Karami-ai
- 1962
- 1 h 47 min
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA dying businessman intends to will two hundred million yen to his three illegitimate children, but his associates scheme to take advantage of the situation.A dying businessman intends to will two hundred million yen to his three illegitimate children, but his associates scheme to take advantage of the situation.A dying businessman intends to will two hundred million yen to his three illegitimate children, but his associates scheme to take advantage of the situation.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Ganhou 1 prêmio BAFTA
- 1 vitória e 1 indicação no total
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
I further suggest "Ten Dark Women" if you want even more entertainment.
The story isn't quite as engaging as the narratives displayed in The Human Condition trilogy, Harakiri, or Kwaidan, but it's still interesting for most of its runtime.
I did like the noir feel, especially the jazzy soundtrack and the voiceover, and it's nice to see a female protagonist (who isn't your typical femme fatale) in a noirish movie like this.
It's probably a more minor work in his overall filmography, but yeah, still pretty good.
Working from Nanjo Norio's novel, screenwriter Inagaki Koichi penned an outstanding screenplay that's rich and downright intoxicating from top to bottom. However characters might first present they show themselves to be not just complex and vibrant as written but roundly, willfully scurrilous in their own ways, usually while adopting a thin facade of innocence or propriety. Each in and of themselves is so interesting that this rather becomes worth watching just for them, and that's to say nothing of the rest of the writing, equally flush with ingenious subtlety as events progress. The dialogue is stark and biting, driving to the core of the characterizations and the plot, and each scene in turn bears a wondrous vitality with deliciously thick, underhanded tension and cutting intelligence. The narrative itself is so brilliant and spellbinding that this became another relatively rare instance of a movie I could not tear my eyes away from - and though it's mostly just on account of how raptly compelling the saga is in its own right, the precise fashion in which information comes out and events unfold is a masterstroke that left me giddily smiling again and again.
All this is very much a credit as well to the cast. Splendid nuance in the acting belies the cold shrewdness and less sure-footed emotions at play, a tactfulness expressiveness that feeds directly into the deceit and trickery on hand in the plot. It hardly even seems fair to highlight some stars over others, though Kishi Keiko is terrific in the lead role of Yasuko (I couldn't help but cheer her at a small moment in the last minutes), and even as Yamamura So's part as Kawara is more restrictive he commands imposing presence and temperament. This is to say nothing of Watanabe Misako, Nakadai Tatsuya, Yoshimura Mari, Miyaguchia Seiji, Chiaki Minoru, or the many others on hand. As Kobayasha guides his actors and shapes the whole as director, he sustains a ferocious energy that builds alongside the story, a sort of intensity that draws us in all the more. His jidaigeki of the 60s in particular thoroughly accentuated the patient mindfulness that Kobayashi bore as a filmmaker, letting pressure grow until the ideal psychological moment for the feature to explode - and though 'The inheritance' isn't so grandiose, the outcome is pretty much just as invigorating.
Composer extraordinaire Takemitsu Toru lends a marvelously flavorful score that meshes neatly with the seedy goings-on of the story, and I can scarcely imagine this without that music. Everything else here is really just as fantastic, from the costume design, hair, and makeup, to the sets, to Kawamata Takashi's smart cinematography and Uraoka Keiichi's keen editing. It's Inagaki's script that really shines here, however, hand in hand with the acting and Kobayashi's direction, and one way or another the end result is a title that's as darkly entertaining as it is tremendously engrossing. As I go through Kobayashi's oeuvre it's safe to say that I have high expectations, and though not all his productions are equal, I'm firmly of the mind that this is altogether excellent and easily counts among his best. Whether one has a specific reason to watch or is just looking for something good to watch, I can hardly recommend 'The inheritance' any more highly. As an avid cinephile this was simply a joy, and this is one picture that's well worth seeking out!
Você sabia?
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the title credits, the names "Yukio Ninagawa" and "Shinya Mizushima" are listed two times.
- Citações
Kikuo Furukawa: I've got a favor to ask. It's embarrassing. But a coffin is waiting for me, so I can say this plainly. I don't have any legally recognized children. But I do have children. To top it off, I've got three of them. Some may be dead. But there's no way all three are dead. So I want you to find my children. I don't mean to legally acknowledge them and their heirship right away. Some may have grown up to be scoundrels. But if any of them are suitable, I'd like to add them as heirs.
Principais escolhas
- How long is The Inheritance?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 47 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1