Best known for dramas such as 'Until We Meet Again' and 'An Inlet of Muddy Water', the Japanese filmmaker Tadashi Imai was also the director of 'Revenge', a highly accomplished and brutal jidaigeki picture. These two sensibilities come together in the film that night just stand as Imai's masterpiece: 'Cruel Tale of Bushido'. Kinnosuke Nakamura (Miyamoto Musashi) stars in multiple roles, playing seven generations of men belonging to the same family, n the modern day, salaryman Susumu likura is devastated by his wife's attempted suicide. In his grief, Susumu recalls the listory of his family over the previous 350 years: tale after tale of men who have suffered, debased themselves and made untold sacrifices in the name of 'bushido', or the moral code of the samurai. Faturing EijiroTono (Seven Samurai) and Masayuki Mori (Rashomon) in supporting roles and boasting a foreboding score by the celebrated composer Toshiro Mayuzumi, 'Cruel Tale of Bushido' won the Golden Bear Award at the 1963 Berlin Film Festival for its uncompromising deconstruction of the all-too-often romanticised concept of bushido.
Bushido: The Cruel Code of the Samurai / Bushidô zankoku monogatari / Cruel Tales of Bushido / The Oath of Obedience / Bushido, Samurai Saga / Cruel Story of the Samurai's Way
Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio 3.0, Japanese LPCM Mono
Subtitles:
English
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.35:1
Colour:
B & W
BLU-RAY Regions:
B
Bonus:
New interview with film critic Tony Rayns
Seven Kinds of Samurai: Tadashi Imai's Cruel Tale - new video essay on 'Cruel Tale of Bushido' and Japanese history by Jonathan Clements, author of 'A Brief History of Japan'
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