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Titel  HARA-KIRI: DEATH OF A SAMURAI


SELECT * FROM kategorie WHERE NUM LIKE '304'
GenreTitel [IMDb]JahrOriginaltitel [TMDb]RegieLandmin
Drama, History, Jidai-geki Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai 2011 Ichimei - Hara-Kiri - Tod eines Samurai Takashi Miike Japan
United Kingdom 
128 

7,3  IMDb

Nr.304 
Handlung
A tale of revenge, honor and disgrace, centering on a poverty-stricken samurai who discovers the fate of his ronin son-in-law, setting in motion a tense showdown of vengeance against the house of a feudal lord. 
Kommentar aus IMDb.com [Klicken zum Anzeigen]
(by wandereramor on 8 January 2013)

Takashi Miike's second straight tribute to the samurai genre is a well-crafted and finely honed object. It's more consistent than Miike's previous samurai film, 13 Assassins, although that also means it lacks anything as great as that film's final battle. But what sets Hara-Kiri apart is its willingness to not just offer a pastiche of these films but genuinely question their values in a way that is still challenging to the contemporary viewer.
Through a series of events told partially in flashbacks, Hara-Kiri poses the question of how relevant our values are -- whether they be highly codified values like honour or the more nebulous instincts that guide us today -- in the face of human suffering. The ronin that we see humiliated and killed in the first act is not guilty of breaking some arcane samurai bylaw but of doing something most of us would find disgraceful. But as the film goes on it argues that we should hold compassion even for people such as this, and that honour is ultimately irrelevant in the face of social suffering. In an age of recession and austerity, where so many try to cling to their ideas of what they or other people "deserve", this is an important message.
It's an easy film to appreciate and a difficult one to love -- there's a kind of coldness to this set of Miike's movies that seems out of place with the gonzo enthusiasm of his earlier work. And doubtlessly it will be too slow and cerebral for some. But its critique of not just a canonized genre but the way in which we view ethics makes it well worth seeing. 
Darsteller
Kôji Yakusho ... Kageyu Saito
Munetaka Aoki ... Hikokuro Omodaka
Naoto Takenaka ... Tajiri
Hikari Mitsushima ... Miho
Eita ... Motome Chijiiwa
Ebizô Ichikawa ... Hanshirô Tsugumo
Hirofumi Arai ... Hayatonosho Matsuzaki
Kazuki Namioka ... Umanosuke Kawabe
Takashi Sasano ... Sousuke priest
Ayumu Saitô ... Fujita 
Musik

Ryuichi Sakamoto 

Drehbuch

Kikumi Yamagishi  |  Yasuhiko Takiguchi 

Produktion

Noguchi. Akemiko  |  Tetsu Fujimura  |  Tatsuro Hatanaka  |  Toru Hatori  |  Yo Hattori  |  Tomoyuki Imai  |  Yoshio Irie  |  Hiroaki Kitano  |  Toshiki Komatsu  |  Noriko Koyanagi  |  Tomoko Machida  |  Sigeshi Maeda  |  Toshiaki Nakazawa  |  Suketsugu Noda  |  Eiichi Noguchi  |  Toshiaki Okuno  |  Misako Saka  |  Shingo Sekine  |  Tôichirô Shiraishi  |  Nobuyuki Tanizawa  |  Jeremy Thomas  |  Yasushi Uchida  |  Shinjiro Yokoyama  |  Kensuke Zushi