Kagemusha
Tatsuya Nakadai Actor , Tsutomu Yamazaki Actor , Kenichi Hagiwara Actor , Kota Yui Actor , Shuji Otake Actor
MPAA Rating:
NR
Contains:Violence,Questionable for Children
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Kagemusha
UPC: 715515048415
Studio: Criterion
MPAA Rating: NR Contains:[Violence, Questionable for Children]
Summary: Just as many American studio-era directors found acclaim abroad that was denied them in their home country, by 1980 Akira Kurosawa's reputation outside Japan exceeded his esteem at home. As uncompromising as ever, he found considerable difficulty securing backing for his ambitious projects. Unsure he would be able to film it, the director, an aspiring artist before he entered filmmaking, converted Kagemusha into a series of paintings, and it was partly on the basis of these that he won the financial support of longtime admirers Francis Ford Coppola and George Lucas. Set in the 16th century, when powerful warlords competed for control of Japan, it offers an examination of the nature of political power and the slipperiness of identity. For some time, Shingen Takeda Tatsuya Nakadai has been able to stay removed from the heat of battle by using his brother Nobukado Tsutomu Yamazaki as a double. As the film opens, Nobukado offers another option, having discovered a condemned thief (also played by Tatsuya Nakadai) bearing an uncanny resemblance to the warlord. After he insists on witnessing the fall of an enemy in person, Shingen falls victim to a sniper's bullet, forcing his advisers to present the thief as the fallen warrior. At first awkward in his new position and plagued by dreams in which the spirit of his double confronts him, he slowly grows into the role even as his enemies begin to advance on his kingdom. The winner of the Palm D'Or at Cannes, Kagemusha: The Shadow Warrior has also been released as The Double. ~ Keith Phipps, Rovi
Category: Epic
Awards: Best Director – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Foreign Film – French Academy of Cinema Best Foreign Film – null Best Art Direction – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Foreign Language Film – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Palme d'Or – Cannes Film Festival Best Foreign Film – National Board of Review Best Foreign Film – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Costume Design – British Academy of Film and Television Arts
Features:
Audio Commentary by Kurosawa Scholar Stephen Prince
Luca, Coppola, and Kurosawa, a 19-minute interview piece in which Directors George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola discuss Kurosawa and Kagemusha
A 41-minute Documentary on the making of the film
Image: Kurosawa's Continuity, a 44-minute video piece reconstructing Kagemusha through Kurosawa's paintings and sketches
Suntory Whiskey Commercials made on the set of Kagemusha
Gallery of Storyboards painted by Kurosawa and images of their realization on-screen
Theatrical Trailers and Teasers
Plus: A Booklet featuring an essay by Scholar Peter Grilli and an Interview with Kurosawa by renowned critic Tony Rayns
Kagemusha
Format: Blu-ray
Release Date: 08/18/2009
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Theatre Wide-Screen
Audio: DHMA null, DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo
Runtime: 180 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Subtitles: English
Dan Jardine
Kagemusha was an atypical entry in the canon of Akira Kurosawa, the master of the samurai epic. At the time, Kurosawa was gradually losing his eyesight, and his films were developing an increasingly impressive visual splendor. However, in Kagemusha, the action sequences are much less thrilling than in Kurosawa's other samurai epics. Here his focus is on character development and philosophical discourse. The film swings like a pendulum between stillness and action, an occasionally jarring mix of David Lean-like panoramas with intimate character study. In Kagemusha (which translates as "shadow warrior"), Kurosawa examines the concept of the double as a means to delve into enigmatic and paradoxical philosophical issues of identity, power, self-worth, and leadership. At first, Tatsuya Nakadai appears a little stiff in the essential dual role of warlord and thief, but his performance relies on subtle differences of intonation and gesture to reveal the evolution of his character. As always, Kurosawa's exploration of the values of feudal Japan provokes contemporary audiences to make parallels with modern Japan, a tendency that did not necessarily endear him to his countrymen. In fact, by 1980 Kurosawa was such a persona non grata in Japan that he had not made a film in five years: Kagemusha would not have been made without the financial assistance of George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola. ~ Dan Jardine, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Kamatari Fujiwara
Actor
Takashi Shimura
Actor
Norio Matsui
Actor
Hideo Murota
Actor
Jinpachi Nezu
Actor
Kaori Momoi
Actor
Masayuki Yui
Actor
Mitsuko Baisho
Actor
Francis Ford Coppola
Executive Producer
Masato Ide
Producer
Masato Ide
Screenwriter
Shinichiro Ikebe
Composer (Music Score)
Akira Kurosawa
Director
Akira Kurosawa
Executive Producer
Akira Kurosawa
Producer
Akira Kurosawa
Screenwriter
George Lucas
Executive Producer
Tomoyuki Tanaka
Executive Producer
Tatsuya Nakadai
Actor
Tsutomu Yamazaki
Actor
Kenichi Hagiwara
Actor
Kota Yui
Actor
Shuji Otake
Actor
Daisuke Ryu
Actor
Country: Japan

