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    Harakiri

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    Poster of the movie Harakiri
    1962     Drama    
    Japan
    2h 15min
    Original language: Japanese
    ·
    Guide for parents: violence.
    13+
    Guide for parents: violence.
    ·
    Guide for parents: violence.
    ·
    Guide for parents: violence.
    ·
    Guide for parents: violence.
    ·
    Guide for parents: violence.
    ·
    Guide for parents: violence.
    ·
    Guide for parents: violence.

    During the Tokugawa Shogunate, many samurai clans were abolished, and clan lords were often forced to commit hara-kiri (ritual suicide). Many of the lords forbade their followers to follow suit. Because of this, countless swordsmen became masterless, ending up impoverished. One day a middle-aged samurai (Tatsuya Nakadai of Sword of Doom) asks to commit hara-kiri at the local ruler's castle. Flashbacks ensue explaining the tragedy of his son-in-law (Akira Ishihama), also a masterless samurai, who had been so desperate to obtain money for a doctor for his terminally ill wife and child, he had bluffed his way into the same castle to commit hara-kiri, hoping instead the lord would offer him employment. When the high-ranking samurai there (Tetsuro Tanba, Yoshiro Aoki and Ichiro Nakatani) had become enraged at what they believed was a growing trend to obtain sympathy, they had instructed the lord's advisor (Rentaro Mikuni) to make Ishihama follow through with his request. Nakadai gradually reveals his true identity to the ever more flustered Mikuni, humiliating the three men who forced the issue, and finally engaging in an extended one man killing spree of the castle's swordsmen.

    Directed byMasaki Kobayashi
    Written byShinobu Hashimoto
    CompanySignal InternationalTempo FilmsTempo Films

    Starring

    Tatsuya Nakadai
    Rentarô Mikuni
    + MORE

    Photos

    Photo from the movie Harakiri
    Photo from the movie Harakiri
    Photo from the movie Harakiri
    Photo from the movie Harakiri
    Photo from the movie Harakiri

    © Signal InternationalTempo FilmsTempo Films