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poster of Sansho the Bailiff
Rating: 8.1/10 by 369 users

Sansho the Bailiff (1954)

In medieval Japan, a woman and her children journey to find the family's patriarch, who was exiled years before.

Directing:
  • Kenji Mizoguchi
  • Tokuzō Tanaka
Writing:
  • Mori Ogai
  • Fuji Yahiro
  • Yoshikata Yoda
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Mar 31, 1954

Rating: 8.1/10 by 369 users

Alternative Title:
The Bailiff - US
Sansho, el gobernador - AR
Epistatis Sansho - GR
Управителят Саншо - BG
El intendente Sansho - ES
Lääninherra Sansho - FI
L'intendant Sansho - FR
Szansó tiszttartó - HU
Zarzadca Sansho - PL
Fogden Sansho - SE
Efendi Sansho - TR
O Intendente Sansho - BR
Sanshô dayû - JP
Sansho the Bailiff - US
산쇼다유 - KR
Sanshō dayū - JP
L'intendente Sansho - IT

Country:
Japan
Language:
日本語
Runtime: 02 hour 04 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: governor, japan, courtesan, exile, banishment, prostitution, compassion, based on short story, decree, mercy, feudal japan, 11th century, ancient japan
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CinemaSerf

When a benign provincial governor tries to intervene to protect his people from the brutality of the military, he is stripped of his rank and banished. His wife and children are forced to follow him, on foot, some time later and hopelessly ill-equipped for that task they fall prey to people traffickers who split the family up. The young daughter and son soon find themselves bought by the eponymous character and forced into cruel manual labour that only his son "Taro" (Akitake Kôno) seems at all concerned about. Can he help? Can they manage to keep some semblance of their erstwhile decency and nobility in the face of such indifference and oppression? Will the family ever reconcile? This is a glorious film to look at. The photography is dark, gloomy and hugely effective at eliciting a feeling of sorrow for the children as they struggle to survive in their new lives. There are glimmers of optimism, but Kenji Mizoguchi manages our expectations well. There is no yellow brick road here, the sunlit uplands are definitely there but we have no idea when (or if) one or other or neither of the children may ever reach them. The acting is poised and characterful - especially the young "Anju" (Kyôko Kagawa) who tries to look out for her initially weak and vulnerable younger brother "Zushio" (Yoshiaki Hanayagi). It is beautifully scored with a mixture of Japanese and classical themes that compliment well the contrasting images of poverty, wealth, cruelty and kindness of this story of barbarity and revenge. The cinematography does benefit from a big screen - it makes the story and the imagery all the more impactful, but even on a television this is is two hours that truly keeps you gripped.


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