Os lendários quarenta e sete ronins conspiram para vingar a morte de seu senhor, Asano Naganori, matando Kira Yoshinaka, um oficial do xogunato responsável por Asano ser forçado a cometer se... Ler tudoOs lendários quarenta e sete ronins conspiram para vingar a morte de seu senhor, Asano Naganori, matando Kira Yoshinaka, um oficial do xogunato responsável por Asano ser forçado a cometer seppuku.Os lendários quarenta e sete ronins conspiram para vingar a morte de seu senhor, Asano Naganori, matando Kira Yoshinaka, um oficial do xogunato responsável por Asano ser forçado a cometer seppuku.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Gengo Ootaka
- (as Kikunojo Segawa)
- Matsunosuke Ooishi
- (as Sensho Ichikawa)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
But most of all, I notice this : for a film that was supposed to take place into a war-propaganda effort, I do find this tribute to the traditional virtues of the Japanese warrior to be remarkably sober in tone and almost completely devoid of any rhetoric. So, I am not at all surprised to learn that it was a commercial insuccess when it was released in 1941 Japan : for the spirit and inspiration of 'The 47 Ronins' are much too elevated to fit the ultranationalist hysteria of the times.
It is a tale of the famous Ako Vendetta of 1702. I do not know how historically accurate it is, but it does give a glimpse into Japan's history.
It also gives a glimpse of hara-kiri; the ritual suicide by slicing the stomach until the bowels spill out, then decapitation by a skilled swordsman.
You are better served in seeing director Kenji Mizoguchi in the classic Sansho the Bailiff.
It's also a unique window into the grim aspects of samurai culture and how the Imperial government of Japan parleyed and exploited those sentiments into the war effort.
This is WAY TOO LONG.
I'm a fan of japanese cinema and especially samurai films, but this 1941 flick was considered too long even by 1941 Japanese viewers.
There is no action the first two hours of this four-hour sanity test. It's just talking among courtiers with occasional nice cinematographic visuals of the grounds. Be forewarned: the ronin samurai are a dim afterthought here. This is almost exclusively about "government" bureaucrats scheming and infighting. In other words, this 4 hours is almost non-stop talking in medium shots.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe Japanese Ministry of Information, under the militarist government, commissioned director Kenji Mizoguchi to make this film as a morale booster for the WWII war effort. But it was a commercial failure, being released in Japan one week before the attack on Pearl Harbor. The military and most audiences found the first part of the film to be too slow and serious. However, the studio and Mizoguchi both regarded it as so important that Part 2 was put into production, though Mizoguchi was forced to insert some close-ups of the stars which are totally absent from Part I. The film was finally shown in America in the 1970s.
- Erros de gravaçãoFrom ~1:40 to ~1:44 an appropriate dialog sequence occurs starting with three men walking a path with one saying "Counselor, the decision has come" and ending with "we need have no fear." That same sequence is duplicated at ~2:22 to ~2:26 with the additional dialog at the end "I want you two to return to Edo at once and inform our brothers there that I will be arriving shortly." This duplicate is out of sequence with the story.
- Citações
Lord Takuminokami Asano: I only regret that I failed to kill Lord Kira and I left him with only superficial wounds. You will no doubt laugh at my ineptitude. I can but ask that I receive the customary punishment.
- ConexõesReferenced in Kenji Mizoguchi: A Vida de um Diretor de Cinema (1975)
Principais escolhas
- How long is The 47 Ronin?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 4 h 1 min(241 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1