Tags / Kurosawa

"Kurosawa"

8 BuzzVerdicts

Seven Samurai

4.8

1954 · Akira Kurosawa · 207 min · Action / Drama

Akira Kurosawa's 1954 epic runs over three hours and earns every minute. Seven warriors defend a farming village against bandits, and from that simple premise Kurosawa built one of the most influential films in cinema history. The action sequences remain thrilling, the characters are drawn with precision and warmth, and the final message about who truly wins and loses in war resonates across decades and cultures. Its length is a commitment, but there's a reason this is the film other filmmakers keep coming back to.

Ikiru

4.7

1952 · Akira Kurosawa · 143 min · Drama

Akira Kurosawa's 1952 drama about a dying bureaucrat who searches for meaning in his final months is one of the most deeply humane films ever made. Takashi Shimura delivers a performance of extraordinary subtlety, tracing a man's journey from hollow routine to purposeful action without a single false note. The unconventional second-half structure divides some viewers, but it serves Kurosawa's larger point about how institutions consume individual effort. It's a film that earns its tears honestly.

Ran

4.7

1985 · Akira Kurosawa · 162 min · Epic / Drama

Akira Kurosawa's final epic is a staggering visual achievement, translating King Lear into feudal Japan with a scale and emotional ferocity that few directors have ever matched. The battle sequences, filmed with real cavalry and practical effects, remain some of the most breathtaking ever committed to film. Tatsuya Nakadai's performance as the aging warlord Hidetora anchors the entire production with operatic grief. The 162-minute runtime and deliberate pacing will test viewers looking for constant action, and the Shakespearean source material means the tragedy is unrelenting. But for audiences willing to submit to Kurosawa's vision, this is cinema operating at the highest level, a meditation on power, betrayal, and the consequences of a life built on violence.

Yojimbo

4.5

1961 · Akira Kurosawa · 110 min · Action / Drama

Akira Kurosawa's 1961 samurai film created a character archetype that reshaped action cinema across cultures. Toshiro Mifune plays a wandering swordsman who strolls into a corrupt town and systematically destroys both warring factions from within, and his performance is one of the coolest things ever committed to film. The blend of dark humor, sudden violence, and moral ambiguity influenced everything from spaghetti westerns to modern action films. It's leaner and more purely entertaining than Kurosawa's deeper works, and that's not a criticism.

High and Low

4.5

1963 · Akira Kurosawa · 143 min · Crime / Drama

Akira Kurosawa's 1963 crime thriller splits cleanly into two halves and excels at both. The first is a claustrophobic moral drama about a wealthy industrialist who must decide whether to bankrupt himself to save a child who isn't his. The second is a meticulous police procedural tracking the kidnapper through the underworld of Yokohama. Toshiro Mifune anchors the moral weight, the detective work is riveting, and Kurosawa's use of the literal high and low geography of the city gives the class themes a visual force that words alone couldn't achieve.

Rashomon

4.5

1950 · Akira Kurosawa · 88 min · Crime / Drama

Akira Kurosawa's 1950 masterpiece posed a question that cinema hadn't asked before: what happens when every witness to an event tells a different truth? Four contradictory accounts of a crime in a forest created a narrative structure so original that 'the Rashomon effect' entered common language. At 88 minutes, it's lean and hypnotic, powered by Toshiro Mifune's ferocious energy and Kazuo Miyagawa's groundbreaking cinematography. Some viewers find the structure more intellectually stimulating than emotionally engaging, but few deny its brilliance.

Throne of Blood

4.3

1957 · Akira Kurosawa · 110 min · Drama / War

Akira Kurosawa's 1957 adaptation of Macbeth transplants Shakespeare's tragedy into feudal Japan and strips it to bone. Toshiro Mifune and Isuzu Yamada deliver performances that channel the ambition and guilt of the original through Noh theater traditions, creating something that feels both ancient and timeless. The fog-drenched atmosphere is suffocating, the arrow-filled climax is one of cinema's great sequences, and the spare approach works as both Shakespeare interpretation and standalone drama. It trades psychological depth for visceral impact, and the trade mostly works.

The Hidden Fortress

4.0

1958 · Akira Kurosawa · 139 min · Adventure / Comedy

Akira Kurosawa's 1958 adventure comedy is his most purely entertaining film, a rousing tale of two bickering peasants, a fierce general, and a disguised princess trying to smuggle gold through enemy territory. It's the film that directly inspired Star Wars, and watching it, you can see exactly where George Lucas found his template. The humor lands, the action thrills, and Mifune commands every scene he's in. It lacks the depth of Kurosawa's masterworks, but as sheer crowd-pleasing cinema, it delivers.