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No Regrets for Our Youth

Wagan Seishun ni Kuinashi

Japan

1946

110 Min
Black and White
Japanese
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Akira Kurosawa

SCR Eijirô Hisaita

DP Asakazu Nakai

CAST Setsuko Hara, Susumu Fujita, Denjiro Okochi, Haruko Sugimura, Eiko Miyoshi, Aritake Kono

MUSIC Tadashi Hattori

Synopsis

In Akira Kurosawa’s first film after the end of World War II, future beloved Ozu regular Setsuko Hara gives an astonishing performance as Yukie, the only female protagonist in Kurosawa’s body of work and one of his strongest heroes. Transforming herself from genteel bourgeois daughter to independent social activist, Yukie traverses a tumultuous decade in Japanese history. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Akira_kurosawa

Akira Kurosawa

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

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Crap Monster

3Feb09

Often overlooked Post-War examination by Kurosawa. Not great, but a good example of his non-jidai geki output.  

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Untitled

By Rodney Welch on December 30, 2008

As the 1946 date indicates, this moving drama from Akira Kurosawa was truly a hot-off-the-presses sort of enterprise; the country had barely been liberated from militarist oppression than the young…  read review

Untitled

By Adam Suraf on December 28, 2008

Following the war Akira Kurosawa would begin to establish a rhythmic form to his films more personal in content and structure than his pre-war films, perhaps due to lighter occupation enforced censorship…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.