Zatoichi in Desperation

1972
6.8| 1h32m| en
Details

After accidentally causing the death of an old lady, Zatoichi tries to do right by buying the lady’s daughter’s freedom from a brothel - but this causes more problems than solves them.

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Also starring Kiwako Taichi

Reviews

Brightlyme i know i wasted 90 mins of my life.
Zlatica One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
Ortiz Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Cody One of the best movies of the year! Incredible from the beginning to the end.
kluseba Zatoichi in Desperation is the twenty-fourth entry in the Japanese franchise about the blind masseur, skilled swordsman and lowly yakuza with the strong moral compass. The film is the first to be directed by leading actor Shintaro Katsu. This movie starts in an unusual way as Zatoichi comes across an old woman who plays the shamisen. They cross a dilapidated bridge and have a short conversation. Zatoichi wants to give the old woman some money but she slips and falls to her death. Zatoichi feels responsible for the terrible accident and decides to visit the old woman's daughter who turns out to be a manipulative prostitute. The blind yakuza still wants to help and buy her freedom. In order to get the fifty ryo to buy her freedom, he goes to a gambling house where he gets in conflict with the local boss and his mob. The criminals are aware of Zatoichi's identity which is also the case for a wandering swordsman and a group of thugs who all want to earn the bounty on his head. In his search for forgiveness, the blind masseur soon has to fight off yakuza, swordsmen and criminals and has to deal with a prostitute whom he cannot trust.There are a few interesting elements about this movie. First of all, the movie features some psychedelic flashbacks, supported with funky music that make the influence of the seventies' cultural trends quite obvious. Secondly, the locations are quite intriguing as the story takes place in a small town by the sea and shows the rough everyday life of exploited fishermen. Thirdly, Zatoichi gets severely injured in this movie and has to use a new technique to fight off his numerous enemies in a stunning fight sequence in the sandy town.Despite these fresh elements, the film also has considerable downsides. The characters are neither fleshed out nor sympathetic which leads to the problem that one only cares about Zatoichi's fate. The plot starts interestingly but slows down and wastes a lot of time through a tedious middle section. The final duel between Zatoichi and a swordsman lasts for about ten seconds and looks ridiculous. Several parts of the movie feel rushed and the unusual shaky camera work makes it look like a low quality entry in the franchise.Overall, Zatoichi in Desperation is among the weaker entries in the franchise. It has a few fresh ideas concerning camera work, score and special effects but the story and characters are too uninteresting to be memorable. I would only recommend this film to fans of old date. Those who aren't familiar with the blind swordsman yet should either start discovering the movies in chronological order or give Takeshi Kitano's version a chance.
Tweekums As this darker than normal 'Zatoichi' film opens our eponymous blind samurai is crossing a rickety bridge. As he does so he meets an old woman who is heading to see her daughter, there is an accident and she falls to her death. Feeling guilty Zatoichi goes in search of the daughter. She is working as a prostitute and can't finish until a bond of fifty ryo is paid. Zatoichi raises the money hustling a group of local gamblers who think it is they who are cheating him. The problems aren't over; the woman's fiancé is part of a group determined to kill Zatoichi for the reward. In the background to all of this Mangoro, the local boss, is forcing the town's fishermen out of business so he can employ them for a pittance while making a fortune from his monopoly of the local market… inevitably he will eventually cross swords with Zatoichi.This is the darkest of the 'Zatoichi' films that I have seen (not that I've seen that many unfortunately); Mangoro is a particularly unpleasant villain and the theme of forced prostitution is pretty grim… especially when the latest person forced into the profession is a fourteen year old girl whose story has a particularly tragic ending; as does that of her younger brother. Inevitably we see Zatoichi win many fights but at one point he is badly injured in a way that leaves the viewer wondering just how he will manage to prevail. As well as being dark in tone the film is perhaps a bit too dark in terms of light levels at times; this makes some of the action a bit hard to make out… presumably done to tone down the bloodshed in these scenes. Shintaro Katsu does a fine job both acting in the lead role and as the director of the film. Overall I'd recommend this to fans of Zatoichi in particular and samurai films in general.
winner55 I have not seen more than five of the classic (and undeniably classy) Zatoichi samurai films, but this is surely the best, cinematographically, so far. It;s hard to believe this was shot in Eastman Color, a kind of poor second to Technicolor (and with far less durability; either the negative was especially preserved, or digital restoration was performed by a true expert; but in any event, this film is absolutely gorgeous to look at.The story is dark, as others have noted; but the Zatoichi series, like most of the sword-fight genre series films to come out of Japan, is pretty heavy-handed stuff; the Japanese seem to take this sort of thing very seriously. Yet there is no doubt Zatoichi "24" stands out as exceptional, from both the series and its genre. The reason, I think, is its almost total sense of social dislocation; Zatoichi is treated by the other characters as somehow less than human, and his determination to fight at the end somewhat more than human, and so he comes across as something other than human; but the other humans of the film come across as rather poor representatives of the species. I should note that there is very little dialog in this film, particularly at the most dramatic moments, which heightens our sense that we are watching some tragedy from another reality. The question here is, has director/star Katsu pushed his character to such an extreme that he is no longer representative of his genre, but somehow an independent dramatic entity, a "grade-A film", as might be enjoyed by those who disdain genre-films? well, I suggest this film to such viewers, as the "one chambara (Japanese sword-fight)film to see". But in any event, it is an exceptional, and troubling, cinema experience for anyone.
gkbazalo Zatoichi in Desperation is the most somber and darkest Zatoichi film that I have seen in the series, both in terms of photography and plot. It's interesting that Shintaro Katsu, who plays Zatoichi, was the director. He was certainly going for a different look and style and got it. Most of the scenes are darkly lit and there is a claustrophobic feeling to the shots. The bad guys, composed of the local yakuza (gangster) mob, are meaner than usual and the body count of innocent villagers is far higher than usual. Zatoichi himself also suffers more at the hands of the evil doers than usual. This was the next to last entry (#24) in the series before the 17 year hiatus between #25 and 26. Things get back into the more typical Zatoichi style in #25. This film would have been appropriate as the last in the series. It has the feeling of "an ending". A very interesting entry, but not one of my favorites. As always, recommended for Zatoichi fans.