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Throne of Blood

1957 - Not Rated
Release Date: 05/27/2003
Features: DVD Features: Region 1 Keep Case Single Side - Dual Layer Full Frame - 1.33 Additional Release Material: Alternate Subtitle Translations Audio Commentary: Michael Jeck - Japanese Film Scholar Trailers: Original Theatrical Trailer Text/Photo Galleries: Essay: Kurosawa Piece by Stephen Prince - Film Scholar
Original Language:  Japanese 
Time:  110  mins.
J&R Item # 1021397_11
UPC # 037429175828
Label: Criterion Collection
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Criterion Collection DVD
 
1957 - Not Rated
Release Date: 09/22/2009
Features: DVD Features: Region 1 Full Frame - 1.33 Audio: Japanese Subtitles - English
Original Language:  N/A
Time:  109  mins.
J&R Item # 1021397_12
UPC # 715515050814
Label: Criterion Collection
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$19.95
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Criterion Collection DVD
 
Plot Credits Reviews Related Shipping
Akira Kurosawa's stunning reconception of Shakespeare's MACBETH is a dark samurai drama, set in feudal Japan. As the film begins, two soldiers--Washizu (Toshir� Mifune) and Miki (Minoru Chiaki)--find themselves lost in a dense forest during a powerful thunderstorm. Seemingly unable to leave the woods, they encounter a ghostly old woman who predicts that Washizu will soon rise to power. At the goading of his ruthless wife, Asaji (Isuzu Yamada), Washizu embarks on a murderously ambitious path and quickly fulfills the prophecy. However, his ascension is cursed by his brutal actions and soon opposition arises to challenge his blood-stained rule. One of the finest Shakespeare adaptations to appear in any medium, Kurosawa's THRONE OF BLOOD is covered in an entrancingly macabre web. The always-amazing Mifune gives one of his greatest performances as the haunted yet unrelenting Lord Washizu, while Yamada portrays the eeriest version of Lady Macbeth to ever grace the screen or stage. A master of reinterpretation, Kurosawa incorporates strong elements of Japanese Noh drama into the film, and the result adds to the somber and chilling mood. The film's highlight, however, is the tense and skillfully paced finale, which features Washizu literally up against the wall as he faces an army of vengeful archers.

"...One of the truest presentations of Shakespeare's tragedy..." -- Mark Chalon Smith , (Los Angeles Times)

"...Kurosawa's visual daring is sustained to the very end....This stands as one of the most successful translations of Shakespeare to film..." -- Lucy Neville , (Sight and Sound)

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