Status
Released
original language
ja
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
Kôichi Nishi
Public Corporation Vice President Iwabuchi
Assistant-to-the-Chief Wada
Itakura
Yoshiko Nishi
Tatsuo Iwabuchi
Administrative Officer Moriyama
Contract Officer Shirai
Construction Company Executive Director Kaneko
Construction Company President Hatano
Managing Director Miura
Mrs. Ariyama
Mrs. Furuya
Mrs. Moriyama
Public Corporation President Arimura
Public Prosecutor Horiuchi
Public Prosecutor Nonaka
Public Prosecutor Okakura
Tomoko Wada
ADA Secretary
Construction Company Employee #1
Construction Company Employee #2
Detective
Hitman
Iwabuchi Maid #1
Iwabuchi Maid #2
Legal Adviser
Management Section Worker
Prosecutor
Reporter A
Reporter B
Reporter C
Reporter D
Safety Deposit Box Rental Receptionist
Taxi Driver
Wada's Daughter
Wedding Receptionist
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-11-17
We start with the sight of a group of journalists at a wedding. The daughter of an industrialist is marrying the son of another. Nothing new here until, that is, an extra wedding cake is wheeled into the reception shaped just like an office block. Sticking out of a seventh floor window is a rose. We are quickly told that symbolises the window from which the groom's father committed suicide. Shortly afterwards, two senior executives are arrested after a ¥12 billion deal is suspected of being a bit fishy. Neither executive will talk to the prosecutors so one is released and the other released and re-arrested. The latter man takes the hint and falls foul of a passing lorry! Could the events of years ago be coming back to haunt those responsible? It certainly has shades of Shakespeare's "Hamlet" to it, but this isn't one of my favourite Kurosawa films. Despite being almost 2¼ hours long I felt the characterisations rather under-developed. The always reliable Toshirô Mifune is the groom ("Nishi") and for a while there is a strong dynamic between him and the star of the film, for me anyway, Kô Nishimura ("Shirai). This latter man is complicit in the double dealings and is quite literally scared into helping "Nishi" expose the culprits and activities that caused his misery. The rest of the acting here is not up to the usual standard, though. There is a great deal of dialogue and in this case that slows the pace down and creates a sense of almost the ennui around the middle third of the film - just as the plot ought to be thickening. The denouement is also rather underwhelming - though, I suppose entirely plausible and totally consistent with the ethos of the title (and the source play), but I still left this screening just a bit disappointed.