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IMDbPro

La Jeunesse de la bête

Titre original : Yajû no seishun
  • 1963
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 32min
NOTE IMDb
7,3/10
4,1 k
MA NOTE
Jô Shishido in La Jeunesse de la bête (1963)
ActionCriminalitéMystère

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA violent thug plays opposing yakuza bosses against each other.A violent thug plays opposing yakuza bosses against each other.A violent thug plays opposing yakuza bosses against each other.

  • Réalisation
    • Seijun Suzuki
  • Scénario
    • Ichirô Ikeda
    • Tadaaki Yamazaki
    • Haruhiko Ôyabu
  • Casting principal
    • Jô Shishido
    • Misako Watanabe
    • Tamio Kawachi
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,3/10
    4,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Seijun Suzuki
    • Scénario
      • Ichirô Ikeda
      • Tadaaki Yamazaki
      • Haruhiko Ôyabu
    • Casting principal
      • Jô Shishido
      • Misako Watanabe
      • Tamio Kawachi
    • 29avis d'utilisateurs
    • 41avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos37

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    Rôles principaux40

    Modifier
    Jô Shishido
    Jô Shishido
    • Jôji 'Jo' Mizuno
    • (as Joe Shishido)
    Misako Watanabe
    Misako Watanabe
    • Kumiko Takeshita
    Tamio Kawachi
    Tamio Kawachi
    • Hideo Nomoto
    Minako Katsuki
    • Sawako Miura
    Daisaburô Hirata
    • Shibata
    Eiji Gô
    Eiji Gô
    • Shigeru Takechi
    Kôichi Uenoyama
    Kôichi Uenoyama
    • Masao Hisano
    Akiji Kobayashi
    Akiji Kobayashi
    • Tatsuo Nomoto
    Yûzô Kiura
    • Takeo Minegishi
    Naomi Hoshi
    • Keiko
    Hiroshi Kôno
    • Seizô Honma
    Eimei Esumi
    Eimei Esumi
    • Gorô Minami
    Shuntarô Tamamura
    • Shôichi Maeda
    Mizuho Suzuki
    Mizuho Suzuki
    • Detective Hirokawa
    Zenji Yamada
    • Fujita
    Yuriko Abe
    Yuriko Abe
    • Takechi's Wife
    Ikuko Kimuro
    Shirô Yanase
    • Ken Ishizaki
    • Réalisation
      • Seijun Suzuki
    • Scénario
      • Ichirô Ikeda
      • Tadaaki Yamazaki
      • Haruhiko Ôyabu
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs29

    7,34.1K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    shishido

    Superior example of 1960's crime cinema!

    "Yaju no Seishun" ("Youth of the Beast") is, without doubt, one of the greatest Japanese films of the 1960's. It is also, arguably, the best film from the amazing director, Suzuki Seijun. This was Suzuki-sensei's "breakthrough" film; in as much as it was the first film where he truly let his flamboyant, dizzying, artistic sense come forward. Full of intense, innovative, eye-popping visuals, the film never loses its solid narrative flow; thanks, in part, to a great script based on the novel by Hard-Boiled master, Oyabu Haruhiko. What more could one ask for? A great story, brilliant direction, and outstanding performances (especially by Shishido Jo). This is a superior example of the Japanese thriller--and, for that matter, crime cinema of the 1960's in general!
    9Quinoa1984

    gripping direction from a man bringing post-modernism and brutality to the forefront

    I think one of the aspects of Youth of the Beast, the late genre- filmmaker master Seijun Suzuki's breakthrough, to take into account is that the story moves at a breathless pace. It's not that it is a story that is hard to follow - there are a good many characters to get to know, and after a black and white prologue (though at first I wasn't sure if it was a 'show-end-at-beginning' thing before going into full color for the majority of the film), we're put right into the physical space of this seemingly violent thug played by Jô Shishido (also named Jo here, good call) - it's that Suzuki, I think, is not so much interested in the story as in how a film MOVES. After all, it is a movie, right? Let's get that motion picture moving and vibrant and with energy. This is like a shotgun blast of 60's crime cinema that makes us feel a lot of things through a lot of intense visual choreography of the frame and what is in it (i.e. the old Scorsese axiom, cinema being a matter of what's in the frame and what's out, is paramount to Suzuki)/

    Youth of the Beast is not necessarily the most remarkable film as far as the story goes, and I'm sure there have been other Yakuza films and other gangster thrillers that have similarities; in a sense this isn't unlike Yojimbo/Fistful of Dollars/Red Harvest, though this time the main character has more of a motive than in that story. What's remarkable is the direction and how the tone is brutal and yet it's staged in some creative ways. There's times when you know a character is about to lunge at someone else, or that we get a piece of visual information like a knife being held under a table or somewhere else, before that character lunges and strikes. Other times it's more about how he'll pan the camera, like when the car full of the one crime family gets ambushed by another car (the music cue here is especially, terribly exhilarating, and the rest of the score has a wonderful jazz rhythm to it), and when we see those faces of the guys with their masks on and how he pushes in.

    Hell, even just how Suzuki uses color cinematography is impressive, all of those reds (the woman being whipped on the carpet), and how he'll have a backdrop like at the movie theater where the Yakuza do some of their business and a film screen projecting some movie or other is in the background of the frame. It feels like one of those moments where post-modernism is creeping in to Japanese cinema, and of course Suzuki would continue making such advances with Tokyo Drifter and particularly Branded to Kill. The movie is hard and rough, violent and the characters' motivations - well, I should say Jo, who is basically undercover playing one side and then another until it's an all-out war - are intense enough that the cast rises above what could be basic (even boiler-plate) B-movie pulp. I don't know how much input Suzuki had on the script, but he knows how to keep his actors moving and being interesting, whether it's Jo, who is the stand-out of the film, or his 'friend' who has a thing for the ladies.

    This is pulp Japanese cinematic excellence, all feeding off of a vision that is unique.
    chaos-rampant

    Suzuki sacrifices none of his artistic flair in the process of crafting a gritty crime noir.

    That's what I like so much about Suzuki (and other genre directors from back then). He made genre pictures on studio demand yet sacrificed none of his personal style and artistic aspirations in the process. As a result, Youth of the Beast is as entertaining as it is visually fascinating, the work of a true master craftsman.

    Jo Shishido plays Jo, a hard-ass guy that won't take no for an answer who inflitrates the local yakuza mob and quickly gains the trust of the boss and his underlings. But when he plays this and another gang against each other, it becomes apparent he has a hidden agenda and operates for reasons of his own. The story is rock solid with enough twists and turns to keep things interested, a whole assortment of colourful (and sociopathic) characters and plenty of violence and hard-boiled badassitude to boot. OK, the violence is relatively tame by today's stadards, but unlike other yakuza flicks from the 60's and 70's, the main character in Suzuki's pictures is his style.

    Vibrant colours from every end of the palette are combined into beautiful frames, with meticulous attention to detail and an eye for composition. Suzuki is good doing black and white but his work operates on a whole other level when he takes on colour. Clearly a challenge for any director that had to make the transition from b/w to colour (as Sidney Lumet details in his book Making Movies), Suzuki here excels in the task. Unusual yet beautiful compositions include the opening scene which is in shot black and white with with the only exception of a flower appearing in colour, until flashy colour and loud swing music boom at the next cut to reveal a busy Japanese street; or the scenes where Jo and the rival gang boss talk to each other while an old b/w Japanese movie plays in the back; the golden clouds of sand that blow outside the boss's house. There are many such examples yet for all its artistic intent, Youth of the Beast never deviates from its goal: to tell a highly entertaining pulpy crime story of revenge. Not as gritty and nihilistic as the works of Kinji Fukasaku and with a dash of film noir, this is a great ride for fans of 60's crime cinema.
    7jellopuke

    Yakuza Yojimbo

    Undercover cop plays two gangs against each other. What it lacks in originality it makes up for in style and brutality with even a nice twist at the end. Very well done B movie.
    9christopher-underwood

    told at such a pace and with such hypnotic visuals we are constantly distracted

    Wonderful Blu-ray print of a fabulous turning point film for Seijun Suzuki. Gone suddenly is his slavish adherence to the studio's ritualistic and formulaic demands and here are the lovely colourful street scenes and crazy kaleidoscopic interiors. There are, of course, yakuza and the small matter of fingers going missing but from the start this has something of the humour and duplicity of Yojimbo and Jo Shishido is slipping effortlessly into the role he would make icon a few years later in Branded to Kill. There is no ponderous exposition here as we slip from scene to scene with European style wipes and fades and even semi jump cuts. The simplistic plot is a little hard to follow at times, not because it is complicated but that the tale is being told at such a pace and with such hypnotic visuals we are constantly distracted. Wonderful.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This is is the first of Seijun Suzuki's films to be shot in black and white in the opening and then in color for the rest of the movie. He would do this again in Le Vagabond de Tokyo (1966).
    • Connexions
      Featured in Best in Action: 1963 (2019)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Youth of the Beast?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 juillet 1994 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Youth of the Beast
    • Société de production
      • Nikkatsu
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 32 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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