Drunken Angel

1948 [JAPANESE]

Action / Crime / Drama / Romance / Thriller

19
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 94% · 16 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 89% · 2.5K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.6/10 10 13361 13.4K

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Plot summary

Doctor Sanada treats gangster Matsunaga after he is wounded in a gunfight, and discovers that he is suffering from tuberculosis. Sanada tries to convince Matsunaga to stay for treatment, which would drastically change his lifestyle. They form an uneasy friendship until Matsunaga's old boss Okada returns from prison.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
December 11, 2020 at 05:45 AM

Director

Top cast

Toshirô Mifune as Matsunaga
Takashi Shimura as Sanada
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
902.25 MB
978*720
Japanese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
Seeds 3
1.64 GB
1456*1072
Japanese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
Seeds 19

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Steffi_P 8 / 10

"Drinking? You don't want to be cured!"

Kurosawa began his career as a jobbing director, making the pictures the studio wanted him to in conventional, by-the-book style. It was with Drunken Angel, his eighth film, that he turned a corner. He regarded it as the first film that was really his, and typically here combining bold social commentary with tender sympathy towards flawed and downtrodden characters.

This also marks the beginning of one of the greatest actor-director relationships in the history of cinema, with the young Toshiro Mifune making his debut for Kurosawa. It is amazing how naturally talented an actor Mifune was. He already knew exactly how to move in front of the camera, and could convey so much with the tiniest of gestures. However, he doesn't get to show off his full range here. Also, in the leading role, is Kurosawa regular and fantastic character actor Takashi Shimura. There isn't really one bad performance in the whole thing.

Drunken Angel is essentially a lament for the state of post-war Japanese society. Not only does the story concern the victims of that era, it is also an extended allegory using illness and contamination as a metaphor for the state of the nation. The central characters – a tubercular gangster (Mifune) and an alcoholic doctor (Shimura) – are partly to blame for their own conditions, and while they want to get better haven't the willpower to do so. The pond of stagnant water outside the doctor's surgery, a constantly recurring image of despair, seems to be the result of a bomb crater from the war.

The plot structure is episodic and bitty, somewhat reminiscent of neo-realist cinema. Unfortunately this makes the whole thing a bit lacking in pace and even boring in places. Things really start to pick up in the second half of the film when the plot starts to come together. The introduction of Okada, a gangland boss who has just finished a stint in prison, adds an element of danger to what has so far only been a gloomy drama.

Music is a constant presence in Drunken Angel, with diagetic music (i.e. really there in the scene rather than a background score) being used to give atmosphere and introduce characters. A whole variety of tunes are heard blasting from bars and dance halls, but most memorable of all is a man who sits outside the surgery playing a dismal Japanese folk melody on an acoustic guitar. This acts like a theme tune for the doctor. However, when Okada appears he takes the guitar and announces his presence by playing a doom-laden classical piece. This seems to have been a major influence on Sergio Leone, particularly on the character of Harmonica in his Once Upon a Time in the West (1968).

It is in the final act of this picture that Kurosawa reveals his talent for deeply sentimental and emotional direction. I won't reveal exactly what happens, but as the film looks set to reach a tense finale (in what is the only proper action sequence) Kurosawa turns it on its head, using expert timing, camera-work, cross-cutting and Fumio Hayasaka's score to produce a scene of incredible poignancy. Another Kurosawa trademark which is established here was his way of injecting a little note of hope into the ending of his darker pessimistic pictures, with the final scene suggesting there may be a cure for this sick society.

Despite all these developments in Kurosawa's style, he was not quite yet ready to turn out a masterpiece. In some ways he seems to have simply crammed every idea he had at the time into the 95 minutes. There is even a dream sequence in which Mifune smashes open a coffin is chased by a zombie version of himself. This hints towards Kurosawa's later horror-tinged work and a similar but better done scene in Kagemusha (1980), but here it seems a little clichéd and very much at odds with the overall tone of the film. Drunken Angel has its moments and is packed with good elements, which is why I rate it as highly as I do, but as a whole it doesn't come together enough to really suck the viewer in.

Reviewed by / 10

Reviewed by TheLittleSongbird 9 / 10

The film that made a star out of Toshiro Mifune

I am a great fan of Akira Kurasawa's films(or a vast majority of them anyhow) and find Toshiro Mifune a very multi-layered actor. Drunken Angel is not one of Kurasawa's or Mifune's very finest, but of their early work it is one of their stronger efforts. The film is beautifully made and Kurasawa's direction is as delicate and humanistic as ever. The music is simple, but effective in that. I loved the story as well, the realist drama parts are very poignant and the gangster parts have cracking suspense and tension, while the characters and script are just as gripping. Toshiro Mifune would give even better performances in later films, but his performance in Drunken Angel is not bad at all, in fact it is great, very charismatic. He is matched wonderfully by another Kurasawa regular Takashi Shimura.

So all in all, a fine gripping film even if even better films from Kurasawa followed. 9/10 Bethany Cox

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