FerdinandGriffon wrote: The problem with this being that your general impression is based on specific details that simply do not exist in the film as it is in reality.
The majority of online reviews - even many of the positive ones - express irritation at the Kaji character ("unconvincing", "saint-like", etc). I don't think I'm imagining it.
FerdinandGriffon wrote: I find it fairly incredible to believe that Kobayashi had "a mainstream American audience with an untested Christian sense of morality" in mind
But this is a country that had just been under American occupation for six years. So, on the one hand, the Japanese population themselves had been shaped by an American way of thinking and, secondly, Kobayashi would have been very aware of the benefits of pleasing an American audience (and how to do so). Kurosawa, Mizoguchi and others had already broken through, ploughed the way and reaped the benefits.
FerdinandGriffon wrote:How does allowing for the existence of a single "good" character, and one who is not necessarily "good" in the end at that, constitute this refusal?
Kaji remains 'good' throughout, that is the whole conceit of the film: "What happens if a morally 'good' person (in a Christian sense) enters into a war? Can he continue to act 'morally' whilst retaining his sanity / life?" The film answers this question with a "No", of course, but Kaji choses to sacrifice his sanity and life, not his morality. And, in this manner, the film seeks to 'condemn' warfare, which is all very right-on, but provides very little actual insight.
FerdinandGriffon wrote: Kaji steals from the poor
Can't recall this. Does he steal some food at the point of dying? He certainly doesn't rape or kill the poor or steal unnecessarily.
FerdinandGriffon wrote:...is tempted by women other than his wife Kaji
...but doesn't succumb, despite years of separation! Because there can be "no greater love" than what they have!...
FerdinandGriffon wrote:...kills... One of his final acts is a revenge killing, brutal, unnecessarily drawn out, vicious.
It is a 'bad person' that he kills (and feels guilty afterwards!). Yes, when under orders / extreme pressure, he also kills a few soldiers from the opposing side, if my memory serves, although he never kills any civilians and, again, he feels guilty afterwards. He never loses his sense of morality, he never decides to kill for the fun of it, or decides that, actually, he should be defending the emperor after all. There is never any threat to his inner sense of conviction - indeed, this would undermine the entire conceit of the film.
FerdinandGriffon wrote:deserts, loses hope in the Japanese government
Deserting form the Imperial Japanese Army, there's a moral crime right there.
FerdinandGriffon wrote:in communism, in humanism
Loses faith in other people, but not in himself and his own righteousness.
FerdinandGriffon wrote:As an audience, we do not sympathize with Kaji when he whips a man with a chain and then drowns him in the bodily fluids of hundreds of incontinent and probably diseased POW's.
You're certainly supposed to. The guy was 'bad', he deserved it (although, of course, Kaji, being the saint that he is, feels guilty afterwards).
FerdinandGriffon wrote:individuals who are finely drawn... Some of them are petty and stupid, others are naive or cowardly, but they are all guilty.
Do you not sense the contradiction here?
FerdinandGriffon wrote:Do you really think we can understand why Hitler did what he did? There are some shadows you can't penetrate, that can only be pointed at and abhorred.
Huh? I thought it was pretty obvious why Hitler did what he did.
Would definitely suggest you watch
Fires on the Plain, from what you've been saying I imagine it will blow your mind.