High and Low
Tengoku to jigoku
Japan
1963
143 Min
Japanese
Toshiro Mifune is unforgettable as Kingo Gondo, a wealthy industrialist whose family becomes the target of a cold-blooded kidnapper in Akira Kurosawa’s highly influential High and Low (Tengoku to jigoku). Adapting Ed McBain’s detective novel King’s Ransom, Kurosawa moves effortlessly from compelling race-against-time thriller to exacting social commentary, creating a penetrating portrait of contemporary Japanese society. —The Criterion Collection
The son of an army officer, Kurosawa studied art before gravitating to film as a means of supporting himself. He served seven years as an assistant to director Kajiro Yamamoto before he began his own directorial career with Sanshiro Sugata (1943), a film about the 19th century struggle for supremacy between adherents of judo and jujitsu that so impressed the military government, he was prevailed upon to make a sequel (Sanshiro Sugata Part Two). Following the end of World War II, Kurosawa’s career gathered speed with a series of films that cut across all genres, from crime thrillers to period dramas. Among the latter, his Rashomon (1951) became the first postwar Japanese film to find wide favor with Western audiences. It was Kurosawa’s The Seven Samurai (1954), however, that made the largest impact of any of his movies outside of Japan. Although heavily cut for its original release, this three-hour-plus medieval action drama, shot with painstaking attention to both dramatic and period… read more
This is for my side one of the if not Kurosawas finest films. Made in a time when Kurosawa began to stiggle hard for his projects, surrounded by a radical commercialisation of the japanese cinema and… read review
Master filmmaker Akira Kurosawa’s kidnapping drama is an absolute classic of its genre and a hallmark of Japanese cinema, even though it is based on an 87th Precinct novel by Ed McBain. Equal parts… read review
Following the two popular samurai comedies “Yojimbo” and “Sanjuro”, Akira Kurosawa and stars Toshiro Mifune and Tatsuya Nakadai head in a different direction with this taught police procedural (“Heaven… read review