Ketto Takadanobaba

Movie·血煙高田の馬場·Blood Spilled at Takadanobaba
Ketto Takadanobaba
1937/12/31
Speech duration
29min
Word count2,960
Unique words1,006
Words (1-occurrence)599
Unique kanji474
Kanji (1-occurrence)191
Speech speed
262
Difficulty Hard
External Rating
70 %

The tale of Nakayama Yasubei’s duel is famous, even if he in reality probably did not cut down 18 opponents. The story has been related in film, rakugo, kodan and on stage many times, in part because Nakayama later joined the famous 47 Ronin (Chushingura) as Horibe Yasubei. But Makino and Inagaki’s version gives no hint of this more serious future, playing up the thrills and the comedy with Bando’s bravura performance. The multiple pans of Yasubei running to the duel are an exemplar of the experimental flourishes of 1930s Japanese cinema and the final duel, performed virtually like a dance number, is a marker of Makino’s love of rhythm and one of the best sword fights in Japanese film history. The film was originally released under the title Chikemuri Takadanoba (Bloody Takadanobaba) with a length of 57 minutes, but suffered some cuts and a title change when it was re-released in 1952.

Genres
Action
Comedy
Drama

Similar Media

xx% = content similarity
72%
Kenkaku Shoubai: Onikuma Izakaya
Movie
Kenkaku Shoubai: Onikuma Izakaya
Movie
Durat.:1h 1min
Uniq words:1,426
Difficulty:
★★★★☆
Kenkaku Shoubai: Onikuma Izakaya