Release date: August 14th, 1960
Director: Senkichi Taniguchi
Studio: Toho
Cast: Toshirō Mifune, Ryō Ikebe, Takashi Shimura, Yūzō Kayama, Jun Tazaki, Akihiko Hirata, Yumi Shirakawa, Akemi Kita, Tadao Nakamaru, Yuriko Hoshi, Yutaka Sada, Shoichi Hirose, Yoshifumi Tajima, Ikio Sawamura, Sachio Sakai, Yoshio Tsuchiya, Hideyo Amamoto et al.
Availability: VHS release. Available online via Internet Archive.
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I keep seeing random people say that they watched this online, but try as I might, I've never been able to find it anywhere, so I did what it is reasonable to do in that situation and spent $60 on a VHS tape that I digitized. Unfortunately, the VHS release is a reissue that shaves a full 26 minutes from the film's original running time of just under two hours. I'm not sure what was in that lost 26 minutes or if the file supposedly circulating online is the original or the cut version, but the VHS is all I've got, so I may never know.
Wherever else this might be hiding online, it is now available on
the Internet Archive until and unless Toho decides otherwise.
Since this will be a "watch-along" post, I won't get too heavy on the production backstory so as not to make this preamble longer than it has to be. (Gee, I never do that, do I?) In fact, the only thing I really want to note before I get into the movie itself is that its subtitled export version (also running 116 minutes) was kicking around Western shores throughout the 1960s; it was brought to the Toho La Brea in March of 1961, and also screened in Hawai'i in the summer of 1964. According to Galbraith, Toho also produced an English dub; details about that escape me. It's actually surprising that this isn't something Toho has chosen to release on DVD, considering that it stars Toshirō Mifune and was Yūzō Kayama's film debut.
Two warnings before we get started: 1. The picture quality on this tape is extraordinarily bad, and 2. Our man plays a real scumbag in this one.
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| I am NOT kidding about the picture quality. You can't even make out "Perspectiva Stereophonic Sound" in the title card. |
We begin with a flashback to the war, a time when everything was sepia. Kaji (Mifune) and Kikumori (Ikebe) were friends and competitors in marksmanship. We see Kaji throw himself over Kikumori to shield him from a bomb lobbed into their camp.
After the war, however, things change. Kaji is the foreman of a stevedoring crew and Kikumori runs a yakuza-affiliated nightclub, both based in Yokohama. Chotaro Masue (Takashi Shimura), the president of Masue Shipping, the company Kaji works for, sends his inexperienced, spoiled son Toshio (Kayama) to work under Kaji. Toshio shows up dressed pretty spiffy and balks when Kaji expects him to change his shoes to something more utilitarian.
Toshio's hardly been on the ship more than five minutes when there's an accident in which a crate containing an engine is dropped on one of Kaji's men, killing him. At the man's funeral, Kaji hands the president a request for retirement, which the president immediately rips up.
Looking disheartened, Kaji goes to visit his old friend Kikumori's Blue Moon nightclub to tell him about what happened to his crewman. When he arrives, Kikumori says something that implies he doesn't visit too often, so we get the feeling that they've drifted apart a bit. Kaji also seems aware that Kikumori is associating with yakuza, and Kikumori for his part is also pretty open about it, but neither of them comes off overly reproachful of the other's life choices. Kikumori has a girlfriend(?) named Natsue (Yuriko Hoshi) who is deaf-mute, we're also introduced to her in this scene.
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Ryō Ikebe looking at this monkey like how I look at my bank account after I spend $60 on a VHS tape again
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We also get Yūzō Kayama performing a little ditty; I guess Toho's not quite letting him flex his
Young Guy chops with a real performance yet, because the lyrics to the song he's playing are basically "be-bop-a-bop-a-diddy-dah-bop-a-be-bop". As an aside, the dubbing here is really terrible. There's no sound while Mifune is looking through a window in Ikebe's office that opens onto the stage, and the song cuts really awkwardly before it feels like it should.
Plot starts happening when Kaji stops to have a drink with his crew at a ramshackle dockside hotel. One of his crewmen, Taro (a very bare-chested Yoshifumi Tajima), finds that another, Santa (Ikio-chan), had a wad of cash stuffed in his suitcase, and it comes out that he'd been asked by a yakuza to steal something for money. The crew doesn't take this well. Santa apologizes, gives up the money, and describes the man who paid him off. Kaji and a few others decide to let the plan proceed, and then lie in wait while Santa presents the yakuza and his men with the goods he's procured.
Taro threatens the yakuza with a little sickle; the head yakuza Igarashi (Ren Yamamoto) pulls a pistol. But Kaji has even more men at the ready and they outnumber the yakuza. The boat cops(??) arrive and everyone disperses, but Kaji takes Igarashi back to the ship where Igarashi "helps him with his inquiries". Right as Igarashi is about to confess, though, an unknown party sticks their hand through a window and shoots him dead, leaving his gang's secrets beyond Kaji's reach - for now.
It's pretty obvious here that Kikumori, having been established as affiliated with yakuza, is somehow involved. After the failed confession scene, we're introduced to Hirata's character Toriumi along with some other henchmen. Toriumi is a hitman working under a Kobe yakuza boss named Tsukamoto (Jun Tazaki), who plans to take over Masue Shipping by force and establish a drug trade with their shipping routes. Tsukamoto is frustrated that Kikumori seems to be reluctant to get in Kaji's way and has a little parlay with him along with several of his goons.

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| I read a review of this movie that described it as having "elements of BL". |
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| Toriumi dresses like he's in a '30s American gangster movie. |
Yoshio Tsuchiya is here; he usually is.
So now we've got a few elements in play: Tsukamoto is an outside force pitting two men against each other who, although opposed morally, had been in equilibrium until then. And then we've got Toshio, who is a liability due to being such a chucklehead, and is still hanging around Blue Moon. Tsukamoto's gang discusses the boy with his henchmen and with Harumi (Akemi Kita), a waitress; I think I caught Toriumi saying basically "You want me to do him?" so our Wakadaisho is on thin ice. (Kaji actually calls Toshio "wakadan'na" - foreshadowing??)
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| I'm gonna have a coronary. |
There's a little romantic subplot in the fact that, although Natsue lives with Kikumori, she's really in love with Kaji, and Kaji is in love with her too (Kikumori doesn't seem to treat her very well), but I don't care for romantic subplots so I was not paying attention to it. Yumi Shirakawa's character, the elder Masue's secretary, is also in love with Kaji. Natsue visits Kikumori in his office, but leaves when she sees that Shirakawa also has her eye on Kaji.
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| "Gomenasai" - sorry/forgive me. |
Harumi is now working for Tsukamoto, and as I've said, Toshio is a galoot who is easily manipulated by her. This comes into play later. When Toriumi and his associates show up and Toriumi tries to snatch Harumi from Toshio, a big dramatic fight breaks out. Mifune is literally just chucking dudes bodily around the dance floor, it's extremely entertaining.
I have to say I'm really impressed by Hirata's acting here, he is unrecognizable as just this absolute dirtbag yakuza underling, such a deeply sleazy, nasty guy. He's speaking dialect, he wears a patterned silk shirt later in the movie, it's all very typical yakuza.
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| Mifune threw him into a fountain. |
Meanwhile, back at the plot, Toshio has been persuaded by Harumi into stealing stock certificates from his father's safe. Toshio's father immediately knows it's his son who stole the certificates, so he goes to Harumi's place to confront him there. (I have to admit I'm getting a kick out of Kayama's first-ever screen role being "guy who sucks".)
Toriumi had been listening carefully from
the closet somewhere outside Harumi's room, waiting for Shimura to leave, and once he did, he hit him with his car - not killing him, but critically injuring him. He is brought to surgery and his secretary assures Kaji that he'll be alright.
Toshio immediately regrets what he did and calls Harumi (who is also involved with Toriumi) to ask for the stock certificates back, but she tells him that she doesn't have them anymore. Kaji and Taro go to her room to confront/intimidate her, and at the same time Tsukamoto gets on the phone with her asking about the certificates - she decides to give them to Kaji and his man instead. It's right at this point in the film that Kaji learns the full extent of Kikumori's involvement with Tsukamoto, as Harumi confesses that Kikumori is a pawn in the whole thing.
Kaji goes to Kikumori and confronts him about his dealings with the Kobe gang, with his crew tailing him, making a nuisance of themselves and insisting to be served. There's an interesting dynamic going on here that I think serves as a thought-provoking contrast to later yakuza films: Kaji is the one who's in charge of a bunch of roughnecks, but they're hard-working, honest people; meanwhile Kikumori owns a nightclub full of dangerous men in sharp suits that looks posh on the surface but runs on corruption. We get to see our obligatory scantily-clad Toho nightclub dancer, who this time is actually a white lady. We also get nightclub fight scene #2, and while it is another all-out brawl, Kaji and Kikumori are the main fighters this time.
But suddenly a gunshot stops the commotion: it's Natsue, firing one of Kikumori's rifles to get everyone to stop fighting and make up.
Another thing I read about this movie when I was looking at reviews before watching it was that it's surprisingly mean to its women characters, and oh boy, is that ever true. Kikumori has Harumi "help him with his inquiries" in quite violent fashion involving the use of a hot shower. Somebody said that this "feels like a Nikkatsu movie" and I think that's a great way to sum it up. I think Toho was going for a deliberately gritty, rough vibe here, and it comes out pretty harrowing to watch at points, although it is ultimately too dated and fakey to feel genuinely upsetting.
I'm... not entirely sure where else to mention this, but I think Sachio Sakai is playing his character camp gay for some reason.
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| During one of the bar fights he breaks a bottle over someone's head and then apologizes. |
Anyway, Tsukamoto has his heavies set fire to some cargo while Kaji's crew is working with it. Also, some more of Tsukamoto's men go to Blue Moon and dunk Toshio's head in a big pot full of water (again, very amused that this was the public's first impression of the guy who would become one of Toho's biggest heartthrobs).
Kaji seems to have confidence in Toshio despite him being a spoiled wimp, so he and Toshio announce their decision to take on a dangerous job hauling crates of gunpowder to regain some of the trust that was lost when their client's cargo got attacked under Masue Shipping's watch. The men agree, and Toshio goes back to his still-bandaged father to tell him that he's restoring their company's good name.
Because this movie kind of hates women, Toriumi assaults Natsue as she's about to leave Kikumori's house for good, and she then commits suicide. It really doesn't feel like there's any point to this.
Now, here is where we get to the part I was most anticipating based on what I had read about it in reviews: Kikumori and Toriumi have a rifle duel while both of them are riding speedboats, which is exactly as ridiculous as it sounds and I kind of love it. So much of this movie is goofy-icky, it's nice to see something that's just goofy-goofy.
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| Imagining some 16-year-old girl madly in love with Ryō Ikebe ca. 1960 watching this and just losing her entire mind |
Both shoot, and Toriumi grazes Kikumori and knocks him over, but Kikumori kills Toriumi. (And now there's still ten minutes left to go, so I have to watch ten more minutes of Man Stuff to write about it on here...)
Kaji begins hauling the gunpowder, and Kikumori goes to Tsukamoto's lair to confront him and his men, but is ambushed by them. Hideyo Amamoto is here now as a miscellaneous unnamed henchman (his usual fare around this time). He dies quickly and has no lines but I always like seeing him.
Tsukamoto demands that Kikumori snipe the gunpowder while Kaji is loading it on the ship. They take him to the dock, hand him a rifle, and of course he starts shooting the yakuza instead. During the shootout, Kikumori is fatally wounded while kicking Kaji out of the way of one of the yakuza's bullets, and he tells Kaji that the Tsukamoto gang plan to shoot up the gunpowder and cause it to explode.
Kaji shoots Tsukamoto dead, effectively ending the whole plot - and the movie, as police sirens approach from the distance. I found it interesting that Kaji is almost in the same uniform he started the movie with, during the war flashback. Maybe some commentary about how Kaji stayed true to what he believed in as a soldier, while Kikumori "took off the uniform", so to speak, or maybe I'm reading way too much into it (I'm almost definitely reading way too much into it).
Well, I certainly have some quibbles with this movie from my 21st-century feminist standpoint, but setting that aside, this was pretty good. It was surprisingly rough (some awkward cuts in addition to the poor dubbing) but Toho movies were usually produced pretty quickly so that can be excused. Mifune is good as always, and Ikebe is a bit flat, but I thought Hirata was fantastic in this role. I feel like it's rare to see him get a role where he can actually be something instead of just delivering lines, and he always does it well, whether it requires him to be emotionally messed-up, like in
Godzilla and
Farewell Rabaul, or downright scummy, like in this movie.
In any event, you should go
watch the whole thing for yourself, and when Toho puts this out on DVD like they should, I'll be the first to buy it and see it in decent quality instead of a grimy VHS rip.