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La légende de Zatoïchi - Le fugitif

Original title: Zatôichi kyôjô-tabi
  • 1963
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
La légende de Zatoïchi - Le fugitif (1963)
ActionAdventureDrama

A yakuza gang targets the blind masseur Zatoichi after he defeats their group in a wrestling match. Meanwhile a long lost love of Zatoichi's returns to his life.A yakuza gang targets the blind masseur Zatoichi after he defeats their group in a wrestling match. Meanwhile a long lost love of Zatoichi's returns to his life.A yakuza gang targets the blind masseur Zatoichi after he defeats their group in a wrestling match. Meanwhile a long lost love of Zatoichi's returns to his life.

  • Director
    • Tokuzô Tanaka
  • Writers
    • Seiji Hoshikawa
    • Kan Shimozawa
  • Stars
    • Shintarô Katsu
    • Miwa Takada
    • Masayo Banri
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tokuzô Tanaka
    • Writers
      • Seiji Hoshikawa
      • Kan Shimozawa
    • Stars
      • Shintarô Katsu
      • Miwa Takada
      • Masayo Banri
    • 13User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos55

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    Top cast20

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    Shintarô Katsu
    Shintarô Katsu
    • Zatôichi
    Miwa Takada
    Miwa Takada
    • Nobu
    Masayo Banri
    Masayo Banri
    • Tane
    Jun'ichirô Narita
    Katsuhiko Kobayashi
    Tôru Abe
    Tôru Abe
    • Boss Yagiri Tokyuro
    San'emon Arashi
    Yûji Hamada
    Sumao Ishihara
    Jun Katsumura
    • Wrestling Yakuza
    Jutarô Kitashiro
    Jutarô Kitashiro
      Kôichi Mizuhara
      Kôichi Mizuhara
      • Boss Unosuke
      Yasuhiro Mizukami
      • Boss Tamamura
      Sachiko Murase
      Sachiko Murase
      • Maki
      Hiroshi Nawa
      Hiroshi Nawa
      Tokio Oki
      Mitsusaburô Ramon
      Kazue Tamaki
      • Director
        • Tokuzô Tanaka
      • Writers
        • Seiji Hoshikawa
        • Kan Shimozawa
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews13

      7.22.1K
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      Featured reviews

      5Zbigniew_Krycsiwiki

      Zatoichi, mark four

      This fourth Zatoichi film in fourteen months

      The recurrence of a lost love might have made for an interesting change of pace, and change of tone for this series, but that mostly takes second stage to a contrived, yet shallow, story of redemption, without much resolution.

      The climactic battles are reasonably good here, but it all feels alternately a bit too choreographed, and poorly choreographed, as the innumerable thugs all seem to politely wait their turn to attack Ichi, who barely gives them a passing glance, before they fall over dead, bloodlessly, and without even so much as a tear to their clothing.

      I found the sake bottle scene to be too silly of a gimmick, like the slicing of candles with his sword, as well.

      Still watchable, though, but a drop in quality from the earlier installments.
      7Pjtaylor-96-138044

      Long lost love.

      By this point, the 'Zatoichi' series has slipped into full-on episodic territory, which isn't necessarily a bad thing. In essence, it's a bit like 'James Bond'; each outing takes place within a vague continuity but doesn't require any pre-existing knowledge to be enjoyed. It's perhaps surprising that the series didn't get an official television show until 1974, though that probably has more to do with the landscape of entertainment media at the time than anything else. 'Zatoichi The Fugitive (1963)' sees its eponymous blind masseur with a price on his head after he defeats a local yakuza gang in a wrestling tournament, eventually finding himself caught in the middle of an underhanded gangland coup. Our protagonist inserts himself into this issue seemingly in an effort to aid a pair of sweethearts whose love it inhibits, perhaps because he doesn't want them to be affected by the same problems that plagued his past - spurred on by the return, in what's basically an extended cameo, of his first love, Otane (last seen in 'The Tale Of Zatoichi Continues (1962)'). As he continues to run afoul of the local mob, the price on his head grows larger and larger, attracting the attention of a rough samurai whose very first appearance almost silently promises a final showdown between the pair. The piece is as character-focused as you'd expect from the series, with themes of love and honour pusling through its veins. Though Zatoichi is almost constantly opposed to killing and even goes out of his way to fulfil the final wishes of those he has to dispatch, the flick has a rather high body count. Its action alternates between suspenseful and exciting, especially in its aforementioned climactic face-off. The feature is also surprisingly funny. It moves at a decent pace and does a good job of keeping you invested in its proceedings. It does occasionally get a tad confusing (there are a lot of names thrown around and it isn't always clear exactly who everyone is) but this isn't a major issue. Overall, it's an enjoyable affair throughout. 7/10.
      7kurosawakira

      Genuinely Suspenseful, Genuine Drama

      One might mistake this for the first Zatôichi in colour, so bold are the colours during the opening credits that they'd challenge even Imamura's hyper-lush "Kamigami no yakubo" (1968).

      What the films achieve wonderfully is that they still allow the necessary plotting to take its time. In modern fare I think we'd be having all the quiet moments and hesitations removed, let alone all the human drama. Thus the film really has genuinely suspenseful moments and genuine drama. Otane reappears, and we are allowed to see a loose end tied in the drama.

      I'm going through the films in chronological order just now. It will be interesting to see where the series goes as it matures; these early films have all been very brilliant.
      9alucinecinefago

      Zatoichi, once again, wants to fulfil a good deed

      The following review is an extract from the book "Shintaro Katsu´s Zatoichi: Complete guide to all movies", which is now available on Amazon.

      "(...) Zatoichi agrees to be transported in a jinrikisha (a type of proto-taxi in Japan of the Tokugawa era, and other Asian countries). Persecutors who want to kill the blind man see how he rides the vehicle, as they keep a close watch on him. At the edge of the road, Zatoichi and his carriers meet a woman with a baby who feels unwell. Chivalrously, Zatoichi proposes to the mother to get into the car in his place; he will continue on foot. A few meters ahead, the jinrikisha is attacked, the killers strung the person inside thinking that it is Zatoichi ... and killing instead the young mother (...).

      (...) Zatoichi, who feels responsible for the tragedy, decides to take the baby to the town of Miyagi to give it to her father Unosuke, the husband of the deceased.

      (...) This issue is the eighth sequel to the excellent "Zatoichi monogatari" (Kenji Misumi, 1962). The director of every film about the adventures of the blind swordsman is not always the great Kenji Misumi, but this is the case in this "Zatoichi kessho-tabi" that we are dealing with today, and whose international title in English comes to be, without much sense, "Fight, Zatoichi, fight". We say without much meaning because that title is not necessarily descriptive of the film (Zatoichi fights in all his films), and we are inclined to think that it is not the literal translation from Japanese either.
      BrianDanaCamp

      MASSEUR ICHI, THE FUGITIVE - Slow and stately early Zatoichi

      MASSEUR ICHI, THE FUGITIVE (1963) is the fourth in the series of Japanese swordplay films devoted to the exploits of Zatoichi, the blind swordsman whose super-hearing and sensitivity enabled him to perform impressive feats of derring-do. This entry is somewhat slower-paced and less action-packed than would become the norm in later Zatoichi films (which would continue to be produced through 1973). There is only one major swordfight, near the very end, but at least it's a spectacular one, with Zatoichi (Shintaro Katsu) slashing opponents right, left, front and back, although the spurting bloodshed which would soon become a distinct feature of samurai films is noticeably absent here. Zatoichi himself is also considerably less superhuman than he appears in later films.

      Instead, the emphasis is Zatoichi's role as mediator in a conflict between gang bosses in a town he is visiting solely to pay respects to the mother of a gang member he'd killed who'd been seeking the ten gold coin bounty on Zatoichi's head. The complex interrelationships among the characters center chiefly around two young women, one of them a former lover of Zatoichi's who is now the wife of a sword-for-hire seeking to sell his services to one of the wily bosses. Zatoichi sides with the underdog, Sakichi, who'd reluctantly inherited his father's territory but would rather marry the other young woman, Onobu (Miwa Takada), the pretty young daughter of the innkeeper, a once-powerful gang boss bearing a powerful grudge because he'd lost his territory to Sakichi's father. The gang bosses pressure the vulnerable Sakichi to use Zatoichi's trust to set a trap for him. The stage is then set for a series of confrontations that culminate in the final battle.

      It may be slow going for most action and swordplay buffs, but it has a formal beauty that later films in the series dispensed with in favor of more visceral thrills. The polished camerawork, largely on location, gives us stately compositions focused on the characters and their relationships. A sparing score by venerated composer Akira Ifukube adds a touch of class. Samurai films of the time routinely boasted such visual and aural elegance long before the audience demanded more bloodshed and a more excessive approach in later films (see, especially, the "Lone Wolf and Cub" series).

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Miwa Takada's first appearance in a Zatoichi movie. She would later on appear in two more movies from this series, La légende de Zatoïchi - La lettre (1964) and La Légende de Zatoïchi : Route sanglante (1967), playing different characters.
      • Quotes

        Zatoichi: Wherever I go, I'm the god of calamity.

      • Connections
        Featured in Best in Action: 1963 (2019)

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      FAQ13

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • August 10, 1963 (Japan)
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Language
        • Japanese
      • Also known as
        • Zatoichi the Fugitive
      • Production company
        • Daiei Studios
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        1 hour 26 minutes
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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