzo--a samurai of proven abilities--snatches this opportunity away from Rikichi and goes solo into the bandit’s camp, steals one of their guns, and gets himself 2 kills in the process. Kyuzo’s courage and skill--as Kimbei’s courage and skill in rescuing the child from the thief--wins praise and admiration, especially from Katsushiro.
Kikuchyo is jealous of Katsushiro’s admiration for Kyuzo and evens the score by sneaking into the bandits’ camp and stealing himself a gun, too. But instead of winning merit, Kimbei reprimands him. Kikuchyo’s deed could have costed them a valuable samurai and the deed was also self serving and not for the greater good of the whole.
Proverbs 25:27,
“For men to search their own glory is not glory.”
Also,
Art of War Chapter 8. Variation in Tactics:
“In war, the general receives his commands from the sovereign, collects his army and concentrates his forces.”
The sovereign is the head. Tactical decisions should be rational. Also, Kikuchyo’s motivation for going into the bandit’s camp is to take glory from another samurai, as he did by dancing over the dead thief that Kimbei killed; or like the villagers stealing the armor off of slain samurai; or like old man Yohei trying on samurai armor that is too big for him. But this act on Kikuchyo’s part only attests to the high value of honor and the price the samurai are willing to pay for it.
The samurai help the farmers to discover honor within themselves. Kikuchyo teaches the farmers how to fight with swords and form battle units; Heihachi provokes Rikichi to work harder in the fields by questioning his manhood. At the beginning of the film, the villagers felt afraid and helpless even though they outnumbered their enemies--the thief that held the child at knife point and the bandits. Back then, every option was on the table, from simply walking away from their harvest and letting the bandits take it to even committing suicide. In fact, the farmers had plenty of rice, salt, beans, and saki stored away but they were poor because they had no honor, they planted and sowed but had no courage to defend what was theirs.
Sowing and reaping
Matt. 13:24--29,
“Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in his field: 25But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat, and went his way. 26But when the blade was sprung up, and brought forth fruit, then appeared the tares also. 27So the servants of the householder came and said unto him, Sir, didst not thou sow good seed in thy field? from whence then hath it tares? 28He said unto them, An enemy hath done this. The servants said unto him, Wilt thou then that we go and gather them up? 29But he said, Nay; lest while ye gather up the tares, ye root up also the wheat with them. 30Let both grow together until the harvest: and in the time of harvest I will say to the reapers, Gather ye together first the tares, and bind them in bundles to burn them: but gather the wheat into my barn.”
The weeds are not just the bandits that appear at harvest but other thieves such as laziness, disunity, and forgetfulness. There are weeds in the human spirit that come up in seasons of trouble as well as seasons of peace and prosperity.
Laziness
To prepare for the bandits’ return, Kimbei and Gorobei inspect the village to secure all the weak points. The weakest point of the perimeter is the eastern border. Here, they find Kikuchyo stretched out, his head and feet propped up, snoring away, with his sword sticking out of a pile of logs. Kimbei takes Kikuchyo’s sword and, from a hiding spot, tosses a stone in the water to wake Kikuchyo up. Kimbei comes out of hiding and gives Kikuchyo his sword and a warning: if he had been the enemy, Kikuchyo would have been dead.
Matthew 24:43,
“But know this, that if the householder had known in what watch the thief comes, he would have watched, and not have suffered his house to be broken into.”
Also,
Art of War Chapter 8. Variation of Tactics:
“The art of war teaches us to rely not on the likelihood of the enemy's not coming, but on our own readiness to receive him; not on the chance of his not attacking, but rather on the fact that we have made our position unassailable.”
Disunity
Kimbei and Gorobei walk the perimeter of the village and discover another weakness; three isolated homes outside the village.
Art Of War Chapter 8. Variation in Tactics:
“In country where high roads intersect, join hands with your allies. Do not linger in dangerously isolated positions.”
Art Of War Chapter 1. Laying Plans:
“If his forces are united, separate them.”
Once the bandits come for the harvest, whoever lived in those three homes would be isolated. Kimbei lays down the rules: all work shall be done in formation; harvesting will be done together; no one shall work by himself; everyone will camp together, unit by unit; nobody shall do anything by himself. Kimbei even reprimands a fellow samurai--Kikuchyo--for leaving the village to go into the enemy camp by himself. Despite the valuable intel he acquired, Kikuchyo’s motive for going into the bandits’ camp was selfish. And as for the homes outside the village on the other side of the marshes, Kimbei orders them to be evacuated. Twenty homes in the village can’t be risked for the 3 homes outside the village.
Matthew 5:30,
"If your right hand makes you stumble, cut it off and throw it from you; for it is better for you to lose one of the parts of your body, than for your whole body to go into hell.”
Kikuchyo, as pointed out earlier, violates Kimbei’s order by going into the bandit’s camp by himself. But even so, Kikuchyo acquires valuable intelligence on the enemy’s condition. Attrition through a series of unsuccessful attacks has taken its toll on the bandits who are not only worn out from the clashes with the samurais and villagers but also hungry. The bandits’ predicament comes from violating 2 rules from the Art of War:
Chapter 6. Weak Points and Strong:
“You can be sure of succeeding in your attacks if you only attack places which are undefended.”
Also,
Chapter 3. Attack By Stratagem:
“The rule is not to besiege walled cities if it can possibly be avoided. The preparation of mantlets, movable shelters, and various implements of war, will take up three whole months; and the piling up of mounds over against the walls will take three months more.
The general, unable to control his irritation, will launch his men to the assault like swarming ants, with the result that one-third of his men are slain, while the town still remains untaken. Such are the disastrous effects of a siege.”
Forgetfulness
Sun Tzu realized that moods are like seasons and change over time. At the very beginning of the film, the fear of the bandits’ attack intensifies leading up to harvest; however, after the villagers gather their harvest with no trouble, the fear dissipates. Gorobei and Kimbei take in a scene of villagers standing around laughing and acting a fool without a care in the world, more at ease and confident in the peace following the bandits’ threat to take their harvest. An experienced samurai, Gorobei observes the villagers’ general attitude with disapproval. He and Kimbei knows that peaceful conditions are the most dangerous times of all.
Art of War Chapter 7. Maneuvering:
“Now a soldier's spirit is keenest in the morning; by noonday it has begun to flag; and in the evening, his mind is bent only on returning to camp.”
Art of War Chapter 1. Laying Plans:
“When we are near, we must make the enemy believe we are far away.”
The delay in the bandits’ attack makes the villagers confident, forgetful, and ungrateful.
Finding samurai to fight and put their lives on the line for only 3 meals a day is no easy task for the villagers. An offended samurai draws his sword on Rikichi for even asking. Finding not one but seven samurai to fight and put their lives on the line for 3 meals a day is miraculous and at first the villagers can’t believe their luck. Over the course of time, the villagers become confident, forgetful, and ungrateful: they tolerate the samurai as long as they are threatened by the bandits. But as soon as the bandits are all dead, the villagers forget all about the samurais that helped them. Even Shino gives Katsushiro the cold shoulder after the bandits are dead and the crops are harvested.
Machiavelli. The Prince. Concerning Cruelty: Whether It Is Better To Be Loved Than to Be Feared, Or The Reverse:
“For this can be said about the generality of men: that they are ungrateful, fickle, dissembling, anxious to flee danger, and covetous of gain. So long as you promote their advantage, they are all yours.”
Wrap
Akira Kurosawa had originally planned to make the film about 6 samurai but decided to add a 7th samurai, Kikuchyo, whose eccentric personality offsets the personalities of the other 6 samurai who are all serious. Toshiro Mifune--who plays Kikuchyo--was to play Kyuzo before Kurosawa made him the 7th samurai. Seeing Mifune as a wild-man in this role brings to mind his role as Musashi Miyamoto in Hiroshi Inagaki’s Samurai trilogy. Mifune’s role in Seven Samurai also brings to mind his role as the bandit, Tajōmaru, in Kurosawa’s 1950 film Rashomon. Of all Kurosawa’s films, Seven Samurai is among my favorites for a number of reasons starting with the cinematography by longtime collaborator Asakazu Naka. Each scene is full of so much information and wisdom; nothing the camera sees is wasted. Poetry is in every shot. The music by Fumio Hayasaka is also great and matches the scenes well.
It doesn’t take long watching Seven Samurai to get the sense that Kurosawa’s film is universal and applies to many aspects of life. The film runs almost 31/2 hours but it feels an hour shorter.
Seven Samurai is an old film but you can see its influence on many of today’s films like Star Wars, The Magnificent Seven, and The Avengers. This masterpiece is why I consider Kurosawa 1 of the best directors ever.

The passion of Raging Bull: a review and analysis of the film!



Raging Bull is a 1980 film by Director Martin Scorsese that is widely regarded as 1 of the greatest ever made. 

Actor Robert DeNiro stars as middleweight boxing champion Jake LaMotta whose opponents in the ring pale next to his opponents within himself. The film is produced by Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff both of whom also produced Sylvester Stallone's breakout film 'Rocky' 3 years earlier. The script was written by Paul Schrader and Mardik Martin, the cinematography is by Michael Chapman, the editing is by Thelma Schoonmaker and is based on Jake LaMotta’s 1970 memoir ‘Raging Bull: My Story.' The film stars Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci, and Cathy Moriarty. Raging Bull was nominated for 8 Academy Awards and won 2 for Best Actor (Robert DeNiro) and Editing (Thelma Schoonmaker), respectively. Here, I will break down the film's themes and symbolism and offer my personal thoughts at the end. Thanks.
Themes
In the opening credits, Jake LaMotta shadowboxes in a boxing ring enveloped in smoke. This scene foreshadows the boxer’s greatest opponent--himself. The boxing ring is an altar where he atones for his sins. The boxing ring is also an outlet for his destructive passions. His nickname, “Raging Bull,” implies a creature that is controlled by the impulses of its flesh. The passion that propels him to the top of the middleweight boxing division is the same passion that destroys the relationships in his personal life.
Clip 4:
The story opens in the dressing room of a nightclub where Jake LaMotta--retired and fat--is preparing to do a stand-up comedy routine. He is sitting in front of a mirror with his head down, not looking at himself, reciting these lines: “and though I’m no Olivier and before Sugar Ray would say: “the thing ain’t the ring, it’s the play” so give me a stage, where this bull here can rage, and though I can fight, I’d much rather recite, ‘That’s Entertainment!” At this stage of his life, Jake is struggling to adjust to retirement as his personal life is disintegrating as rapidly as his once chiseled but now pudgy physique. In the Biblical context, Jake is coming out of the Old Testament where God requires burnt sacrifices of animals to atone for sin. When Jake boxed, the ring was the altar; he and his opponents were the meat. Retirement has taken away the old way of sacrificing and all the people he can blame his failures on: his wife and brother have left him; no crooked boxing politics to point the finger at anymore--it’s just him. He has to accept responsibility for his actions and yet he can’t even face himself in the mirror.
Jake’s character arc is approaching the turning point. Without the boxing ring as an outlet, his appetites are raging out of control and his sins and body are swelling up to match them.
Rage
The film backtracks to an earlier time in Jake’s life. His marriage is on the ropes because his wife suspects him of cheating. The explosive rage that makes him a great boxer is on display here as he and his wife get into a fight over a steak. Right off the bat we get to see 2 aspects of Jake’s personality, rage and lack of discipline. This scene also introduces Jake’s little brother Joey, played by Joe Pesci, and Frank Vincent who plays the role of Salvy Batts, a member of the mafia.
Clip 7: Lust
Joey introduces Jake, who is still married, to a 15 year old girl named Vickie. Jake saw her in a nightclub with a mafia figure and became obsessed with her. Joey knew her and introduces them in this scene, which takes place at a public swimming pool. The black and white shirt Jake has on represents the conflict he has within himself in contrast to Vickie who wears all white. Also, the chain-link fence enclosing the public pool and separating Jake from Vickie symbolizes the forbidden nature of their relationship. In keeping with the Holy Bible, the chain-link fence is in the pattern of crosses, an important Christian symbol.
Clip 8:
This scene is a montage of Jake’s fights and him marrying Vickie shot to look like a home movie. You notice the juxtaposition of the scenes of his marriage to Vickie, which are filmed in color and the boxing scenes which are filmed in black and white. Jake wants to be happy, but there is restlessness in his soul, passions that he can’t control that will eventually overlap into his life outside the ring. These brief clips are the only instances in the film that Jake looks truly happy.
Clip 10: Gluttony
In between fights Jake picks up a lot of weight and his wife Vickie is unhappy. Also, we see the politics of boxing, that despite Jake’s success he is not guaranteed a shot. Joey persuades Jake to throw an upcoming fight with a weaker opponent named Billy Fox. Later, at a nightclub, Jake and his friends are having drinks and Jake is boasting about his upcoming bout with Middleweight Champ Tony Janiro. Vickie throws in her 2 cents, saying that she thinks that Janiro is good-looking. Jake is consumed with jealousy and now even more determined to release his destructive passions on Janiro. At this point in the film and Jake’s character arc, boxing gives him a designated place to release his rage. In this case, boxing also gives Jake a safe way to release other energies like jealousy. Ultimately, jealousy is what brings his marriage to an end.
Once again, we have Jake and Sugar Ray in the 3rd of their 4 fights. This is an interesting scene because at this point in the film, Jake is battling on several fronts in his life and career. He knows that he has to win every fight to even have the smallest chance of fighting for the title, which the mafia controls. And his storybook marriage to Vickie is falling apart. This fight reflects Jake’s state of mind. His life has become surreal. The rope covering his eyes represents blindness and his namesake, Raging Bull--a creature controlled by its instincts:
Exodus 29:36,
“Sacrifice a bull each day as a sin offering to make atonement. Purify the altar by making atonement for it, and anoint it to consecrate it.”
Clip 14:
Jake throws a fight to get a shot at the title at the urging of Joey whose theory was that if the mob saw that Jake was beatable that they would give him a shot at the champ. Jake is a man with a great deal of pride and losing to a lesser fighter is a bitter pill. This fight is a metaphor of his spiritual transformation later in the film after he comes out of prison and humbles himself to fix his relationship with his brother Joey.
Proverbs 18:12,
“Humilty goes before honor.”
Clip 16: Jealousy
Shortly after winning the title, Jake confronts his brother about Vickie. Jake has heard through the grapevine that Joey had a fight with Salvy concerning Vickie but Joey refuses to tell Jake anything. At this point, Jake doesn’t trust anybody, not even his brother. Jealousy has distorted Jake’s sense of reality as he continues to act on blind instinct.
Clip 17:
Jake is out of control. He confronts Vickie about her having an affair with Joey. Vickie affirms his suspicions and makes a facetious comment about the size of Joey’s manhood. Jake takes her seriously and goes over to his brother’s house and beats him up. The guilt and self-hate he feels afterwards is enormous and for this sin he, once again, offers himself up as a sacrifice to arch nemesis Sugar Ray Robinson. But unlike his previous fights, he now has to face Sugar alone.
Clip 18: Atonement
Sugar Ray beats Jake but doesn’t knock Jake out. This is a good sign. In this fight, Sugar Ray is God’s punishment for all of Jake’s sins. God, as Sugar Ray, beats Jake severely and yet with mercy as he is still able to stand at the end.
Hebrews 12:6,
“For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives.”
Ecclesiastes 9:4,
“For to him that is joined to all the living there is hope: for a living dog is better than a dead lion.”
Clip 19:
Jake is now retired and owns a nightclub where he flirts with the female customers. This clip comes just before a short innocuous encounter with a couple of young ladies. They are fans of his and to confirm that they are not underage, they each give him a big girl kiss on the mouth.
On a side note, Scorsese stopped shooting for several months to allow DeNiro to pack on 65 pounds for the 2nd half of the film. DeNiro went from 150lbs to almost 215lbs.
Clip 20: Born again
Without boxing as both a way to maintain his weight and a way to cover his sins, Jake’s life spirals out of control and he is charged with serving alcohol to a 14 year old girl in his nightclub. Innocence in the mind is synonymous with youth and in the context of redemption, this girl becomes the key that opens the door for Jake to redeem himself.
Jake is arrested and put in a jail that looks like a tomb; here, the old Jake dies and he confronts himself and his demons for the 1st time. Throughout the Old Testament of the Bible, God requires animal sacrifices for atonement. In the book of Genesis, God kills an animal and uses its skin to cover up Adam’s shame; in the book of Genesis, God tells Abraham to sacrifice his son.
But in the new testament, God’s requirement for atonement changes; instead of animal sacrifice He requires repentance.
Romans 12:1,
“Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship.”
No more burnt sacrifices; no more bulls, lambs, or goats. God requires a living sacrifice, not a dead one. Jake comes out of prison and this symbolic baptism and purification reborn. In the Biblical context, he now realizes that he must repent and seek forgiveness from those he has hurt and he must pay for this forgiveness with tears and not blood. His eyes are open and he can see that his true enemy is, and has always been, himself.
Isaiah 1: 11-16,
“I do not delight in the blood of bulls,
    or of lambs, or of goats.
Wash yourselves; make yourselves clean;
    remove the evil of your deeds from before my eyes;
cease to do evil,”
Jake cries and begs Joeys forgiveness. This scene marks the final stage in Jake’s character arc, going from a man living on pure appetite and blind instinct (like his namesake, Raging Bull) to a man broken and reconciled with both God and his humanity; from a man used to paying for sinning with his flesh and the flesh of his opponents in the boxing ring to a man who atones with tears. Jake’s pride was his downfall; his humility is his redemption.
Isaiah 40:4,
“Every valley shall be raised up, every mountain and hill made low.”
Also in the background in this scene, there is a cross which is, in the Bible, the sign of forgiveness.
Clip 21: “Now I see!”
This is the final scene, Jake is full circle from where he began in the 1st scene where he’s in the dressing room rehearsing his lines. In that scene, he is not looking at himself in the mirror but in this scene he is looking at himself in the mirror, a sign that he now accepts responsibility for his actions. Here, he reads ex-boxer Terry Malloy’s famous lines from Elia Kazan’s film On The Waterfront: “Remember that night in the Garden you came down to my dressing room and you said, "Kid, this ain't your night. We're going for the price on Wilson." You remember that? "This ain't your night"! My night! I coulda taken Wilson apart! So what happens? He gets the title shot outdoors on the ballpark and what do I get? A one-way ticket to Palooka-ville! You was my brother, Charley, you shoulda looked out for me a little bit. You shoulda taken care of me just a little bit so I wouldn't have to take them dives for the short-end money. You don't understand. I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I coulda been somebody, instead of a bum, which is what I am, let's face it. It was you, Charley.” After reciting these lines, Jake, dressed in a tuxedo, shadowboxes and leaves the dressing room. Charley, in this monologue, is Jake himself; he has finally accepted responsibility for the mistakes he made in his life.
The film ends with the epigraph from the book of John 9:24-25,
 The Jewish leaders[o] summoned the man who had been blind a second time and told him, “Give glory to God! We know that this man is a sinner.”
He replied, “Whether he is a sinner or not, I don’t know. One thing I do know. I was blind but now I see!”
Wrap
Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff, the film’s producers, were still riding the success of Rocky, which they’d produced 3 years earlier and the studio wanted another boxing movie even though Raging Bull, in contrast, was dark and its protagonist an antihero
Raging Bull is 1 of the most gorgeous black and white film’s I’ve ever seen and if I had to name my top 3 all-time black and white films, my pick would be this film, Raging Bull, Citizen Kane, and Double Indemnity. There are so many great black and white films but I couldn’t see a top 3 without these three films and the influence they have had on the medium. But Raging Bull is remarkable for a lot of reasons, the 1st being that black and white was not a stylistic choice but a practical choice after director Michael Powell noticed that the color of the boxing gloves in the film didn’t match the original color of the gloves worn by boxers of that era, which were brownish-red in color. Turned out that black and white was not only more aesthetically striking but also a motif reinforcing Jake LaMotta’s inner conflict.
Another thing I find remarkable about Raging Bull is that it came out only 3 years after Rocky which featured a clear-cut hero and underdog whereas the protagonist of Raging Bull is, clearly, an antihero with a fixation on underage girls. That both films were produced by Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff took a lot of guts considering that a boxing film following on the heels of a hit like Rocky would invite comparisons, especially a boxing film with a character that contrasts so sharply with Rocky.
Also unbelievable about Raging Bull is the fact that it was even made. DeNiro read the autobiography the film’s based on and brought it to Scorsese’s attention after Scorsese nearly killed himself from a drug overdose. Scorsese, made the film to save his career and seriously thought Raging Bull would be his last feature film. Scorsese also wasn’t a big boxing fan which is incredible when you look at the job he did on the fight sequences. But the most remarkable thing about Raging Bull is how much better it seems to get with each passing year. And the cinematography by Michael Chapman is mesmerizing, particularly the use of light and visual effects like the shimmering heat effects in Jake’s 3rd fight with Sugar Ray which was done by placing the camera near and slightly above a flame . Then there’s Thelma Schoonmaker; what a job she did editing this masterpiece. She took the jump cut to another level in this movie from the staccato editing of the fight sequences to the popping flashbulbs when Jake wins the title to Sugar Ray hammering Jake’s face to a bloody pulp in their 4th fight--incredible!
Raging Bull is dark but lovely at the same time, 1 of those films that you can watch over and over and each time lose none of the visceral power you got the 1st time you watched it. The best sports film, period, by a mile and 1 of many classic films by 1 of the world’s greatest filmmakers, Martin Scorsese.