Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Harakiri (1962)

Harakiri (1962) Poster

Harakiri (1962)
"Seppuku" (original title)

Not Rated  |   |  ActionDramaHistory  | 4 August 1964 (USA)
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An elder ronin samurai arrives at a feudal lord's home and requests an honorable place to commit suicide. But when the ronin inquires about a younger samurai who arrived before him things take an unexpected turn.

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  (screenplay),  (novel), 1 more credit »

Dictionary hara–kiri

Dictionary

hara–kiri

Definition of HARA-KIRI

1
:  ritual suicide by disembowelment practiced by the Japanese samurai or formerly decreed by a court in lieu of the death penalty
2
:  suicide 1b

Variants of HARA-KIRI

hara–kiri also hari–kari \ˌha-ri-ˈkir-ē, -ˈka-rē\

Origin of HARA-KIRI

Japanese harakiri, from hara belly + kiri cutting
First Known Use: 1840

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Harakiri (1962 film)

Harakiri (1962 film)



Shima Iwashita
Akira Ishihama
Music byTōru Takemitsu
CinematographyYoshio Miyajima
Distributed byShochiku
Release dates
September 16, 1962 (Japan)
Running time
133 min.
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Harakiri (切腹 Seppuku?, 1962) is a Japanese jidaigeki (period-drama) film directed by Masaki Kobayashi. The story takes place between 1619 and 1630 during the Edo period and the reign of the Tokugawa shogunate. It tells the story of Hanshirō Tsugumo, a warrior without a lord.[1] At the time, it was common for masterless samurai, or rōnin, to request to commit hara kiri in the palace courtyard in the hope of receiving alms from the remaining feudal lords.

Plot[edit]

Edo, 1630. Tsugumo Hanshirō arrives at the estate of the Ii clan and says that he wishes to commit seppuku within the courtyard of the palace. To deter him Saitō Kageyu (Rentarō Mikuni), the Daimyo's senior counselor, tells Hanshirō the story of another rōnin, Chijiiwa Motome – formerly of the same clan as Hanshirō.
Motome arrived at the palace a few months earlier and made the same request as Hanshirō. Infuriated by the rising number of "suicide bluffs", the three most senior samurai of the clan—Yazaki Hayato, Kawabe Umenosuke, and Omodaka Hikokuro—persuaded Saitō to force Motome to follow through and kill himself. Upon examining Motome's swords, their blades were found to be made of bamboo. Enraged that any samurai would, "pawn his soul", the House of Ii forced Motome to disembowel himself with his own bamboo blade, making his death slow, agonizingly painful, and deeply humiliating.
Despite this warning, Hanshirō insists that he has never heard of Motome and says that he has no intention of leaving the Ii palace alive. After a suicide pavilion is set up in the courtyard of the palace, Hanshirō is asked to name the samurai who shall behead him when the ritual is complete. To the shock of Saitō and the Ii retainers, Hanshirō successively names Hayato, Umenosuke, and Hikokuro—the three samurai who coerced the suicide of Motome. When messengers are dispatched to summon them, all three decline to come, saying they are suffering from a life-threatening illness.
After provoking their laughter by calling bushido a facade, Hanshirō recounts his story to Saitō and the Ii retainers. He did, he admits, know Motome after all. In 1619, his clan was abolished by the Shogun. His Lord decided to commit seppuku and, as his most senior samurai, Hanshirō planned to die alongside him. To prevent this, Hanshirō's closest friend performed seppuku and left a letter assigning to Hanshirō the guardianship of his teenage son—Motome. Despite Hanshirō's pleas, his Lord forbade him to kill himself.