Screening Series

Screening Series

Darkness and Humanity: The Complete Akira Kurosawa

This comprehensive career retrospective, presented entirely on 35mm film, covers the director's key contributions to the jidai-geki samurai genre as well as his contemporary gendai-geki dramas.

Mar 28–May 30, 2026

Seven Samurai (Shichinin no samura) (1954)

Upcoming Screenings in Series

Red Beard (Akahige) in 35mm

Screenings

Red Beard (Akahige) in 35mm

Kurosawa and Toshiro Mifune’s grand marathon of collaborations, which yielded numerous masterpieces, faces its finish line with a three-hour exploration of moral values and existential contemplation of humankind, led by another heartfelt performance by Mifune as a humble and compassionate clinic director, aka Red Beard. He, welcomes a young doctor, Yasumoto (Yuzo Kayama), into his small-town practice, only to discover that his protégé is arrogant, blinded by ambition, and reluctant to serve patients with low social standing. Kurosawa examines humanity with a thoughtful gaze, gently excavating the innate goodness of humankind through lessons from both life and death.

35mm

Dersu Uzala in 35mm
Special Guest

Screenings

Dersu Uzala in 35mm

In person: Anne McKnight, associate professor of Japanese and comparative literature

35mm

Ran (Chaos) in 35mm
Special Guest

Screenings

Ran (Chaos) in 35mm

In person: Academy Collection and Preservation Executive Vice President Matt Severson

35mm

Kagemusha (The Shadow Warrior) in 35mm
Special Guest

Screenings

Kagemusha (The Shadow Warrior) in 35mm

In person: Kerim Yasar, associate professor of East Asian languages and cultures

35mm

Dreams (Yume) in 35mm

Screenings

Dreams (Yume) in 35mm

Any description of dreams in mere words cannot capture their expressive power.”

—Akira Kurosawa, 1993  

Inspired by a passage in a novel by Fjodor Dostoevsky “where he talks about dreams and the fact that they express our deepest fears and greatest hopes,” Dreams is a visually sumptuous entry in the latter half of the filmmaker’s career. Divided into eight chapters reflecting dreams from Kurosawa’s childhood through his late seventies, this impressionistic wonder was released, appropriately, the year after the director received an Honorary Oscar from the Academy “for cinematic accomplishments that have inspired, delighted, enriched, and entertained worldwide audiences and influenced filmmakers throughout the world.”

35mm

Madadayo (No, Not Yet!) in 35mm

Screenings

Madadayo (No, Not Yet!) in 35mm

The 50-year career of one of history’s greatest filmmakers concludes with this heartwarming finale from 1993, dedicated to celebrated and respected writer and educator Hyakken Uchida. After Uchida announces his retirement from teaching, his students host an annual gathering, the “Not Yet Banquet” to celebrate his life and career. Composed of a series of poignant episodes, Kurosawa invites us into a world where beauty can be found, despite the inevitable pitfalls of reality, in genuine connection, loyalty, and respect for all living creatures.

35mm

Rhapsody in August (Hachigatsu no kyoshikyoku) in 35mm

Screenings

Rhapsody in August (Hachigatsu no kyoshikyoku) in 35mm

Based on Inside a Pot by distinguished female novelist Kiyoko Murata, Kurosawa’s penultimate film centers on widow Kane (Sachiko Murase), whose husband was killed by the atomic bomb dropped by the Americans on Nagasaki. Now a grandmother, Kane welcomes her grandchildren to her rural home, where the impact of her decades of silence becomes impossible to ignore.

“Making an antiwar picture isn’t a matter of re-creating battle scenes,” Kurosawa said in 1991. The director instead relies on the sweltering summer heat and softly spoken observances to convey the impacts of generational trauma caused by wartime tragedies. American actor Richard Gere, who appears as one of Kane’s nephews, agreed to make the picture on the modest condition that his name was not used to sell the film.

35mm