- Yojimbo (film)
Infobox Film
name = Yojimbo
caption = Poster for "Yojimbo"
writer =Ryuzo Kikushima
Akira Kurosawa
starring =Toshirō Mifune Tatsuya Nakadai Yôko Tsukasa Isuzu Yamada
director =Akira Kurosawa
producer = Ryuzo Kikushima
Akira Kurosawa
Tomoyuki Tanaka
music =Masaru Satō
cinematography =Kazuo Miyagawa
Takao Saito
distributor = Toho Company Ltd.
released =April 25 ,1961
runtime = 110 minutes
country =Japan
language = Japanese
amg_id = 1:55840
imdb_id = 0055630
budget =
followed_by = "Sanjuro "nihongo|"Yojimbo"|用心棒|"Yōjinbō" is a 1961 "
jidaigeki " (period drama) film directed byAkira Kurosawa . It tells the story of a "ronin " (masterlesssamurai ), portrayed byToshirō Mifune , who arrives in a small town where competing crime lords make their money from gambling. The ronin convinces each crime lord to hire him as protection from the other. By careful political maneuvering and the use of his sword, he brings peace, but only by encouraging both sides to wipe each other out in bloody battles. The title of the film translates as 'bodyguard '. The ronin calls himself "Kuwabatake Sanjuro" (meaning "Mulberry Field thirty-year-old"), which he seems to make up while looking at amulberry field by the town. Thus, "Sanjuro" can be viewed as the original "Man with No Name " concept, made famous in theClint Eastwood -Sergio Leone collaborations, commonly known as the "Dollars Trilogy ".Inspirations
The film's look and themes were in part inspired by the
western film , in particular the films ofJohn Ford . The characters - the taciturn loner and the helpless townsfolk needing a protector - are reminiscent of Kurosawa's own "The Seven Samurai " (1954) and have become westernarchetype s, and the cinematography mimics conventional shots in western films such as that of the lone hero in a wide shot, facing an enemy or enemies from a distance while the wind kicks up dust between the two.Kurosawa stated that a major source for the plot was the "
film noir " classic "The Glass Key" (1942), an adaptation ofDashiell Hammett 's 1931 novel. In particular, the scene where the hero is captured by the villains and tortured before he escapes is copied almost shot for shot from "The Glass Key".Fact|date=May 2008 However, it has been noted that the overall plot of "Yojimbo" is actually much closer to that of another Hammett novel, "Red Harvest " (1929). Kurosawa scholarDavid Desser and film criticManny Farber , among others, state categorically that "Red Harvest" was the inspiration for the film; however, other scholars, such asDonald Richie , believe the similarities are coincidental. [Allen Barra, [http://dir.salon.com/story/books/feature/2005/02/28/hammett/index.html?pn=1 'From Red Harvest to Deadwood'] , "Salon" (2005)]Cast
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Toshirō Mifune ... Kuwabatake Sanjuro
*Tatsuya Nakadai ... Unosuke
*Yōko Tsukasa ... Nui
*Isuzu Yamada ... Orin
*Daisuke Katō ... Inokichi, Ushitora's younger brother
*Takashi Shimura ... Tokuemon, sake brewer
*Hiroshi Tachikawa ... Yoichiro
*Yosuke Natsuki ... Kohei's Son
*Eijirō Tōno ... Gonji, tavern keeper
*Kamatari Fujiwara ... Tazaemon, Silk merchant and Mayor of town
*Ikio Sawamura ... Hansuke, Officer of the town
*Susumu Fujita ... Homma, instructor who skips town
*Kyu Sazanka ... Ushitora, Crime lord number 1Production
Many of the actors in "Yojimbo" had worked with Kurosawa before and after, especially
Toshirō Mifune ,Takashi Shimura andTatsuya Nakadai .At one point the hero, beaten, disarmed and left for dead, recovers in a small hut where he practices with histhrowing knife by pinning a fluttering leaf. This effect was created by reversing the film: in reality, the leaf was pinned, the knife yanked away by a wire, and the leaf blown away.Influence
Both in Japan and the West, "Yojimbo" had a considerable influence on various forms of entertainment.
Kurosawa directed a companion piece to "Yojimbo" in 1962, entitled "
Sanjuro ", in which Mifune returns as the ronin, who keeps his "given name" Sanjuro (meaning "Thirtysomething") but he takes a different "surname" (in both films, he takes his surname from the plants he happens to be looking at when asked his name).In 1964, "Yojimbo" was remade as "
A Fistful of Dollars ", a spaghetti western directed bySergio Leone and starringClint Eastwood in his first appearance as theMan with No Name . Leone and his production company failed to secure the remake rights to Kurosawa's film, resulting in a lawsuit that delayed "Fistful"'s release in North America for three years. In "Yojimbo", theprotagonist defeats a man with a gun, when he carries only a knife and a sword; in the equivalent scene in "Fistful", Eastwood'spistol -wielding character survives being shot by arifle by hiding an iron plate under his clothes to serve as a shield against bullets.The 1970 film "Zatoichi Meets Yojimbo" also features Mifune as a similar character. It is the twentieth of a series of movies featuring the blind swordsman
Zatoichi . Although Mifune is clearly not playing the same man (his name is Sasso, and his personality and background are different in many key respects), the movie's title and some of its content do intend to suggest the image of the two iconic "Jidaigeki " characters confronting each other. "Incident at Blood Pass ", made in the same year, stars Mifune in a role similar to that of "Yojimbo".Stan Sakai 's comic book series "Usagi Yojimbo " derives its title from the film and frequently references the work of Akira Kurosawa."Last Man Standing" (1996), a Prohibition era
gangster thriller, directed by Walter Hill and starringBruce Willis , is an officially authorized remake of "Yojimbo."The "
anime " series "Kaze no Yojimbo " (2001; literally "Bodyguard of the Wind"), produced byKurosawa Productions retells the story of the original film in the modern era. Many of the characters and events in the series are analogous to characters and events in "Yojimbo", but additional subplots and characters are added to expand it into a 25-episode TV series and to distinguish it from Kurosawa's film. The anime film "Sword of the Stranger " (2007) features a swordsman with no name as its protagonist.The
PlayStation 2 game "Way of the Samurai " has many elements heavily inspired by Yojimbo. Another PlayStation 2 game, "", features characters with very similar costumes, features, and behavior.Notes
External links
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* [http://www.criterion.com/asp/release.asp?id=52&eid=68§ion=essay Criterion Collection essay by Alexander Sesonske]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A1161271 A Comparison of "Yojimbo", "A Fistful of Dollars" and "Last Man Standing"]
* " [http://www.jmdb.ne.jp/1961/ck002050.htm Yojimbo] " ja icon at theJapanese Movie Database
* " [http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/yojimbo/ Yojimbo] " at the Rotten Tomatoes
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