Zatoichi the Outlaw (座頭市牢破り, Zatōichi rōyaburi) is a 1967 Japanese chambara film directed by Satsuo Yamamoto and starring Shintaro Katsu as the blind masseur Zatoichi. It was originally released by the Daiei Motion Picture Company (later acquired by Kadokawa Pictures), and is the first film produced by Katsu Productions (Katsu's own company).
Zatoichi the Outlaw | |
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Japanese | 座頭市牢破り |
Hepburn | Zatōichi rōyaburi |
Directed by | Satsuo Yamamoto |
Written by | Koji Matsumoto Takehiro Nakajima Kiyokata Saruwaka |
Based on | Zatoichi by Kan Shimozawa |
Produced by | Masaichi Nagata |
Starring | Shintaro Katsu Rentarō Mikuni Kō Nishimura Toshiyuki Hosokawa |
Cinematography | Kazuo Miyagawa |
Edited by | Kanji Suganuma |
Music by | Sei Ikeno |
Production companies | Daiei Studios Katsu Productions |
Release date |
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Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Zatoichi the Outlaw is the sixteenth episode in the 26-part film series devoted to the character of Zatoichi.
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In a rural village, Zatoichi (Katsu) encounters Shushi Ohara (Suzuki; modeled after 18th-century agriculturalist Yagaku Ohara) a sword-less rōnin who defends himself against multiple attackers without killing them. Ohara leads a peasant movement advocating the abstention from gambling, drinking, and whoring.
In a contemporary review, "Chie." of Variety noted that this Zatoichi film was given a big name director Satuso Yamamoto and a well known actor Rentarō Mikuni which made the film "inflated [...] which, by comparison with the others, not very entertaining."[2]
J. Doyle Wallis, in a review for DVD Talk, wrote that "[t]his film has one of the better plots in the series, the almost hippie ex-samurai's teaching posing as a threat to the gangsters who prefer the villagers to lead debauched lives. Unfortunately some of the storytelling is sloppy, particularly the side-plot characters who Ichi becomes involved with. Their introductions and back story were told so quickly and incidentally, that when their stories began to get a third act wrap up, I had trouble recalling who they were in the first place."[3]
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