Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai (Blu-ray)
Love Honour Revenge
Out of Print:
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: Unrated
- Run Time: 2 hours, 6 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: January 22, 2013
- Originally Released: 2011
- Label: New Video Group
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Ebizô Ichikawa & Kôji Yakusho | |
Directed by | Takashi Miike | |
Screenplay by | Kikumi Yamagishi | |
Composition by | Ryuichi Sakamoto | |
Director of Photography: | Nobuyasu Kita |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 3/4 --
A 3-D epic that, despite its title, is more of a soap opera than a swordplay thriller.
Full Review
New York Post
Rating: 3/4 --
Miike can't seem to get enough of Hanshiro's heroics. That's not just visual excess, though.
Full Review
Boston Globe
Rating: 4/5 --
It's an indelible picture of a cold-hearted ruling class that has allowed self-interest and hypocrisy to override its own humanity.
Full Review
New York Daily News
Rating: 3.5/5 --
A quiet, narratively layered period drama with a focus squarely on character.
Full Review
Arizona Republic
Rating: 3/4 --
Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai reveals yet another facet of this always-unpredictable filmmaker: a flair for compassionate, humane melodrama.
Miami Herald
"Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai" offers a reason to rejoice, allowing Miike to stretch his abilities in a film that's deliberately paced, but moving nonetheless in invoking an emotion rarely seen in his films before: compassion.
Full Review
Moveable Fest
Rating: 4/4 --
It's not about Bushido, it's about its representation.
Full Review
Film Freak Central
Product Description:
Japanese auteur Takashi Miike takes an uncharacteristically serious and somber approach to this moody period tale of honor and revenge. In the 17th century, Japan is enjoying an era of calm and tranquility, which is good news for most people but bad news for the samurai, the class of professional soldiers who now find themselves without jobs or a sense of purpose. Hanshiro (Ebizo Ichikawa) is a samurai who, with no money and no prospects, has arrived at the House of Ii, hoping to use its courtyard as a setting for the suicide ritual known as hara-kiri. However, the ruler of the House if Ii, Kageyu (Koji Yakusho), has been hearing similar requests often as of late, and he knows most of them are emotional blackmail, attempts to persuade the members of the house to give the samurai money. To show what he thinks of such shameless appeals, Kageyu tells Hanshiro the story of one such warrior, Motome (Eita), who had his bluff called and was forced to take his own life with a dull weapon made of bamboo. But Kageyu is unaware of the connection between Hanshiro and Motome, and he underestimates the impact this story will have on Hanshiro. Adapted from Masaki Kobayashi's celebrated 1962 feature HARAKIRI, HARA-KIRI: DEATH OF A SAMURAI (aka ICHIMEI) was also one of the first 3-D features to debut at the Cannes Film Festival.