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Kuroi kawa

  • 1957
  • 1h 54m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,2/10
1,3 k
MA NOTE
Kuroi kawa (1957)
ActionCrimeDrama

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA love triangle develops between a benevolent student, his innocent girlfriend, and a cruel petty criminal, all as a point of diagnosis of a social disease that had Japan slowly succumbing t... Tout lireA love triangle develops between a benevolent student, his innocent girlfriend, and a cruel petty criminal, all as a point of diagnosis of a social disease that had Japan slowly succumbing to lawlessness during the post-War era.A love triangle develops between a benevolent student, his innocent girlfriend, and a cruel petty criminal, all as a point of diagnosis of a social disease that had Japan slowly succumbing to lawlessness during the post-War era.

  • Director
    • Masaki Kobayashi
  • Writers
    • Zenzô Matsuyama
    • Takeo Tomishima
  • Stars
    • Fumio Watanabe
    • Tatsuya Nakadai
    • Ineko Arima
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,2/10
    1,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Masaki Kobayashi
    • Writers
      • Zenzô Matsuyama
      • Takeo Tomishima
    • Stars
      • Fumio Watanabe
      • Tatsuya Nakadai
      • Ineko Arima
    • 10Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 16Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Rôles principaux26

    Modifier
    Fumio Watanabe
    Fumio Watanabe
    • Nishida
    Tatsuya Nakadai
    Tatsuya Nakadai
    • Jo
    Ineko Arima
    Ineko Arima
    • Shizuko
    Keiko Awaji
    Keiko Awaji
    • Okada's Wife
    Asao Sano
    • Sakazaki
    Seiji Miyaguchi
    Seiji Miyaguchi
    • Kin
    Tomo'o Nagai
    • Okada
    Eijirô Tôno
    Eijirô Tôno
    • Kurihara
    Isuzu Yamada
    Isuzu Yamada
    • Landlady
    Natsuko Kahara
    Natsuko Kahara
    Chisato Kasuga
    Yôko Katsuragi
    Yôko Katsuragi
    Kôichi Kitami
    Masao Kiyomizu
    Sue Mitobe
    Eiko Miyoshi
    Eiko Miyoshi
    Yasushi Nagata
    Zekô Nakamura
    • Director
      • Masaki Kobayashi
    • Writers
      • Zenzô Matsuyama
      • Takeo Tomishima
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs10

    7,21.2K
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    Avis en vedette

    9HEFILM

    Film noirish look at post war Japanese squalor

    The story is set around an American Air Force base which has attracted bars and brothels and the native Japanese who need this sordid world to scape by and make money to just barely survive. A love triangle develops among the dwellers of a falling down apartment building and a local gangster called Killer Joe.

    It's a fascinating slice of life with engaging vivid seedy characters, these type of shanty towns always develop around military bases, I can't think of any other films I've seen that take place there. It's a rare look into the postwar lower middle class and lower end criminal element in Japan. Fast moving and convincing well worth watching if you can find it. Memorable ending and last image to a memorable film.
    7davidmvining

    Life in the refuse

    This is The Lower Depths but angry. This feels like the closest Kobayashi ever came to making a Kurosawa movie, and it's still distinctly his own. It's a look at people living in the shadow of an American military base on the eve of the American military's departure from the area, when development opportunities are opening up, and what happens to the people in the lowest rungs of society in the face of that. It's also a love-triangle. There's definitely interlapping elements between the two major storylines, both literally and thematically, but I still feel like the two could have been intertwined more intimately.

    A slum area of Tokyo welcomes a new resident, the student Nishida (Fumio Watanabe). He has decided to move out here to save some money, finding a cheap place to rent run by an unscrupulous landlady (Isuzu Yamada). On his way, he meets with the pretty Shizuko (Ineko Arima), a waitress who lives in the area. She is also spied by Joe (Tatsuya Nakadai), a local gang leader who decides that he's going to have her. Nishida meets the tenants of the shack of an apartment building, including a husband whose wife he has no idea is a prostitute, a sickly man with a wife, and even some of Joe's gang. That night, Joe sends his gang out to accost Shizuko while she's alone, allowing him to put on a show of saving her from the group of six men. He then immediately rapes her. She is a good girl, though, and knows that he took possession of her. She comes to him the next day and demands that he marry her formally, a prospect that Joe laughs off while taking her on as a kept woman. This causes a rift between Shizuko and Nishida in more ways that one. They were obviously fond of each other in that stranger likes another sort of way, and she had promised to borrow a book from him. With her shame, she runs away from him instead.

    Behind all of this is the landlady working with a government official to get the tenants to sign eviction notices because she wants to sell the land to the government for development. Tenant rights in Japan at the time apparently included a provision that each tenant in a tenement had to affirmatively sign off on the eviction for the sale to go through, so the landlady enlists the services of Joe and his men to get those signatures. They're happy to pay three thousand yen for a signature, but they'll commit fraud if necessary. And commit fraud they do, getting at least three fake signatures (as well as stamps, which were apparently a thing) including that of Nishida.

    Meanwhile, the relationship between Shizuko and Joe continues with Shizuko obviously trapped in a situation she has no love for, living in rather constant fear, while also trying to find ways to break off just to see Nishida for a few moments whenever she can, but it never works out. He grows increasingly disgusted with the whole situation, and she grows increasingly desperate that she's losing her way out of her depression.

    The final major section of the film is really centered on the love triangle while pretty much completely dropping the tenant storyline. There is something going on here that connects the two, though. It's all about how to survive in such a world. Do you keep your innocence, whatever it may be after a crime committed against you, or do you become like Joe? Well, Shizuko chooses one path, and Nishida does not want her to take it. He puts himself in danger to prevent her from doing it, but she does it on the eponymous black river (a stretch of street that is pitch black in the middle of the night). The final shot is just great, by the way. A marvelous composition of stark contrasts in both light and subject.

    I think Black River is a good film overall, but the out of balance nature of the two subplots undermines the emotional throughline of Nishida, I think. The center of this film is the degrading effects of this lawless, dog eat dog environment on the people, starting with the presence of Joe and continuing into the degradation of Shizuko. The look at the tenants is another dimension of this same idea, meaning that the two subplots do tie together, but it ends up feeling like extra stuff rather than essential elements to the story. So, it's not quite two movies awkwardly stitched together, but it's close to it. It feels like Kobayashi's typical issue (I wouldn't go so far as to call it a problem) where he has what he wants to say (this time about the lawlessness of post-war Japan that tramples under the underclasses) while trying to find a story to attach to it. The story itself, the romantic trio, actually has all of the subtext that he was looking for, which is interesting in and of itself. Perhaps simply diminishing the tenants in importance while giving us more time with Nishida would have been enough to push this into the upper tier of Kobayashi's body of work.

    As it is, though, Black River is the continued evolution of Kobayashi learning to say what he wants to say within a story effectively. He's never been bad at it, and he's made better films, however the strength of the love triangle element's subtext is probably the best he's done at it. The overall package is solidly good, but that love triangle represents some very good work on Kobayashi's part.
    8yadavanita-18093

    The River is Black and the Atmosphere is Stinky

    Another masterpiece by Masaki Kobayashi which might not be the likes of "Human Condition Trilogy", "Hara-kari", "kwaidan" but still is among one of his very strong works. Could be considered an early Kobayashi film, which should recieve more recognition, but imdb votes tell the story that its reach to the audience has not been that great. It is like the Combination of Kurosawa's "The lower Depths, (1957) and Mizoguchi's" Street of Shame" but in a good way giving proper homages. The characters ; like the surroundings are all Stinky and dirty, all selfish and thinking about only themselves, where even close relations are not that close but money minded. A student and an Innocent girl are also not left untouched by this dirt which even deterioration their their character to do immoral deeds. The Atmosphere and the music makes great collaboration along with camerawork to show the traits of characters, be it good or evil intent. Tatsuya Nakadai does a great job as an thug and yakuza man, and so does Ineko Arima( the Ozu girl, "Tokyo Twilight", "Equinox Flower") as an innocent girl turning immoral to keep up with the Stinky Atmosphere of her New surroundings.

    A good Kobayashi film that needs more reach and recognition.
    7AlsExGal

    It was meant as an indictment of post-war Japanese decadence and corruption

    Japanese drama from Shochiku and director Masaki Kobayashi. The story follows civil engineering student Nishida (Fumio Watanabe) as he moves into a slum apartment building near a U. S. army base. His fellow tenants struggle to survive by doing all sorts of unsavory things, while Nishida simply tries to keep his head down, concentrating on his studies, and staying out of trouble. Things get complicated when he falls for nice-girl waitress Shizuko (Ineko Arima), who has also caught the eye of young gang leader Killer Joe (Tatsuya Nakadai).

    Director Kobayashi's film is meant as an indictment on post-war Japanese decadence and corruption, with a very critical eye toward the continuing U. S. military presence. Various concessions made for the comfort and convenience of the troops lead to poverty and squalor for the neighboring Japanese citizens, many of whom turn to petty crime and prostitution for survival. I think the director's message gets lost a bit in the love triangle, though. Watanabe makes for a passable lead, while Arima turns in another good turn, although not as impressive as that in Tokyo Twilight, which I watched yesterday. The real star is Nakadai, one of my favorite Japanese actors, here in his breakthrough role. He's menacing and compelling, while also imbuing what could have been a one-note psycho-thug with some depth and nuance. The film features excellent, moody cinematography, and the oppressive heat of the summer season is depicted very well.
    9co_oldman

    I Prefer My Rivers Black

    No one is innocent in the post-war Japan depicted in Masaki Kobayashi's Black River. The film focuses on a love triangle: the straight-laced bookseller Nishida and Yakuza gangbanger Joe compete for the affections of the bourgeois local girl Shizuko. The American military base looms large in the film but the action takes place outside of it, mostly in a nearby shantytown. Although he regards the American presence as pernicious, Kobayashi is clear as to where responsibility rests for immoral behaviour and deficiencies in character, namely, the individual and society as a whole.

    Kobayashi challenges preconceived notions as to whether people of a certain class are virtuous or vicious. Appearances may reinforce the moral decay of a character, such as the rotten teeth of the unscrupulous landlord, or conceal it in the case of the beautiful and virginal Shizuko. In a disturbing scene, not one tenant is willing to donate blood to a man who is critically ill--not even his own wife. Nishida at least deigns to admit that, in spite of having the correct blood type, he does not want to donate his blood. He may feel that the man, apparently less educated and of a lower class than him, is unworthy of his blood. However, his refusal is as callous and cowardly as that of the other tenants, exposing his apparent nobility as a mere façade.

    Black River exhibits the characteristic influence of film noir whose origin is American popular culture. Just as the presence of the American military corrupts Japanese society in the film, American culture has, as it were, corrupted Black River. Kobayashi paints in black and white a quasi-dystopian picture of a society that, having abandoned its principles, has descended into paranoia and mutual sabotage. The stylized and disinterested depictions of characters betray a moral ambivalence to their actions. Sultry jazz music, a distinctly American genre, provides the score of the film. Like the cinematography, its expression suggests that sordid deeds, places, and people are at hand.

    In general, Kobayashi juggles the large cast of characters skillfully. However, their number can distract from the film's main plot about the love triangle, leading to a loss of focus and making it difficult to identify with any one character. Humour often shines through the dark subject matter, notably in a quarrel about emptying outhouses and the use of communal space. Like most film noir, Black River occasionally wavers into campiness and mannerism.

    Kobayashi crafts a powerful ending to commit the metaphorical assassination of Shizuko's character. Once again, the Americans act as an accomplice but crucially not as the malefactor, the person ultimately responsible. Perhaps for the first time in the film, a character reflects on her own behaviour and is profoundly disgusted. Contemporary viewers will likely, as I did, have more sympathy for some characters and forgive them in light of the ordeals they have experienced or the circumstances in which they live. Nonetheless, Kobayashi makes a powerful argument, not to mention an excellent film that will appeal to fans of post-war cinema, film noir, and Japanese culture.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Tatsuya Nakadai's first major role for director Kobayashi, starting a partnership that lasted over 15 years and 10 films.
    • Connexions
      References La fille de Neptune (1949)

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    FAQ12

    • How long is Black River?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 23 octobre 1957 (Japan)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japan
    • Langues
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Black River
    • sociétés de production
      • Bungei Production Ninjin Club
      • Shochiku
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 54 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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