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- AnecdotesBased on an unproduced script written by Akira Kurosawa and Hideo Oguni fifteen years earlier, entitled "Tenkichu odan sanbyaku ri" ("Three Hundred Miles Through Enemy Lines").
Commentaire en vedette
It's the Russo-Japanese War. The Japanese forces have had a major victory in Manchuria, but they are short on men and supplies. No more will be coming. The American ambassador has offered to broker a victorious peace, but the Japanese need another decisive victory. However, they do not know what lies beyond their lines. They decide to send a small patrol of cavalry out, ordering them to advance far enough to discover where the Russians are and how well supplied. It's a round trip of more than three hundred miles, to Mukden and back, with the Russians in pursuit.
Kazuo Mori directs, as he had before, a movie from a script by Akira Kurosawa, co-written with Hideo Oguni. If the era doesn't sound like Kurosawa's forte, stop and realize his script had been written in 1942, when he was struggling to make the leap from well-regarded Assistant Director, usually under Kajiro Yamamoto, to director. It wouldn't be for another year until he finally made the top spot. For the moment, he was turning out scripts that he hoped would pass the censor. Surely a story about valiant Japanese cavalrymen would turn the trick?
Nope. As directed by Mori, it has a lot of Japanese national pride, a sense of loyalty to the army, soldiers willing to commit hara-kiri lest the mission fail, and lots of snow. Mostly, it's a grand adventure into unknown lands, a voyage extraordinaire that suggests Jules Verne's MICHAEL STROGOFF. Kurosawa would later adapt European classics like Shakespeare and Gorky. It's not much of a stretch to presume he knew Verne.
Michio Takahashi's black-and-white cinematography of men in snowy landscapes is gorgeous. There's also lots of nice stunt riding.
Kazuo Mori directs, as he had before, a movie from a script by Akira Kurosawa, co-written with Hideo Oguni. If the era doesn't sound like Kurosawa's forte, stop and realize his script had been written in 1942, when he was struggling to make the leap from well-regarded Assistant Director, usually under Kajiro Yamamoto, to director. It wouldn't be for another year until he finally made the top spot. For the moment, he was turning out scripts that he hoped would pass the censor. Surely a story about valiant Japanese cavalrymen would turn the trick?
Nope. As directed by Mori, it has a lot of Japanese national pride, a sense of loyalty to the army, soldiers willing to commit hara-kiri lest the mission fail, and lots of snow. Mostly, it's a grand adventure into unknown lands, a voyage extraordinaire that suggests Jules Verne's MICHAEL STROGOFF. Kurosawa would later adapt European classics like Shakespeare and Gorky. It's not much of a stretch to presume he knew Verne.
Michio Takahashi's black-and-white cinematography of men in snowy landscapes is gorgeous. There's also lots of nice stunt riding.
- boblipton
- 17 oct. 2019
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Three Hundred Miles Through Enemy Lines
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 26 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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What is the English language plot outline for Nichiro senso shori no hishi: Tekichu odan sanbyaku-ri (1957)?
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