With his penultimate film, Uchida revisited one of his popular prewar titles, 1936’s Theatre of Life, an adaptation of Shiro Ozaki’s eponymous novel. Three-time Seijun Suzuki collaborator Goro Tanada wrote a gangsterized adaptation of Ozaki’s story for Uchida at a time when the yakuza had eclipsed the samurai genre as Toei's main cash crop. Protagonist Hishakaku murders a man in a quarrel over a barmaid and goes to jail. In his temporary absence, his girlfriend Otoyo, a former geisha, falls for Hishakaku’s brother, inciting a dangerous love triangle that, in typical yakuza fashion, ends tragically.
Title | Hishakaku and Kiratsune: A Tale of Two Yakuza |
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Year | 1968 |
Genre | Crime |
Country | Japan |
Studio | Toei Company |
Cast | Koji Tsuruta, Tomisaburō Wakayama, Sumiko Fuji, Ken Takakura, Takeya Nakamura, Minoru Ōki |
Crew | Masaru Satō (Music), Tomu Uchida (Director), Gorō Tanada (Screenplay) |
Keyword | |
Release | Oct 25, 1968 |
Runtime | 109 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 6.00 / 10 by 2 users |
Popularity | 2 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | 日本語 |