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IMDbPro

Ghost Dog, el camino del samurái

Título original: Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai
  • 1999
  • 13
  • 1h 56min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,5/10
102 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
3335
1077
Forest Whitaker in Ghost Dog, el camino del samurái (1999)
Home Video Trailer from Artisan
Reproducir trailer1:30
2 vídeos
99+ imágenes
¿CrimenDrama

Un hombre sicario de la mafia afroamericana que se modela a sí mismo después de que el samurai de la antigüedad se encuentra a sí mismo como blanco de muerte por la multitud.Un hombre sicario de la mafia afroamericana que se modela a sí mismo después de que el samurai de la antigüedad se encuentra a sí mismo como blanco de muerte por la multitud.Un hombre sicario de la mafia afroamericana que se modela a sí mismo después de que el samurai de la antigüedad se encuentra a sí mismo como blanco de muerte por la multitud.

  • Dirección
    • Jim Jarmusch
  • Guión
    • Jim Jarmusch
  • Reparto principal
    • Forest Whitaker
    • Henry Silva
    • John Tormey
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,5/10
    102 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    3335
    1077
    • Dirección
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Guión
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Reparto principal
      • Forest Whitaker
      • Henry Silva
      • John Tormey
    • 399Reseñas de usuarios
    • 151Reseñas de críticos
    • 68Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio y 8 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos2

    Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai
    Trailer 1:30
    Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'
    Clip 3:12
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'
    Clip 3:12
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'

    Imágenes113

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    Reparto principal50

    Editar
    Forest Whitaker
    Forest Whitaker
    • Ghost Dog
    Henry Silva
    Henry Silva
    • Ray Vargo
    John Tormey
    John Tormey
    • Louie
    Cliff Gorman
    Cliff Gorman
    • Sonny Valerio
    Dennis Liu
    • Chinese Restaurant Owner
    Frank Minucci
    Frank Minucci
    • Big Angie
    Richard Portnow
    Richard Portnow
    • Handsome Frank
    Tricia Vessey
    Tricia Vessey
    • Louise Vargo
    Gene Ruffini
    Gene Ruffini
    • Old Consigliere
    Frank Adonis
    Frank Adonis
    • Valerio's Bodyguard
    Victor Argo
    Victor Argo
    • Vinny
    Damon Whitaker
    Damon Whitaker
    • Young Ghost Dog
    Kenny Guay
    • Boy in Window
    Vince Viverito
    Vince Viverito
    • Johnny Morini
    Gano Grills
    Gano Grills
    • Gangsta in Red
    Touché Cornel
    • Gangsta in Red
    Jamie Hector
    Jamie Hector
    • Gangsta in Red
    Chuck Jeffreys
    Chuck Jeffreys
    • Mugger
    • Dirección
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Guión
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios399

    7,5101.5K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    flingebunt

    I live by a code

    The movie is about codes of conduct, with 2 main codes that are dying out or are dead.

    One is the code of the Mafia the other is the Samurai.

    The basic plot is this. One of the Mafia wiseguys must be killed as he is having an affair with the daughter of the Mafia Don.

    The person they get to do it is an African American who lives by the code of the Samurai and goes by the name of Ghost Dog. To be honest, I have met many Japanafiles so this is not so unbelievable.

    But the code of the Mafia means that if you kill a wiseguy then you must be killed or the Mafia person who hired him must be killed.

    Jim Jarmusch makes movies where the characters close relations based on only very small things. The Mafia wiseguy saved Ghost Dogs life, so now he must be his retainer. He lives off the land (lives on a roof, steals the cars and equipment he needs to do a job). There is also a friendship between 2 people who don't speak the same language. It is the connection between people that is so important here.

    If you saw Dead man and like it, then you will love Ghost Dog. It is funny, serious, dark, tragic and beautiful all at the same time. Dead man missed the mark with some similar themes (though the DVD of Dead man has some deleted scenes that would have made the movie much better and reflected better the idea of small connections being strong connections).

    I loved this movie, and I don't expect everyone else to. Art house movies have small audiences for this exact reason. I know a lot of people who avoided this movie because they thought it was cheesy. The answer is, yes it is, and most of the bad reviews reflect this same idea.

    Also I love the sound track, with lots of Phat beats, and uses Hip Hop (African American culture) to reflect Japanese culture.
    9Quinoa1984

    a fascinating, strange hybrid of black, Japanese and Italian culture, with a perfectly detached, somber lead in Forrester

    Jim Jarmusch is one of the few filmmakers in Hollywood able to make bodies of work that are challenging, thoughtful, and with a distinctive voice. Like the Coen Brothers, it's hard to make his films accessible to the public like many other films at the cineplexes, and that's part of the joy in watching a film such as Ghost Dog. It's such a strange kind of story, but it's a story that extremely well crafted, even when some of the characters aren't developed enough past a certain point. While I can't really say that it's a great film, there are plenty of great things about it.

    Such as a pulsing, rhythmically engaging soundtrack (I'm not a big fan of rap and hip-hop, but the artists on here are better than expected) with the RZA behind the seat. Delicate, finite cinematography by Robby Mueller (who's other superb collaboration with Jarmusch was on Down By Law). A performance from Forrest Whitaker, as the dedicated, un-hinged-from reality 'samurai' known as Ghost Dog, which ranks among his best and shows in plain sight that he can carry an action film with patience and cool. And the film also carries a fine sense of humor to many scenes - the fact that these gangsters (one of which Dog's boss) watch more cartoons than take care of business is as funny as the way they interact sometimes. While it tends to streak on parody, in the characters there's still the fascinating Jarmusch has in mixing the cultures.

    It's a hard film to classify, for even though it's a martial-arts movie, the only sight of a sword is used for practice and not a blood-bath in Kill Bill. It's a gangster movie, but every five minutes or so there's philosophical notes on the way of the samurai that seems more in place in a (good, thematically engaging) art film than a (good, shoot-em-up) Hollywood actioner. It's a movie about urban-life, yet the only signs of Urbana are shown from a distance, where the only two who will talk to Ghost Dog are a Haitian ice cream guy (who provides a wonderfully weird scene on the roof with Ghost Dog), and a little girl who likes to read. But it's this mixture that can keep a viewer on his or her toes, especially once you realize the psychological state of the lead as much as his spiritual state.

    Parts of the film might turn off one group, but the other parts of the film might keep the same group enthralled. In fact, it's as interesting a comparison to be made to Kill Bill (itself a hybrid) as it is in the spiritual and stylistic parent, Le Samourai by Melville. Like those films, at the least, Jarmusch's film asks to be looked at more than once...Anyway, three cheers for Garry "Nobody" Farmer!
    8lasttimeisaw

    worth cherry-picking by Jarmusch newbies and diehards alike

    Conflating the samurai tenet within a tailing-off gangster underworld in an unnamed USA city, Jim Jarmusch's version of LE SAMOURAI is profoundly branded with his idiosyncrasies: a nocturnal cityscape tinged with retro-flair (mostly seen behind the wheels), a vibrating, mind-bending, killer soundtrack (courtesy to RZA), a perversity and absurdity presiding over the turn of events (cartoon hooked mobsters, a lethal shot fired from a drain pipe, the cameo of Gary Farmer's Nobody from DEAD MAN 1995, etc.), a tangy timbre of acedia inhabits in some of his dramatis personae (the boss's daughter portrayed with crashing nonchalance by a sylph-like Tricia Vessey) and a total abandon of anhedonia (twice, the dog's gaze is the self-reflexive bellwether of a preordained corollary).

    Ghost Dog (Whitaker), a self-claimed retainer of the world-weary mobster Louie (Tormey), who has saved his life eight years ago, is a proficient hit-man abiding by the codes of HAGAKURE: THE BOOK OF THE SAMAURAI, written by Yamamoto Tsunetomo in the early 18th century, living alone in the top of a building with a bevy of messenger pigeons, his disciplined life and allegiance is challenged when the local mafia boss Ray Vargo (a deadpan Silva) and his right-hand man Sonny Valerio (Gorman), both superiors of Louie, decide to do away with Ghost Dog as a scapegoat for a mission he has adroitly accomplished, a fatuous move because they have no inking of Ghost Dog's credentials, who will become their imminent nemesis, save the wobbling Louie, who is inadvertently submitted to the receiving end of Ghost Dog's undivided loyalty, chiming in with the RASHOMON (a book which undergoes a ritualistic full circle in the end) motif, even their recollections of their first encounter are different (with clear visual aid here), which shrewdly explains the discrepancy of their attitudes, for Louie it may be merely a self-defense, yet for Ghost Dog, he roundly leaves his own life to the mercy of Louie.

    An artistically knowing discord looms large between Ghost Dog's zippy choreography and efficiency to rub out his over-confident but ponderous, long-in-the-tooth rivals and a languid but cordial narrative arc encompassing Ghost Dog, his best friend Raymond (De Bankolé), a francophone-only Haitian ice-cream vandor, and a prepubescent bookworm Pearline (Winbush), to whom Ghost Dog eventually lends HAGAKURE, a deed of passing on his mantle.

    Forest Whitaker superbly channels a less laconic Alain Delon in the titular role, but is far more superior in transmitting a loner's variegated inscape, hewing to his codes of honor and living by liquidation of mortals, but it doesn't necessarily negate that he can have a warm soul underneath, and truly, the warmth quotient increases whenever there is a scene between him and Isaach De Bankolé's motormouth Raymond, the latter is the bees knee for a sore eye, amusingly and edifyingly, Jarmusch points up that human beings can build a communicative bond in spite of a seemingly insurmountable language barrier, and it is this humanistic perspective gives the film an edge over its built-in romanticism of indiscriminately adhering to something exotic and gnomic, so at large, GHOST DOG is worth cherry-picking by both Jarmusch newbies and diehards.
    8philip_vanderveken

    A big surprise that really works

    Jim Jarmusch isn't exactly a household name when it comes to Hollywood directors. I don't know about other people, but personally I had heard of his name before, but certainly couldn't name any of his movies. Now that has changed. Since I've seen "Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai" I'll try to see at least a couple of his other movies as well, because I really liked this one.

    "Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai" is a quite unique movie. It tells the story of an African-American mafia hit-man in New York who lives by the rules of the Samurai, in simplicity and alone with his pigeons, who calls himself Ghost Dog and who is always faithful to his master, a local mobster who has saved his life several years ago. When the daughter of the local mob boss witnesses one of Ghost Dog's hits, he must die himself. The first victims are his birds and in response, Ghost Dog goes right at his attackers. He is lethal, but does not want to harm his master or the young woman. And while his life is in constant danger, the only people he ever has contact with are a little girl, with whom he discusses books, and a Haitian ice cream man who only speaks French and doesn't understand a word of what Ghost Dog tells him.

    I guess the best way to categorize this movie is to call it a mix of the movie "Léon", the Samurai code and hip-hop culture. Normally you would think that such a mix could never work, but this time it does. I admit that it certainly isn't a normal mix, but Jarmusch avoids the traps that would make this original and daring movie a complete waste of time and which would turn it into one unbelievable and unrealistic mess. I know it sounds strange, how can a movie that combines Italian, Japanese and hip-hop culture into one ever become one solid movie? Don't ask me, I don't even know how he came up with the idea, but it works and that's all that matters.

    This movie has several strong points. One is the way everything is told and shown, which make this a sober, but powerful movie. Especially with the quotes that are taken from the Way of the Samurai and that are voiced by Forest Whitaker, a solid base is formed. This helps you to understand why the man does what he does, why he lives his life like that and why he will always respect his master. If this hadn't been in the movie, I would probably not have liked it a bit. The other strong point is the acting. The mobsters look a bit stereotypical, but are well portrayed by people like Cliff Gorman, John Tormey, Richard Portnow,... but the best performance definitely comes from Forest Whitaker. Normally Whitaker plays the role of a good guy, like for instance Jody in "The Crying Game" or Captain Ramey in "Phone Boot" and it has to be said, he really has some talent for that kind of roles. But, as he proves with this movie, he is capable of a lot more. He plays the role of the samurai hit man, doesn't look like he's fit for that role at all (at least, I would never think of him when it comes to that role), but does it really very well.

    As a conclusion I would like to add that the sound track is also very nice. Normally I'm not too much a fan of hip hop in the movies, although I can appreciate it as a form of music on itself, but this time it really works. Add to this some nice acting, a cool and well-written story, some funny moments (like for instance a rapping mobster) and what you'll get is a movie that is fun and interesting to watch. I give it an 8/10.
    8TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews

    Interesting and deep, but not as deep as it tries to be

    This is a great film; it has pretty much everything a great film needs: a great score, great actors, great performances, etc. The film revolves around Ghost Dog, perfectly portrayed by Forest Whitaker. He is a assassin who lives by the code of the Samurai. Apart from him, we also follow the fate of several mafia men(though nowhere near as intimately as we follow Ghost Dog). These two very different groups, Samurai and mafia, are both depicted reasonably well, giving us insight to how the groups work, and, more importantly, their code. Both groups live and die by the code, and this is probably the most important thing in the movie, and it's shown with respect with both Samurai and mafia; I'm not entirely sure that it's correct all the way through, but that's not what's most important, anyway. The film has reasonably little action, but it's not supposed to be an action film, by any means. It's fairly slow throughout the film, but it never really bores you to the point of not watching any more; I've seen the film at least five times now, so believe me, I know. The film is very stylized and cool throughout, which definitely has some part in keeping you interested, but the theme and story/plot plays a bigger part, I think. The plot is pretty good, and though it keeps a fairly slow pace throughout the film, it also keeps your interest for the entire duration of the film. The acting is all good, though not everyone pulls off as excellent a performance as Whitaker. Isaach De Bankolé portrays Ghost Dog's best friend, and he does gives a great performance. So does Camille Winbush, who portrays a girl who Ghost Dog befriends and discusses books with. The characters are well-written and(mostly) credible. I'm not entirely sure that the film does provide a totally correct version of the Code of the Samurai. The soundtrack is great; it's made by the hip-hop artist RZA, but most of it will be enjoyable to people who aren't into hip-hop. Also, I guess it's more of a score than a soundtrack; there isn't any time where the music feels out of place in a scene. All in all, a great film, but not for all tastes. Don't go in expecting an action film; don't go in expecting a very deep an entirely intellectual film; don't go in expecting a regular movie; go in expecting to see a decent(if not good) representation of both the mafia code and the Samurai code. I've heard some people describe the ending as an anti-climax; I don't know what they were expecting... I won't say that I saw it coming, but I wasn't disappointed when it happened. It had to end it, and I think the director, Jim Jarmusch made a good decision on that. I recommend this film to people with an interest in Samurai, fans of Jarmusch and people looking for a reasonably deep film. I don't recommend this to fans of action movies, as there's fairly little action in the film. No matter who you are, if you're going to see this film, make sure you have the patience for it; it's worth sitting through the two reasonably slow hours for. 8/10

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Jim Jarmusch stated in an interview that he wrote the role of Ghost Dog specifically for Forest Whitaker, and if Whitaker hadn't taken the role, the film probably would not have been made.
    • Pifias
      In the scene where Ghost Dog practices his kenjutsu (sword technique), his sword is tucked into his sash with the curve of the blade pointed downwards. In the majority of iaijutsu (sword drawing) styles, the sword is tucked into the belt with the curve of the blade pointed upward, so that the act of drawing the sword from the scabbard (saya) can also serve as the first cut (kiri).
    • Citas

      Ghost Dog: There is something to be learned from a rainstorm. When meeting with a sudden shower, you try not to get wet and run quickly along the road. But doing such things as passing under the eaves of houses, you still get wet. When you are resolved from the beginning, you will not be perplexed, though you still get the same soaking. This understanding extends to everything.

    • Créditos adicionales
      The second to last person thanked at the credits' close is Akira Kurosawa--the Japanese filmmaker who filmed one of the Ghost Dog's central texts, Rashomon.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Instinct/The Loss of Sexual Innocence/Limbo (1999)
    • Banda sonora
      Ice-Cream
      (instrumental mix)

      Written by R. Diggs and C. Woods

      Produced, mixed and arranged by RZA for Wu-Tang Productions, Inc.

      Published by Careers-BMG Music Publishing, Inc.

      On behalf of Ramecca Music and Wu-Tang Publishing (BMI)

      Featuring Ghostface Killah, Cappadonna and Raekwon

      Raekwon appears courtesy of Loud Records

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    Preguntas frecuentes20

    • How long is Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • What are the quotations from "The Book of the Samurai" in the order in which they appear in the film?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 14 de enero de 2000 (España)
    • Países de origen
      • Francia
      • Alemania
      • Estados Unidos
      • Japón
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Pandora Filmproduktion (Germany)
      • StudioCanal International (France)
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Ghost dog - El camino del samurai
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Jersey City, Nueva Jersey, Estados Unidos
    • Empresas productoras
      • JVC Entertainment Networks
      • Canal+
      • Bac Films
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 3.308.029 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 166.344 US$
      • 5 mar 2000
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 9.421.594 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 1h 56min(116 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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