Harakiri (The Criterion Collection)

Harakiri (The Criterion Collection)
by Masaki Kobayashi

Harakiri (The Criterion Collection)
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DVD details

Actor: Akira Ishihama, Masao Mishima, Shima Iwashita, Tatsuya Nakadai, Tetsurô Tanba
Director: Masaki Kobayashi
Brand: Image Entertainment
Cinematographer: Yoshio Miyajima
Editor: Hisashi Sagara
Producer: Tatsuo Hosoya
Writer: Shinobu Hashimoto
Writer: Yasuhiko Takiguchi
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Subtitled); Japanese (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono; English (Published)
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled
Picture Format: 2.35:1
Running Time: 133 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2005-08-23
Audience Rating: Unrated
Studio: Criterion

DVD Reviews of Harakiri (The Criterion Collection)

DVD Review: The finest "anti-samurai" samurai film ever made; a true work of art!
Summary: 5 Stars

(Note: All names are in Western order, given name then family name. Now, on to the review...) This is probably the finest chambara film you'll ever see, or at least that is my humble opinion. When I decided some time ago to go on a binge of watching so-called "samurai films," I did a small amount of research and decided to see this one first. I had previously only seen Kurosawa's films, and, in my humble opinion, he did not make optimum use of the great Tatsuya Nakadai the way that Masaki Kobayashi has in this film and others. I think Kobayashi/Nakadai is at least as powerful a collaborative combination as Kurosawa/Mifune. What is more, the film is a visual and conceptual masterpiece, symmetrically drawn by meticulous master Kobayashi (like Kurosawa he trained as an artist) and scripted by Shinobu Hashimoto, who also did great service for the more well-known (in the West anyway) Kurosawa.

This film concerns the happening (as shown at the beginning chronicled by the scribe of the House of Ii) in the case of a middle-aged ronin, Hanshiro Tsugumo (Nakadai, at age 29, playing age 50), who requests the use of the clan's forecourt so that he may commit seppuku (hara-kiri as it is also known) to end his days honorably, for he is starving in this post-Warring States economy. As a samurai warrior in peacetime, his services are no longer in demand, so he is forced to take piecemeal employment, observing all the prohibitions inherent in the Japanese class system (for instance, a samurai may not make footwear because of a sandal's proximity to the ground--thus only lower class craftsmen may do this). Clan Councilor Kageyu Saito (Rentaro Mikuni) hears Tsugumo's request and proceeds to tell him what he considers a cautionary tale of another ronin who had earlier made the same request. Mikuni is appropriately reserved, soft-spoken and serious; these requests have caused the Ii and other houses serious problems, because many ronin have been given a few coins to hold them over and told to go away, or in other cases, they have been given low-level employment because the appeal was so audacious and extreme. This has caused a problem, and Saito as representative of the powerful Ii family must address it.

What follows is the slow unfolding of the sad tale of Tsugumo's fallen fortunes and the uncovering of the Ii's conception of samurai honor. Kobayashi called it an "anti-samurai film," and indeed it is. Tsugumo, by slow recitation and careful maneuvering, presents his appeal and the reasons for it in a manner that builds a powerful and scathing indictment of what officially passed for "honor" in the days of the Tokugawa Shogunate. We are treated (if you can call it that) to a graphically horrible scene of ritual disemboweling at which the honorable swordsman and loyal Ii retainer Hikokuro Omodaka (Tetsuro Tamba in fine restrained form, the very picture of the ideal samurai swordsman) presides as kaishakunin (the "second" who performs the decapitation, which ends the ceremony). Omodaka recites the traditions of the ritual and takes care to project the image of the Ii clan as one who is the pinnacle of adherence to traditional honor. He is a true believer.

Presiding mutely over the entire formalized stageplay atmosphere is a symbol that might as well be the meat of the Ii's code of honor and the message of this film--it is an empty set of armor, the master's armor, which is set up and revered beyond measure. If it is disturbed or threatened, the retainers must defend it as if it were the most important of living beings. And yet it is empty, having not been required since the closing battles of the last era of warring states (relatively recent though they were in this setting). This is Kobayashi's message--the notion of honor as codified can only be an empty platitude in the face of the true human condition as represented by Tsugumo, who makes sure that Saito and the full measure of attending retainers are completely aware of that fact and its ramifications. Tatsuya Nakadai was trained as a stage actor primarily, and his resonant, very loud declamatory tone as he addresses the assembled Ii retainers is evident and creates an effect that rivets all watchers, both on-screen and in armchairs at home. This film was my first real introduction to just how powerful Nakadai is as a personality--he is at least Mifune's equal, although they are characteristically quite different (thus making films in which they clash with each other ultra-enjoyable, but I digress...) .

This film can be called a jidai-geki, as it is set in historical times, but more properly it is in the tradition of the chambara, the swordplay film. It is a fictional account in specifics, but set in 1630, not terribly long after the forces of Ieyasu Tokugawa united the bulk of the country under his rule. Basically, Ieyasu had consolidated his victory, and his grandson Iemitsu reigned. Many institutions of the Shogunate were still in their formative stages at this time; samurai who had previously been active were decommissioned and idled. Many more were disenfranchised or unseated due to having been aligned against Ieyasu as well.

Tsugumo is shown in a flashback (a device used a lot in this film) repairing the battlements of Hiroshima Castle with his good friend Jinnai Chijiwa (Yoshio Inaba, one of the original Seven Samurai), a fellow samurai (on the orders of his lord at the time). This seemingly innocent action was taken by the Tokugawa to be a possible threat--the act of preparing for hostilities by getting a castle into order. (The repairs to Hiroshima Castle were an actual piece of history, having been undertaken in 1619 by Lord Fukushima after damage from a flood; he was stripped of his lordship by the Shogun for this action). Thus, in our story, Tsugumo's lord comes to the attention of the Shogun, and the domain is seized, and Tsugumo and many thousands of samurai are set adrift to become ronin (literally "wave men") who had to seek their own way in life and secure whatever employment they could to survive. The lord is forced to commit seppuku, and some of his samurai would follow him in death (the practice of junshi, which was outlawed later by the Tokugawa). That action, too, had consequences, as it set the survivors of these samurai adrift without their family head, often at young ages.

The House of Ii, on the other hand, is one of those fortunate houses that was allied with Ieyasu and thus given the honor of being named fudai (major domain, given active roles in the Shogunate administration). To indict Ii in the manner Kobayashi has done is to indict the Tokugawa system itself, for the Ii are full beneficiaries and representatives of the ruling elite.

Kobayashi's style of visual blocking will be obvious in this film. The courtyard at which much of the exposition takes place is symmetrical and neat, the interiors spare. However, when it comes to the living space of Tsugumo the ronin and his house, the spare quality is darkened and cramped. We see Tsugumo receive an unexpected visitor while he is plying his typically ronin-practiced trade of crafting umbrellas. There is only enough room for Tsugumo, the skeletal unfinished parasol and the stooping visitor. The message is obvious. Although this is chambara, the mood is patient and the progression slow and formally stylized; those watchers who hunger for sword action will have to wait, but the wait and build-up is well worth it, making the denouement eminently satisfying and appropriate. Kobayashi has a framing device of the scribe for the House of Ii which encapsulates the event and makes an even more scathing statement about history and those who write it. This device is also used to great effect in Okamoto's "Samurai Assassin," but I think it has even more effect here as a punctuating end note. (That movie, interestingly, concerns one prominent member of the House of Ii as well.)

One aspect I have failed to mention is the score, which is spare and quite appropriate. Toru Takemitsu's music uses traditional Japanese instrumentation, achieving auditorily what Kobayashi achieves visually with his carefully symmetrical and spare sets. It is an auspicious collaboration; the two masters of their crafts blend in perfect harmony in this film.

I watched the Criterion version on DVD, and the interviews on the second DVD are most illuminating as well. Shinobu Hashimoto tells how he came up with the idea for the story; Tatsuya Nakadai reveals that they used real swords for the action and that he was rather frightened by this aspect. Tetsuro Tamba had previous training in sword arts, whereas this was Nakadai's first attempt in the genre (apart from Yojimbo a year earlier, but as we remember, he carried a gun in that one). (Also I don't think we can count his 2 second walk-by in Seven Samurai that you will miss if you blink....)We hear from an interview with Kobayashi about the reception of the film at Cannes, which was quite extreme, and the introduction to the film by Donald Richie, which appears on the first DVD, should not be viewed until later if you want to maintain the surprise. I don't think I've revealed too much here in this review, although I did want to clarify some historical and thematic notes.

Seppuku as a thematic element is thickly marbled in the fabric of the tale: Tsugumo's disenfranchised lord, other ronin in his situation, samurai who have failed their lords in important tasks--all these merit this "punishment," and yet it is counted an honor afforded only to the samurai class and those above. It is a means of control but also a special privilege; therein lies its uniqueness and its status as a sort of double-edged sword, so to speak. Just as with the sword itself, the way in which this ritual is utilized is key to whether a character or institution is honorable or not, and it can be used to make a powerful statement for good or ill. Prepare for a keen lesson and an unforgettable experience!
More Harakiri (The Criterion Collection) reviews:
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Description of Harakiri (The Criterion Collection)

Studio: Image Entertainment Release Date: 08/23/2005 Run time: 133 minutes
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