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IMDbPro

La légende de Zatoïchi - Le fugitif

Original title: Zatôichi kyôjô-tabi
  • 1963
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.2K
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
    2.2K
    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

    Photos56

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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

      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.
      MovieIQTest

      too much and too many fake arrangements in this sequel

      this is one of the so-so add-on(s) of this 'blind swordsman' series. after couple of the prequel and sequel in black and white, it suddenly turned into a colored one. but there were many flaws in this series that by nowadays standard, they were so obvious and inevitably decreased the greatness of this series:

      1) In this follow-up film, Zatoichi's short hairdo suddenly fashioned in modern cut. his short hair was trimmed so evenly and nicely and blow dry up and held on his head firmly. a wandering Yakuza blind masseur would have such fashion taste to have his hairdo nicely treated in an expensive saloon was beyond my comprehension.

      2) The fighting scenes looked more false and phony once in colors. the swords never cut open the clothes and no blood was splashed all over the places, even when cut by Zatoichi's sword and fell into the pond, no blood ever showed up in the water, yet when Zatoichi was cut by his opponent's sword, his arm would have blood. but judging by where it was cut, the artery on his arm should have cut deeply and the blood would never be so easily to be stopped. but the worst effect of such synchronized swords fighting was those clothes never being slashed open and no blood appeared whatsoever, it just looked so fake and unconvincing, more like the stupid productions of Chinese 'Shaw Brothers' Kung-Fu movies, all of them just looked so stupidly fake and moronically synchronized.

      3) For a blind man, no matter how sensitive his hearing ability, there's no way he could have detected the positions and locations of so many enemies around him. but Zatoichi seemed to have the supernatural power to rightly detect his enemies' locations and where to lodge and cut his opponents' bodies. the most unconvincing flaw of Japanese samurai movies was the sudden stop in action when one of the guys was cut and the others just stood around to await the next synchronized movement. it seems when all the people surrounding their targeted person would allow the guy to finish the fatal cut of their comrades to be completed thoroughly and then to start the next fighting sequence. this is such a unbearable fake scene almost appeared in every Japanese samurai movie.

      4) When a hunting rifle was implemented in this film, the primitive long gun seemed to be very easily reloaded. by judging this movie series era, the primitive rifle would need fuse to ignite the gun powder to push a round bullet ball out of the barrel, it would need gun powder to be stuffed into the barrel and chamber first then inserted the lead ball bullet to complete the reload, yet in this film and all the other series, the rifle simply operated so modern than what we usually saw in the fighting scenes of the American Civil War.

      The screenplay of this film is just too bland and lukewarm to make this particularly a great and memorable one.
      Michael_Elliott

      Masseur Ichi, the Fugitive

      Masseur Ichi, the Fugitive (1963)

      *** (out of 4)

      The blind swordsman Ichi (Shintaro Katsu) angers a large yakuza after defeating them in a wrestling match, which will lead to a bigger fight. Directed by Tokuzo Tanaka. This here was my second film in the series and while I enjoyed most of the first one, this one here just doesn't cut it. There's way too much talking going on and none of it is even mildly interesting. Even worse is that the actual swordfights are rather lame as well. The concept of a blind swordsman is really the only thing that keeps this film (and perhaps series?) afloat.
      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.
      8kevin_robbins

      Zatoichi: The Fugitive is a masterclass in filmmaking, cultural texture, and heroic storytelling

      I recently rewatched Zatoichi: The Fugitive (1963) on a random streaming service. The story follows our hero, Zatoichi, who is framed for a crime by the local Yakuza-leading to a bounty hunter being hired to track and kill him. Meanwhile, an old flame resurfaces at a most inopportune time...

      Directed by Tokuzô Tanaka (The Demon of Mount Oe), the film stars Shintarô Katsu (Hanzo the Razor), Miwa Takada (Yokai Monsters), and Masayo Banri (The Depths).

      The cinematography is top-tier-from the stunning backdrops to the framing of each character and the dynamic execution of every action sequence. The film does a remarkable job of showcasing the culture organically, without making it the focus. The opening sumo wrestling scene is a standout: an unexpected and entertaining way to reintroduce our hero. It's also a treat to see a youthful Shintarô Katsu in these early entries.

      The sword fights are sudden, stylish, and brilliantly choreographed. The buildup to the final showdown is strong, and the duel itself delivers. As for the romantic subplot-true to form for Zatoichi-it's bittersweet, and he remains a heartbreaker.

      In short, Zatoichi: The Fugitive is a masterclass in filmmaking, cultural texture, and heroic storytelling. I'd give it an 8/10 and strongly recommend it.

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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
        • 1h 26m(86 min)
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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