Throne of Blood
Kumonosu jô
Japan
1957
109 Min
Black and White
Japanese
One of the most celebrated screen adaptations of Shakespeare into film, Akira Kurosawa’s Throne of Blood reimagines Macbeth in feudal Japan. Starring Kurosawa’s longtime collaborator Toshiro Mifune and the legendary Isuzu Yamada as his ruthless wife, the film tells of a valiant warrior’s savage rise to power and his ignominious fall. With Throne of Blood, Kurosawa fuses one of Shakespeare’s greatest tragedies with the formal elements of Japanese Noh theater to make a Macbeth that is all his own—a classic tale of ambition and duplicity set against a ghostly landscape of fog and inescapable doom. —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
Una de las mejores peliculas de la historia. A mas de 50 años de su realizacion, este clasico sigue sorprendiendo por la maestria tecnica que Kurosawa demuestra a lo largo del film.(una buena muestra… read review
I can see, on second viewing, why this is so highly regarded. It’s a very dehumanized picture, and it evokes the themes of Macbeth visually, almost exclusively so (who has ever shot forests better… read review
Akira Kurosawa’s transplanting of ‘Macbeth’ into feudal Japan is unfortunately an incredibly uneven film. It’s a visual masterwork, with extraordinary imagery that’s some of the best Kurosawa – and… read review
Riding back from a decisive victory, master samurai Toshiro Mifune and Minoru Chiaki encounter a demon ghost in the middle of the Spider Castle forest, who prophesizes treason and death in the coming… read review