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Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)

Posted By: supersoft
Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)

Buraikan (1970)
103 min | XviD 720x288 | 912 kb/s | 129 kb/s AC3 | 23.976 fps | 823 MB + 3% recovery record
Japanese | Subtitles: English and Spanish .srt | Genre: Drama / Comedy

A trio of characters in Edo intersect during a time of puritanical social reform. A ner-do-well, Naojiro, wants to become an actor and get his face in prints (this was the Japanese version of the supermarket tabloids in olden times) and he wants to marry a geisha but his overbearing mother disapproves. A man who abandoned his wife and child returns to discover tragedy has befallen his small family. A "buraikan" plots to overthrow the despotic lord who is imposing the strict social reforms.
Buraikan is an expert blend of art and history that follows the paths of six characters trying to make a living during the chaotic Tempou revolution. The intricate story lines are consistently funny, erotic, suspenseful, and absorbing. Nakadai Tatsuyo is eerily compelling as the handsome fortune teller. This dark, witty period drama is an absolute must for any film connoisseur.


Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)

Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)


A distinctive style permeates the entire film. The image composition is excellent with wonderful color design. The strong soundtrack is a quirky but enjoyable mix of Henry Mancini style jazz, traditional Japanese music and some odd musical styling. The acting is strong and does a lot to carry the film for those of us baffled by some of the goings on. While the film is named for the "buraikan" (played by Tetsuro Tamba), it seems the the center of attention is really Naojiro, played by Tatsuya Nakadai. No problem, he's an interesting enough character.

Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)

Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)


Veteran Japanese director Masahiro Shinoda ( Kaseki no mori a.k.a. The Petrified Forest, Shinmoku a.k.a. Silence) delivers another exceptional work of art. His absorbing movie from the beginning of the 70's revolves around six characters that try to make a living during Japan's chaotic Tempou revolution. Based on a popular Japanese stage play, Buraikan teleports the magic art form of traditional Kabuki to the video screens of all true connoisseurs!

Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)

Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)


Nominally this movie fits into the "Jidaigeki" (Period Drama) genre. However, this movie is much more interesting with funny, complex characters. Tamba Testsuro (the head of Japanese secret service in "You Only Live Twice") is outstanding is the "lone wolf" Buraikan - a kind of good-hearted, if ruthless and highly clever monk. Nakadai Tatsuyo is also funny, eerie and compelling as the handsome, never-do-well, lazy fortune teller.

Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)


The story is set during the "Tempo Reform" period of Mizuno Tadakuni (1793-1851). Lord Mizuno was an extreme moralist and tried to outlaw more or less anything pleasurable. His reasoning was that things like staged plays, posters of actors, popular novels, expensive meals, cakes, dolls, paintings, etc… were wastes of the country's resources and contributed to the decline of the national moral fiber. Not a very fun-loving guy.
The movie has everything: multiple, well-developed, interleaved story lines. Well developed individual characters. Some eroticism, a lot of traditional art, many funny sequences, suspense, action.
This is an excellent movie, especially for lovers of Japanese history and art.

Masahiro Shinoda - Buraikan (1970)


Rip and subtitles (english and spanish) by JoseElLuzu from allzine.org.

Script/Guión: Mokuami Kawatake (play), Shuji Terayama (writer)
Cast/Reparto: Tatsuya Nakadai, Suisen Ichikawa, Shima Iwashita, Tetsuro Tamba, Shoichi Ozawa, Masakane Yonekura, Kaneko Ichinojo, Kiwako Taichi, Fumio Watanabe, Hiroshi Akutagawa, Hisashi Igawa, Kamatari Fujiwara, Jun Hamamura, Akiji Kobayashi, Aya Kawano