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Review   / Tokyo Story
Actors & Directors
  • Chieko Higashiyama
  • Yasujiro Ozu
  • Chishu Ryu
  • Sô Yamamura
  • Setsuko Hara
  • Haruko Sugimura

Review Tokyo Story:

Yasujiro Ozu's economical style reaches its zenith in this deceptively simple 1953 story of an elderly couple in rural Japan who go to visit their married children in Tokyo. Chishu Ryo (Ozu's favorite performer) and Chieko Higashiyama star as the aging parents who find a cold welcome waiting for them from their two urbanized children, too busy with work and their own lives to pay them any attention. After a miserable trip to a noisy spa, the mother spends a pleasant night with the widow of their other son (who had died in the war) while the father drinks the evening away with old friends. But on their return trip, the mother falls ill and the family reunites one last time at her sickbed. Within this simple framework, Ozu creates a quiet but profound drama of the changing face of Japanese culture and the loss of traditional values in modern society. Described by critics as Japan's most "Japanese" director, Ozu's style by this time had become firmly established: the entire film is shot from an unmoving camera 36 inches from the floor (the point of view of an observer kneeling on a tatami mat), edited in a subtly off-center manner and paced at a placid tempo. Ozu's graceful style, understated direction, and rich evocation of character creates an elegantly realized world of dignity in the face of disappointment and loss. -Sean Axmaker.

Review Tokyo Shock  / Moon Over Tao
Actors & Directors
  • Uchiyama Zeeko
  • Yûko Moriyama
  • Hiroshi Abe
  • Chisato Kawamura
  • Toshiyuki Nagashima
  • Keita Amemiya
Release date: 2001-07-31
Run time: 90 min.
List Price: $4.99
Price: $95.00

Review Moon Over Tao / Tokyo Shock:


Review Homevision  / The Sisters of the Gion
Actors & Directors
  • Benkei Shiganoya
  • Kenji Mizoguchi
  • Isuzu Yamada
  • Yôko Umemura
  • Taizô Fukami
  • Eitarô Shindô
Release date: 2000-06-16
Run time: 66 min.
Price: $29.95

Review The Sisters of the Gion / Homevision:

Widely regarded as Kenji Mizoguchi's (Sansho the Bailiff, Ugetsu) best pre-war film, Sisters of the Gion marks the beginning of the acclaimed director's mature style. Filled with compositions as exquisite as they are realistic, the s.

Actors & Directors
  • Toshiro Mifune
  • Akira Kurosawa
Price: $49.95

Review Stray Dog:


Review Homevision  / The Story of the Last Chrysanthemum
Actors & Directors
  • Shôtarô Hanayagi
  • Kenji Mizoguchi
  • Gonjurô Kawarazaki
  • Kôkichi Takada
  • Kakuko Mori
  • Tokusaburo Arashi
Release date: 2000-06-16
Run time: 115 min.
Price: $29.95

Review The Story of the Last Chrysanthemum / Homevision:

In the hands of Kenji Mizoguchi (Ugetsu, Sansho the Bailiff), the simple story of a man redeemed by a woman's love is no less than profound. The Story of the Last Chrysanthemum pulls the viewer into a world of pure love, intense hear.

Actors & Directors
  • Tatsuya Nakadai
  • Misako Watanabe
  • Keiko Kishi
  • Rentaro Mikuni
  • Masaki Kobayashi
  • Michiyo Aratama

Review Kwaidan:

A masterpiece of filmmaking artifice and mood-setting atmosphere, Kwaidan consists of four ghost stories adapted from the fiction of Greek-born Lafcadio Hearn (a. k. a. Yakumo Koizumi, 1850-1904), who assimilated into Japanese culture so thoroughly that his writings reveal no evidence of Western influence. So it is that these four cinematic interpretations-perhaps more accurately described as tales of spectral visitation-are sublimely Japanese in tone and texture, created entirely in a studio with frequently stunning results. There are painterly images here that remain the most beautiful and haunting in all of Japanese cinema, presented with the purity of silent film, sparsely accompanied by post-synchronized sounds and music (by Toru Takemitsu) that enhance the otherworldly effect of director Masaki Kobayashi's meticulous imagery. When viewed in a receptive frame of mind, Kwaidan can be intensely hypnotic. Each of the four stories find their protagonists confronted by spirits that compel them to (respectively) make amends for past mistakes, maintain vows of silence, satisfy the yearnings of the undead, or capture phantoms that remain frightfully elusive. As each tale progresses, their supernatural elements grow increasingly intense and distant from the confines of reality. With careful use of glorious color and wide-screen composition, Kwaidan exists in a netherworld that is both real and imagined, its characters never quite sure they can trust what they've seen and heard. [+]
Vastly different from the more overt shocks of Western horror, the film casts a supernatural spell that remains timelessly effective. -Jeff Shannon.

Actors & Directors
  • Eiko Miyoshi
  • Kyôko Aoyama
  • Takashi Shimura
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Minoru Chiaki
  • Toshirô Mifune

Review I Live in Fear:

The official title of I Live in Fear is Record of a Living Being, and coming as it did after Kurosawa's triumphant Seven Samurai it was perhaps inevitably a box-office failure. With barely a decade passing after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japanese filmgoers avoided this serious drama about the gloomy specter of nuclear annihilation. It's not always an easy film to watch, but that's only because the story wields substantial emotional power, taking form as a kind of modern King Lear with its scenario of family strife and internal plotting. As such, it bears tangential relationship to Kurosawa's own rendition of Lear, his final epic Ran. Playing a character twice his age, Toshirô Mifune (barely recognizable from Seven Samurai) is the patriarch of a large extended family (the "I" of the title) who has decided to move to a Brazilian farm to escape the psychological torment of the atomic bomb. Charging him with "mental incompetence," his adult children plot to override his decision, and a mediator (Takashi Shimura) attempts to balance the battle. This turns the film (like much of Kurosawa's work) into a quest for truth: Is the father insane with fear? Are his fears truly justified? In Japan of the 1950s these were not easy questions, and the death during production of Kurosawa's best friend (composer Fumio Hayasaka) lends the film additional gravity and import. If the story and its execution seem at times ambivalent, it's only because Kurosawa (and Japan itself) was still struggling to find meaning-to create a record of a living being-in a world that could be destroyed at any moment. -Jeff Shannon.

Review Asian Pulp Cinema  / The Bondage Master Release date: 2000-09-26
Run time: 83 min.
List Price: $29.99
Price: $129.99

Review The Bondage Master / Asian Pulp Cinema:

Shiro is a bondage master of exquisite skill who takes pride in his unique form of art. But when one of his models is found strangled and bound in his trademark style, he must track the killer to his lair - and escape the vengeance of the victim's lover, the leader of the treacherous Blue Dragon Gang!.

Release date: 1999-12-21
Run time: 365 min.
Price: $49.98

Review The Juzo Itami Collection (The Funeral / A Taxing Woman / Tampopo) / Fox Lorber:


Review SVS Films  / The Human Condition Part Two: The Road to Eternity (Ningen no joken II)
Actors & Directors
  • Izumi Hara
  • Tatsuya Nakadai
  • Michiyo Aratama
  • Masaki Kobayashi
  • Kaneko Iwasaki
  • Minoru Chiaki
Run time: 180 min.
Price: $99.00

Review The Human Condition Part Two: The Road to Eternity (Ningen no joken II) / SVS Films:

Second part of a trilogy. Conscientious objector Kaji, now forced to serve in the Japanese army during the Second World War, helps a friend defect to the Russians and nearly goes with him. But despite his opposition to war, Kaji does his best to serve as help and guide to the men in his charge, most of whom are doomed to fall to the relentless attack of Russian armored divisions.

Review Adv Films  / Police Branch 82 Release date: 2000-05-23
Run time: 100 min.
List Price: $19.98
Price: $39.96

Review Police Branch 82 / Adv Films:

A statue of The Virgin has been stolen, and the girls of Police Branch 82 are on the case! When the thief offers them a cut of the ten million to join him, their response is rather pointed - like a knife in the back. Then again, their methods usually lack a certain subtlety. Shooting through a maze of civilians isn't exactly a maxim of law-enforcement handbooks. Neither is their combination of high heels and hair triggers, but as long as they keep the sizzle in their stakeouts, no one will question their results. Handcuffs aren't just for justice anymore.

Review Homevision  / Rare Kurosawa (Drunken Angel/ Scandal/ I Live In Fear)
Actors & Directors
  • Shirley Yamaguchi
  • Yôko Katsuragi
  • Eitarô Ozawa
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Toshirô Mifune
  • Noriko Sengoku
Release date: 2001-09-21
Run time: 320 min.
Price: $49.95

Review Rare Kurosawa (Drunken Angel/ Scandal/ I Live In Fear) / Homevision:


Actors & Directors
  • Akira Kubo
  • Hiroshi Tachikawa
  • Toshirô Mifune
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Takashi Shimura
  • Isuzu Yamada

Review Macbeth:

A champion of illumination and experimental shading, Kurosawa brings his unerring eye for indelible images to Shakespeare in this 1957 adaptation of Macbeth. By changing the locale from Birnam Wood to 16th-century Japan, Kurosawa makes an oddball argument for the trans-historicity of Shakespeare's narrative; and indeed, stripped to the bare mechanics of the plot, the tale of cutthroat ambition rewarded (and thwarted) feels infinitely adaptable. What's lost in the translation, of course, is the force and beauty of the language-much of the script of Throne of Blood is maddeningly repetitive or superfluous-but striking visual images (including the surreal Cobweb Forest and some extremely artful gore) replace the sublime poetry. Toshiro Mifune is theatrically intense as Washizu, the samurai fated to betray his friend and master in exchange for the prestige of nobility; he portrays the ill-fated warrior with a passion bordering on violence, and a barely concealed conviviality. Somewhat less successful is Isuzu Yamada as Washizu's scheming wife; her poise and creepy impassivity, chilling at first, soon grows tedious. Kurosawa himself is the star of the show, though, and his masterful use of black-and-white contrast- not to mention his steady, dramatic hand with a battle scene-keeps the proceedings thrilling. A must-see for fans of Japanese cinema, as well as all you devotees of samurai weapons and armor. -Miles Bethany.

Actors & Directors
  • Toshirô Mifune
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Tatsuya Nakadai
  • Kyôko Kagawa
  • Yutaka Sada
  • Tatsuya Mihashi
Creator: Ryuzo Kikushima

Review High and Low / Criterion Collection, The:

Although best known for his samurai classics, Japanese master filmmaker Akira Kurosawa proved himself equally adept at contemporary dramas and thrillers, and 1962's High and Low offers a powerful showcase for Kurosawa's versatile skill. The great Toshiro Mifune stars as a wealthy industrialist who has just raised a large sum of money to execute his planned takeover of a successful shoe manufacturer. Fate intervenes when he receives a phone call informing him that his son has been kidnapped, and by unfortunate coincidence the ransom demand is nearly equivalent to the amount Mifune has raised for his corporate coup. A philosophical dilemma emerges when it is revealed that the executive's son is safe, and that it is actually his chauffeur's son who has been taken. What follows is both a tense detective thriller, as the police attempt to track down the kidnapper, and a compelling illustration of class division in Japan-the "high and low" of the title. Far be it from Kurosawa to make a mere thriller, however; this loose adaptation of the Ed McBain novel King's Ransom provides the director with ample opportunity to develop a visual strategy that perfectly enhances the story's sociological themes. The Criterion Collection DVD of this extraordinary film is presented in the original "Tohoscope" aspect ratio of 2. 35:1. -Jeff Shannon.

Actors & Directors
  • Kinji Fukasaku
  • Kikko Matsuoka
  • Akihiro Maruyama
  • Yukio Mishima
  • Junya Usami
  • Isao Kimura
Release date: 1992-05-26
Run time: 86 min.
Price: $79.99

Review Black Lizard (Kurotokage) / Cinevista Inc.:


Actors & Directors
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Chieko Nakakita
  • Reisaburo Yamamoto
  • Toshirô Mifune
  • Takashi Shimura
  • Michiyo Kogure

Review Yoidore tenshi:

Upon its release in 1948, Drunken Angel was hailed in Japan as Akira Kurosawa's directorial breakthrough, comparable to Kubrick's Paths of Glory in the way it catapulted Kurosawa into a higher level of artistic achievement. Kurosawa himself noted, "In this picture I was finally myself. It was my picture. I was doing it and nobody else. " It is indeed an important, vital film, confidently conceived and expertly executed, illuminating themes that would dominate the finest films in Kurosawa's exceptional career. The setting is a rancid, jerry-built section of a postwar city, where a filthy, disease-ridden pond functions as a physical threat and also as the film's central symbol of decay. It's in this hardscrabble environment that a brash young gangster (Toshiro Mifune, in the role that made him a star) visits an alcoholic doctor (Takashi Shimura) to have a bullet removed from his hand. The doctor discovers that the hot-tempered thug is also doomed by tuberculosis, seen here as the physical manifestation of the gangster's moral decay. The doctor is himself diseased by his drinking, and as these clashing men struggle to make some kind of difference in their pathetic lives (spurned by the return from prison of a ruthless yakuza boss), Kurosawa makes unlikely heroes of them both-men who undergo a personal transformation in a vile and violent world. Drunken Angel is a transitional film for Japanese cinema and especially for Kurosawa; it offers a vivid glimpse of postwar life (both rotten and restoring), and signals the full blossoming of Kurosawa's talent. [+]
And while the title role belongs to Shimura (so memorably poignant in Kurosawa's later masterpiece, Ikiru), the film belongs to the forceful presence of Mifune, whose vitality touches nearly every scene of this timeless and powerful drama. -Jeff Shannon.

Review   / Rebellion
Actors & Directors
  • Masaki Kobayashi
  • Isao Yamagata
  • Toshirô Mifune
  • Etsuko Ichihara
  • Yôko Tsukasa
  • Tatsuyoshi Ehara

Review Rebellion:


Review Water Bearer Films  / I Like You...I Like You Very Much
Actors & Directors
  • Shibuya Kazunori
  • Nishimoto Kazufumi
Release date: 2001-09-04
Run time: 58 min.
Price: $39.95

Review I Like You...I Like You Very Much / Water Bearer Films:


Actors & Directors
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Masayuki Mori
  • Machiko Kyô
  • Minoru Chiaki
  • Takashi Shimura
  • Toshirô Mifune

Review Rashômon:

This 1950 film by Akira Kurosawa is more than a classic: it's a cinematic archetype that has served as a template for many a film since. (Its most direct influence was on a Western remake, The Outrage, starring Paul Newman and directed by Martin Ritt. ) In essence, the facts surrounding a rape and murder are told from four different and contradictory points of view, suggesting the nature of truth is something less than absolute. The cast, headed by Kurosawa's favorite actor, Toshiro Mifune, is superb. -Tom Keogh.

Release date: 1999-05-27
Price: $39.99

Review A Swastika III / Tai Seng Video:


Browse Japan:

Models & Brands:
Tokyo Story, Moon Over Tao, The Sisters of the Gion, Stray Dog, The Story of the Last Chrysanthemum, Kwaidan, I Live in Fear, The Bondage Master, The Juzo Itami Collection (The Funeral / A Taxing Woman / Tampopo), The Human Condition Part Two: The Road to Eternity (Ningen no joken II), Police Branch 82, Rare Kurosawa (Drunken Angel/ Scandal/ I Live In Fear), Macbeth, High and Low, Black Lizard (Kurotokage), Yoidore tenshi, Rebellion, I Like You...I Like You Very Much, Rashômon, A Swastika III

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