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L'ange rouge

Titre original : Akai tenshi
  • 1966
  • 16
  • 1h 35min
NOTE IMDb
7,8/10
2,1 k
MA NOTE
L'ange rouge (1966)
DramaRomanceWar

Pendant la guerre sino-japonaise, une jeune infirmière militaire compatit avec ses patients et tombe amoureuse d'un médecin impuissant et accro à la morphine.Pendant la guerre sino-japonaise, une jeune infirmière militaire compatit avec ses patients et tombe amoureuse d'un médecin impuissant et accro à la morphine.Pendant la guerre sino-japonaise, une jeune infirmière militaire compatit avec ses patients et tombe amoureuse d'un médecin impuissant et accro à la morphine.

  • Réalisation
    • Yasuzô Masumura
  • Scénario
    • Yoriyoshi Arima
    • Ryôzô Kasahara
  • Casting principal
    • Ayako Wakao
    • Shinsuke Ashida
    • Yûsuke Kawazu
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,8/10
    2,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Yasuzô Masumura
    • Scénario
      • Yoriyoshi Arima
      • Ryôzô Kasahara
    • Casting principal
      • Ayako Wakao
      • Shinsuke Ashida
      • Yûsuke Kawazu
    • 22avis d'utilisateurs
    • 33avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos24

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    Rôles principaux42

    Modifier
    Ayako Wakao
    Ayako Wakao
    • Nurse Sakura Nishi
    Shinsuke Ashida
    Shinsuke Ashida
    • Dr. Okabe
    Yûsuke Kawazu
    Yûsuke Kawazu
    • Pvt. Orihara
    Ranko Akagi
    • Head Nurse Iwashima
    Jôtarô Senba
    Jôtarô Senba
    • Private Sakamoto
    Daihachi Kita
    • Private Nogami
    Jun Osanai
    • Special Duty Sergeant Major
    Daigo Inoue
    • Advance Guard Company's Fifth Chief
    Takashi Nakamura
    • Head of infantry
    Ken'ichi Tani
    • Wounded soldier
    Kisao Tobita
    • Patient
    Naomasa Kawashima
    • Medic
    Ayako Ikegami
    • Nurse Tsurusaki
    Kyôsuke Shiho
    • Chinese Boy
    Shin Minatsu
    • Soldier
    Ken Nakahara
    • Wounded soldier
    Shinji Sayama
    • Sick Soldier
    Kenji Ôba
    Kenji Ôba
      • Réalisation
        • Yasuzô Masumura
      • Scénario
        • Yoriyoshi Arima
        • Ryôzô Kasahara
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs22

      7,82K
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      Avis à la une

      10Musicianmagic

      Absolutely Brilliant Dark Drama

      Sakura Nishi is a new Japanese nurse when she arrives at an army hospital in China during the war in 1939. She quickly encounters the reality of war and the types of physical and mental injuries inflicted along with the medical staff and soldiers she meets.

      This is a very dark drama although it lightens the mood for a couple of scenes. There is a definite feeling of realism. It does not pull any punches regarding the realism including some gruesome and violent episodes. Not for the squeamish.

      Director Yasuzo Masumura is a legend in Japanese cinema and this is an example of his brilliant filmmaking. The cast is all first-rate. Ayako Wakao who plays Nurse Nishi is outstanding as usual, one of my favorite actresses and is totally believable in this role adding to the realism. Shinsuke Ashida plays Dr. Okabe and was perfect in the role.

      I really hate to rate a movie 10 out of 10 but I can't say a single minute of this film was uninteresting. I did feel I had to catch my breath when it was over as it hits very hard. You don't have to be a fan of Japanese movies to watch. It is just that good.
      10aaronable14

      Fantastic

      A very underrated masterful piece of art. This is my kind of film. It analyses, dissect, and expose the human psyche. There is no good and bad in the film, you make up your mind about that. There is no unblemished hero character in the film; only ordinary people doing extraordinary actions in unique circumstances. The film illustrates the beauty of human heart. Even though the film is Japanese, it doesn't do what the traditional Hollywood films do in war films involving America; the film, in respect of the war issue is neutral. It uses the war as a background to the main concepts addressed by the film. However, the war aspect is not entirely neglected, rather it is dealt with from a neutral perspectives.
      9I_Ailurophile

      Stark, arresting, and compelling - if also earnestly troubling

      What is this film if not a portraiture of both the ugliness and complexities of war as they impact even those who are not specifically on the front lines? In focusing on nurse Nishi Sakura we're given a protagonist who feels deep sympathy for her soldier patients and those around her, and takes that sympathy to extremes, even if said patients wrong her. There is also substantial reflection herein on the absurdities of war with regards to conscription, and how draftees' skills are warped and misused in the military; the endless stream of casualties, and the twisted mindset that may gift promotions; how soldiers are mistreated by their own leaders, the abuses endured by doctors, nurses, and support staff, and still more, including the ways both literal and proverbial in which anyone involved in such madness may self-medicate. Though filmed in black and white there is major grisliness throughout 'Red angel' as many shots and scenes depict the blood and gore of field hospitals, the long lines of full beds, dirtied surgical instruments, removed bullets and shrapnel, and more. Largely bereft of the action sequences of the average war movie, this drama nevertheless speaks unflinchingly to the horrors of war. Moreover, there is no glorification whatsoever of martial strife, or of the soldier life, and really the opposite is true: from one scene to the next heavy emphasis is placed on criticizing war, and how the military treats even their own.

      Furthermore, there is significant treatment herein of the horrid intersection of sex and lust with the gender dynamics of military logistics. However terribly fallacious in reality, in an echo of some of the most toxic strains of male thought that endure even in modern society there is direct linkage between sexual potency and masculinity, and the loss of the former is equated to loss of the latter. Just as drills, discipline, and the command to kill may be cynically viewed as reducing the soldier to an unthinking beast, that demanded atavistic impulse extends to how women are treated by soldiers, specifically, and more generally, the military, and men. Truthfully, at times this feature is a hair's breadth away from sado-erotic exploitation, and one can easily envisage how it may have looked had it been made with the sensibilities of some such genre fare in the 1970s, or even if another filmmaker like Oshima Nagisa ('In the realm of the senses') had taken on the project. While do we also get bits and pieces of the battle violence of other pictures that handle the same subject matter, far more than not 'Red angel' steps back from the usual explosions and gunfire to show us another side of war - and if anything even more so with that broad declination, from every corner Masumura Yasuzo gives us a sordid saga that wavers on the razor's edge between accentuating how war strips people of their humanity, and zeroing in on characters who desperately try to retain their humanity and sense of self.

      There is abundant, meaningful value herein, however achingly grim and dreary. Ikeno Sei's tremendous original score is plainly haunting as it further lends to the gloom, and the production values are top-notch with image and audio that are equally crisp. The production design and art direction are outstanding, and the visuals are flush with incredible detail in the sets, costume design, hair and makeup, crimson and viscera, and props and weapons. Those stunts and effects that are employed are vivid and finely executed, as fine as in any kindred genre fare, and only further cement the dourness in how they are used. Masumura's direction is marvelously smart and adept, ably navigating the subtly shifting moods of the difficult spaces between the most dubious, uncomfortable, and seedy ideas, the traces of human warmth, the stark underlying themes, and the overarching bleakness, and he does so in a manner that unfailingly brings out the best of the cast. Wakao Ayako certainly stands out most in the lead role as Nishi, but she is joined in her excellence by all those in supporting parts, from prominent Ashida Shinsuke to those in smaller roles like Kawazu Yusuke. The material is tough, demanding delicate range and nuance in maneuvering between dangerously impassioned, quietly thoughtful, highly emotive, and unnerved trauma, but Wakao and her co-stars give terrific performances that increasingly impress.

      Above all, in penning his adapted screenplay, writer Kasahara Ryozo saturates the title with simmering outrage at the damage war wreaks not just on people's bodies and lives but their psyche. The humanity that peeks through 'Red angel,' represented primarily but not exclusively in Nurse Nishi and Dr. Okabe, is refreshing relief when stood next to the poisonous barbarism that has been infused into soldiers, the amoral tinkering of military leadership that treats people like disposable tools, and the numbing routine of encountering death and devastation every day. And still even Nishi and Okabe are not free from these horrors as they themselves fall victim to violence, adopt fatalistic attitudes, and turn to self-destructive behaviors of various stripes to cope with it all. I think all these themes may have been stronger still had Nishi in particular been fleshed out a tad more - that is, if we spent even only a few minutes seeing who she was before she became another pawn in the machinations of war - but even at that the characters are written with depth and complications that are a big part of what makes the film so spellbinding. This is hardly any less true of the rich, mindful dialogue, and the scene writing is vibrant in the best and worst of ways in filling out a fiercely compelling, harrowing narrative. If in a different manner, Masumara's movie reminds me of the scathing anti-war sentiments of Abel Gance's disquieting silent epic 'J'accuse,' or the stridently criticism of the military that is Stanley Kubrick's 'Paths of glory.' This joins some esteemed company.

      There are two more salient points that one would be awfully remiss not to discuss. First is that Kasahara and Masumara waste no time in confronting us with one of the most shocking sequences of the feature, and while it is part and parcel of what 'Red angel' does broadly, the incidence is jolting and makes a poor first impression as it presents. The entire episode with Sakamoto is immensely troubling, and I think the shakiest portions of the writing are the first out of the gate. Even if we accept that Nishi has a practically pathological need to sympathize, and be the nurse that her patients need, the first approximate third of the runtime left me skeptical. And there's also this: is the unwavering, trenchant tenor of the picture bolstered by the fact that the story centers the Japanese army in China during World War II? Or does that make it all problematic? This doesn't speak directly to all the many war crimes that Imperial Japan committed against the Chinese, but certainly to some; is the tone duly harsh in its criticism, or not enough so? Kasahara and Masumara do not for one moment romanticize or lionize, and the most sympathetic characters are but cogs in the war machine as the script reservedly but unmistakably lashes out against the inhumanity imposed upon people by war; does this balance out the fact of the plot centering the aggressors in a massive, deadly conflict? I don't have the answers to these questions. I know only that if nothing else, no matter how deserving it may otherwise be, 'Red angel' has an asterisk next to its name.

      However much we can, should, and must dissect such facets, though, the incontrovertible truth is that by and large this is fantastic. It's raptly absorbing, and very much thought-provoking; that some elements raise an eyebrow or merit scrutiny does not undercut the overall strength. I found myself doubting this title initially, but as the tale advanced I was drawn in more and more, and once the complete image emerges of what the filmmaker was doing here, the result is greatly satisfying. Especially given the nastiness of the material this won't appeal to all comers, nor meet with equal favors, and it bears repeating that there are aspects of the work that require earnest, probing analysis. Be that as it may, far more than not 'Red angel' is a superb classic that deserves more recognition, and I would definitely recommend it to anyone who is receptive to such movies that explore the darker side of life.
      8christopher-underwood

      Important and enthralling film

      Extremely tough little b/w gem from director, Masumura. It's 1939 and the Japanese are fighting in China, to not very much effect. We follow the efforts of those in field hospitals desperately trying to pick up the pieces when each load of war injured is raced back from the front line. Limbs are sawn off and bullets removed, all without aesthetic but plenty of blood and screams. Amid it all our heroine struggles to recover from her early rape by patients and the requests of the desperate and dying. This movie is so well put together that it is only afterwards you wonder just how that scene where she allows the handless man to feel her with his feet or make her senior a 'man again', without it seeming incongruous within this tale of death and destruction. With the blatant misogynism, nudity, explicit surgery, bondage, drug taking and even cross dressing, not to mention the inherent criticism of the Japanese stance, it is a wonder this film got made, distributed and survived. Important and enthralling film.
      3TooKakkoiiforYou_321

      When they start a movie with a rape scene in the first FIVE minutes, you know you're up for something

      Akai Tenshi, the movie starring Ayako Wakao where she impersonates a comfort woman...errrr, a nurse who helps japanese soldiers by making sex with them for no real discernible reason and then feels bad for them dying or killing themselves again for no real reason. Oh, did I mention the fact that she magically falls in love with a surgeon with whom she doesn't show any chemistry whatsoever? This movie feels more like an exploitation flick where somebody imposed to the director to not show the actual sex scenes, resulting in something extremely bizzarre at the end of the day. Having enjoyed a lot of the works of this director and especially the feminist-leaning A Wife Confesses made five years prior to this thing, I am shocked and infuriated that he produced this crap. Well shot crap, but crap nonetheless. I might try to rewatch it in the future, but it's not on the priority list.

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      Histoire

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      Le saviez-vous

      Modifier
      • Anecdotes
        The film contains some gruesome sequences of surgery without anaesthetic and the removal of limbs with saws. Not for the squeamish.
      • Gaffes
        Several dead bodies are clearly seen to be breathing slightly throughout the film.
      • Connexions
        Featured in Horrible Reviews: The Most DISTURBING Movies | Part 36: The Horrors Of War (2025)

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      FAQ13

      • How long is The Red Angel?Alimenté par Alexa

      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 16 avril 1969 (France)
      • Pays d’origine
        • Japon
      • Langue
        • Japonais
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • The Red Angel
      • Société de production
        • Daiei Studios
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        1 heure 35 minutes
      • Couleur
        • Black and White
      • Rapport de forme
        • 2.35 : 1

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