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DramaThriller

Yojimbo

- Kill one or a hundred... you only hang once

A nameless ronin, or samurai with no master, enters a small village in feudal Japan where two rival businessmen are struggling for control of the local gambling trade. Taking the name Sanjuro Kuwabatake, the ronin convinces both silk merchant Tazaemon and sake merchant Tokuemon to hire him as a personal bodyguard, then artfully sets in motion a full-scale gang war between the two ambitious and unscrupulous men.

Release Date : 1961-04-25

Language :Japanese

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : TOHO

Production Country : Japan

Alternative Titles : The Bodyguard

Cast

Toshirō Mifune

Character Name : Sanjuro Kuwabatake / The Samurai

Original Name : 三船敏郎

Gender : Male

Tatsuya Nakadai

Character Name : Unosuke, gunfighter

Original Name : 仲代達矢

Gender : Male

Yōko Tsukasa

Character Name : Nui

Original Name : 司葉子

Gender : Female

Isuzu Yamada

Character Name : Orin

Original Name : 山田五十鈴

Gender : Female

Daisuke Katō

Character Name : Inokichi

Original Name : 加東大介

Gender : Male

Seizaburō Kawazu

Character Name : Seibê - brothel operator

Original Name : 河津清三郎

Gender : Male

Takashi Shimura

Character Name : Tokuemon, sake brewer

Original Name : 志村喬

Gender : Male

Hiroshi Tachikawa

Character Name : Yoichiro

Original Name : 太刀川寛

Gender : Male

Yōsuke Natsuki

Character Name : Kohei's Son

Original Name : 夏木陽介

Gender : Male

Eijirō Tōno

Character Name : Gonji, Tavern Keeper

Original Name : 東野英治郎

Gender : Male

Kamatari Fujiwara

Character Name : Tazaemon

Original Name : 藤原釜足

Gender : Male

Ikio Sawamura

Character Name : Hansuke

Original Name : 沢村いき雄

Gender : Male

Atsushi Watanabe

Character Name : The Cooper (Coffin-Maker)

Original Name : 渡辺篤

Gender : Male

Susumu Fujita

Character Name : Homma, Instructor Who Skips Town

Original Name : 藤田進

Gender : Male

Kyū Sazanka

Character Name : Ushitora

Original Name : 山茶花究

Gender : Male

Kō Nishimura

Character Name : Kuma

Original Name : 西村晃

Gender : Male

Takeshi Katō

Character Name : Ronin Kobuhachi

Original Name : 加藤武

Gender : Male

Ichirō Nakatani

Character Name : First Samurai

Original Name : 中谷一郎

Gender : Male

Sachio Sakai

Character Name : First Foot Soldier

Original Name : 堺左千夫

Gender : Male

Akira Tani

Character Name : Kame

Original Name : 谷晃

Gender : Male

Namigoro Rashomon

Character Name : Kannuki the Giant

Original Name : Namigoro Rashomon

Gender : Male

Yoshio Tsuchiya

Character Name : Kohei

Original Name : 土屋嘉男

Gender : Male

Gen Shimizu

Character Name : Magotaro

Original Name : 清水元

Gender : Male

Jerry Fujio

Character Name : Roku - Samurai Whose Arm is Cut

Original Name : ジェリー藤尾

Gender : Male

Yutaka Sada

Character Name : Matsukichi

Original Name : 佐田豊

Gender : Male

Shin Ōtomo

Character Name : Kumosuke

Original Name : 大友伸

Gender : Male

Shōichi Hirose

Character Name : Ushitora Follower

Original Name : 広瀬正一

Gender : Male

Hideyo Amamoto

Character Name : Yahachi

Original Name : 天本英世

Gender : Male

Shōji Ōki

Character Name : Sukeju

Original Name : 大木正司

Gender : Male

Fuminori Ōhashi

Character Name : Second Samurai

Original Name : 大橋史典

Gender : Male

Hiroshi Kiyama

Character Name : Farmer

Original Name : 寄山弘

Gender : Male

Senkichi Ōmura

Character Name : Traveler

Original Name : 大村千吉

Gender : Male

Noriko Honma

Character Name : Farmer's Ex-wife

Original Name : 本間文子

Gender : Female

Ryusuke Nishio

Character Name : Seibei Follower

Original Name : Ryusuke Nishio

Gender : Male

Naoya Kusakawa

Character Name : Seibei Follower

Original Name : 草川直也

Gender : Male

Nadao Kirino

Character Name : Seibei Follower

Original Name : 桐野洋雄

Gender : Male

Mitsuo Tsuda

Character Name :

Original Name : 津田光男

Gender : Male

Shinpei Takagi

Character Name : Ushitora Follower

Original Name : 高木新平

Gender : Male

Jun Ōtomo

Character Name : Seibei Follower

Original Name : 大友純

Gender : Male

Akio Kusama

Character Name : Ushitora Follower

Original Name : 草間璋夫

Gender : Male

Yasuzō Ogawa

Character Name : Ushitora Follower

Original Name : 小川安三

Gender : Male

Hiroshi Takagi

Character Name : Ushitora Follower

Original Name : Hiroshi Takagi

Gender : Male

Jun'ichirō Mukai

Character Name : Seibei Follower

Original Name : 向井淳一郎

Gender : Male

Takuzō Kumagai

Character Name :

Original Name : 熊谷卓三

Gender : Male

Ichirō Chiba

Character Name : Second Foot Soldier

Original Name : 千葉一郎

Gender : Male

Haruya Sakamoto

Character Name : Ushitora Follower

Original Name : 坂本晴哉

Gender : Male

Rinsaku Ogata

Character Name : Seibei Follower

Original Name : 緒方燐作

Gender : Male

Takeo Ogushi

Character Name : Ushitora Follower

Original Name : Takeo Ogushi

Gender : Male

Yoko Terui

Character Name : Woman at Seibei's House

Original Name : Yoko Terui

Gender : Male

Hiromi Mineoka

Character Name : Woman at Seibei's House

Original Name : Hiromi Mineoka

Gender : Male

Michiko Kawa

Character Name : Woman at Seibei's House

Original Name : 河美智子

Gender : Female

Reviews

A

Andres Gomez

@tanty

2021-06-23

Great movie! Akira Kurosawa is just a master movie maker.

C

CRCulver

@CRCulver

2021-06-23

Akira Kurosawa's 1961 film YOJIMBO is a Japanese period drama where wily strategy is worth just as much as prowess with a sword. In the late Edo era (some decades before its end in 1868) a community is plagued by two opposing gangs who have built up a criminal empire of prostitution and gambling. Even the local officials are on the take. Into this town steps a nameless samurai (Toshiro Mifune). Once they get a taste of his swordsmanship, both sides want to hire him, but he decides to play them off against each other and free the innocent citizens from this evil. In past films Kurosawa had taken advantage of Mifune's ability to produce exaggerated facial expressions of laughter and fear. Here, however, the nameless samurai is completely unflappable, while it is the criminal bosses and corrupt officials who play the clowns. Ikio Sawamura is a town constable constantly toadying to the gangsters, for example, while Isuzu Yamada gives a memorably sassy performance as the madame of a brothel. In what would become a convention of the Japanese period drama, the numerous henchmen in the gangs were apparently chosen from the most grotesque men that Kurosawa could find (each furthermore has distinctively ratty attire), and one thug is played by an actor suffering from gigantism. That darkly comedic drama between the characters coexists with brutal violence. Yet, while audiences may have been shocked in 1961 by the samurai dispatching his opponents with realistic slashing sound effects and a hacked off limb, there are only a handful of fights here, and they are all over in a flash. (Indeed, one of the most striking aspects of Mifune's acting is his speed in executing the sword moves.) While Kurosawa delights in gangsters getting their comeuppance, he doesn't revel in gore. Much has been said about how this Japanese film would inspire Westerns made in America and Europe (Sergio Leone's A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS was a straight-up remake). However, the film is also interesting for how it draws so much on influences from the West. Kurosawa's inspiration was an American crime caper by Dashiell Hammett, the samurai’s walk down the main street is drawn from the Westerns of John Ford and others, the soundtrack mixes Japanese music with Western instruments such as harpsichord, and Tatsuya Nakadai's pretty-boy looks are clearly modeled on Hollywood. All in all, I was very impressed by this film. Everything here – from the script and aspect to little things like the wind and dust and the little decorations on the set – seems the result of great effort and talent, all coming together to impress the viewer. And like Kurosawa's RASHOMON, it stays fresh even as its elements have been repeatedly reused by other film and television productions for half a century now.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-08-13

I was surprised when I saw this, how late it was set - 19th Century - as I'd always imagined it to be of a more historical nature. That doesn't remotely detract from the story though - as again Kurosawa casts Yoshirô Mifune ("Sanjûrô") in the leading role. Here he is a wandering samurai who arrives in a village torn by strife. His skills are sought by the two opposing headmen and he quite successfully manages to play them off against each other - and keep the peace - until one the their sons arrives, armed with a pistol, and completely alters the balance of power. Mifune is superb as the maverick, thoroughly honourable and at times quite amusing ronin - I was reminded a little of the characterisation by Clint Eastwood in the Sergio Leone films - with a ruthless, violent streak: but somehow only towards those meritorious of their fate. It takes it's time, this - there is a fair degree of character development and as such, I felt quite invested in both Mifune and in his friend the innkeeper (Eijirô Tôno) as their peril gradually increases. The remainder of the cast adds to the tension well as does the frequent use of the weather in helping create the gripping atmosphere making this a corker of a film, very much worth watching.