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Stray Dog [VHS]
 
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Stray Dog [VHS] (1963)

Starring: Toshirô Mifune, Takashi Shimura Director: Akira Kurosawa Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: VHS Tape
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

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A classic crime film steeped in the vivid environs of postwar Tokyo, Stray Dog is arguably Akira Kurosawa's finest film preceding the international success of Rashomon. A classic theme--the identification between criminal and crime fighter--is presented here in one of its earliest incarnations, as a promising young detective (Toshiro Mifune) struggles to retrieve his stolen pistol. The missing gun is used in a robbery and murder, and Mifune's superior (Ikiru's Takashi Shimura) is caught in the case's volatile crossfire. As the detective closes in on his lethal alter ego, his own moral compass spins out of control, into a psychological tempest that inspires Mifune to give one of his best early performances. Using real locations and a sense of sweltering heat rivaled only by Do the Right Thing, Kurosawa (who first wrote this film as an unpublished novel inspired by an actual incident) maintains an atmosphere of lurid urgency perfectly suited to this riveting film noir scenario. --Jeff Shannon


Product Description

When a young homicide detective loses his gun to a pickpocket, a heated chase through Tokyo's underworld begins. Rich in atmosphere and detail, this classic Japanese film noir from Akira Kurosawa (Rashomon, Ikiru) offers powerful insight into the criminal mind and life in postwar Japan. The rookie cop, played by Toshiro Mifune (Rashomon, Seven Samurai), fumbles his way through the search until he is joined by a seasoned detective (Takashi Shimura, Ikiru, Rashomon). Following one clue to the next, they learn that the stolen pistol has been used in a robbery and fatal shooting. Desperate to find the murderer, Mifune soon reveals his own criminal impulses. Shot on location with the Hollywood model--and accompanied by music ranging from classical to boogie woogie--Stray Dog is both a thrilling crime drama and a complex character study.

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36 Reviews
5 star:
 (28)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (36 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
39 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Homage & Echoes and Finally, Stubbornly Original., December 26, 2001
By Archmaker (California) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)      
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I am not a Japanese film historian, so others can elaborate on that aspect. When it started, I wasn't sure I would take to this film, but it draws you in inexorably. Shot on location in Tokyo, remarkably just 3 or 4 years after the end of WWII, it most reminds me of a Japanese Naked City, with echoes and moments reminiscent of other American gangster films all the way back to Public Enemy and The Roaring Twenties of the 30's.

The location photography alone is fascinating in depicting the Japan of 1948 or 49. And the story progresses as a very young Toshiro Mifune wanders through various levels of that postwar society in search of the thief who stole his Colt. On hand also, is that wonderful actor in Kurosawa's repertory company that was the leader of the 7 Samurai, and here too, is the older & wiser mentor to Mifune.

Finally, the movie wins you over for its own reasons. Though early, Kurosawa's composition, framing, and directorial skill is evident. The performances are fine. The atmosphere and location photography ground the film in reality. And it is a more complex film and story than it first appears. And, like early Ford, there is poetry amid the restrictions of budget and resources. And like early Ford, it presages what was to come. Good stuff if you've a mind for it. 5 stars for those folks.

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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Good time for a showdown.", January 10, 2005
By Strategos "The Guardian of Time" (In Space above Planet Earth) - See all my reviews
  
The sweltering heat of summer in the big city, the atmosphere of a metropolis in a time of drastic change, an idealistic young rookie out on a quest for personal revenge...

What can I say? Every time I think I have Kurosawa figured out he again amazes me with the incredible power of story-telling that he wields. While many will praise the master of Japanese cinema for his awesoem samurai epics, this one strikes a similar chord to High and Low, spinning a tale of social commentary in post-war Japan. There are differences though. Big ones.

While High and Low (like this film) tells us a great deal about police-work and the state of Japan after World War II (and the terrible things that people may or may not have been forced to do as a result of the social upheaval), this film is more personal.

Toshiro Mifune is probably the greatest actor in Japanese history, and his early performance here struck me very hard indeed. Previously I had seen Mifune as an old man and a rascal, but never playing a serious dramatic lead as a young man (ordinary Joe). When our young protagonist loses his gun, I can feel his shame and disgrace, and feel his terrible moment of panic. As the film progresses, he continues to scan every room as if it might hold some hidden clue, and his intensity is such that it worries his superiors and outright frightens normal people who get in his way. As the film progresses we watch the tension grow, and see his mind pushed closer and closer to the edge. He isn't worried about his gun. He is obsessed. Every new crime he hears about triggers the reaction "Was it MY gun?!" By the end of the movie my eyes were glued to the screen, and few moments in movie history match the scene where he finds himself right next to the killer who has his gun, with only a simple description to go on (that matches about five or six people right in front of him). Mifune is awesome in this movie. It's worthy buying for him alone.

Of course this detective story is about more than just one person, and all of the characters are acted out supremely well. Characteristic of Kurosawa, the camera is used to perfection, the music used to wrap you into the story, and the dialog is perfectly natural. It all feels so real (or is it surreal?), you simply don't know what is going to happen next. The atmosphere is the thing that really sends this one into the stratosphere, though. It's like The Big Sleep or The Maltese Falcon. As we are taken through seemingly every aspect of Japan's metropolis, we see people sweating up a storm, staring off into space dispassionately, struggling just to keep alive in a dangerous world. It's all metaphorical, but it's also all wildly entertaining. If you love film-noir or Kurosawa you must buy this movie immediately.
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25 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A consistently fascinating film, June 18, 2001
By Robert Moore (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
I foung this to be an absolutely fascinating film on several levels.

First, although we primarily associate Kurosawa with period films, this was one of his relatively few contemporary films. Along with the utterly phenomenal IKIRU (1952) and HIGH AND LOW (1963), it is one of his three most successful nonhistorical films. Nonetheless, for us in the early part of the 21st century, it possesses a great deal of almost documentary interest for glimpses into life in post-war Japan. Released in 1949, it depicts a Japan that had not yet begun the strong enonomic recovery of the 1950s. I found the numerous images of individuals struggling on the margins of economic survivability to be riveting. This was seen not merely in the "stray dog" who possessed the gun of the main character, but in many minor characters, not all of whom we actually see. One of the truly sad moments was when Takashi Shimura (familiar as the head samurai of SEVEN SAMURAI, the dying man in IKIRU, and the woodcutter of RASHOMON) explains to Toshiro Mifune how a thief's stealing the cash a woman had saved for her dowry probably meant that she would not have enough money saved again until she was an old maid, implying that the thief had stolen not merely her cash, but her chance of happiness in life as well.

Second, seeing Toshiro Mifune playing a despondent, anxious, inexperienced, overly deferential detective was a completely new experience. It is a range of emotions that I had not previously seen him put on display in anyother role. I must add that I think most contemporary American viewers will find, perhaps, his character to be a little too groveling and impetuously stupid. My daughter watched this movie with me (though 14, she is a huge Kurosawa fan as well), and she felt very, very uncomfortable at the way he deferentially hung his head in shame before his superiors. (I should add that despite this, she loved the film as a whole as well.)

The film was full of fascinating shots of private spaces that as a Westerner I found to be one of the most interesting things in the movie. When American films started being made in the 1950s that were at least partially set in Japan, the shots in people's homes often made them look as if they were display pieces, not like actual places where people would live. But the homes in STRAY DOG all looked lived in, like real abodes.

But while all these things are good and fine, the movie in the end has to stand up as a piece of cinema, and it does so admirably. Although on one level not a great deal happens in the movie, Kurosawa manages to imbue the conflicts and struggles in the film with Shakespearean importance. He manages to bring home the point that people's lives and their own concerns are of infinite concern to them. And scene after scene that might have come off as trivial and unimportant instead are crucial and memorable, like the long scene in which Mifune sits in the apartment of a dancing girl and her mother, attempting to gain information about her quasi-boyfriend who is suspected of having and using Mifune's pistol. The camerawork in the film is flawless, and many of the scenes stay with you long after you have seen the film. I agree with the reviewer who emphasized the overwhelming sense of heat that the film communicates (the action all takes place in the middle of a heat wave).

One scene in particular bears pointing out. In the climatic fight with the villain, we witness one of the least glamorized and romanticized fights in the history of the cinema. Neither man places tremendous fighting skills before the viewer. Neither looks particularly competent. When the fight is over, both men lay heaving and sweaty and dirty on the ground in the middile of a field. It is an utterly remarkable moment. Finally, after a few minutes, the thief begins to sob, less, one suspects, over having been caught, but over what his life has become.

In short, a marvelous film. And very, very different than most of the films by which we know Kurosawa. I strongly recommend it.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Mifune in a Hitchcockian Buddy Movie
LOVED this . . . Tokyo when it was a sweaty, seedy, devastated post-war shadow of its past (and future) self. Read more
Published 7 days ago by Conroca

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Movie< One of the Best !!!!!
This is a great movie, one you have to get. The story is great, the characters fantastic, and the filming is nice as well. The story is a knock out. Read more
Published 24 months ago by Dr. Tumbleweed

5.0 out of 5 stars Stray Dog
Landmark, atmospheric Japanese noir helped cement Kurosawa's reputation as a director to watch. Not only is "Dog" a satisfying thriller, it exposes the thin line between a... Read more
Published on June 25, 2007 by John Farr

5.0 out of 5 stars This should be hackneyed by now
I've seen many of Kurosawa's films and I'd have to say that this one is my favorite. You might think you've seen every permutation of the detective story that compares the cop to... Read more
Published on March 26, 2007 by Opinion_Sharer

4.0 out of 5 stars To Make A Mends
In the post WWII environment of Japan, the line between becoming a criminal and a cop was a very thin one. Read more
Published on November 2, 2006 by Aco

5.0 out of 5 stars Early Kurosawa: Foretells His Cinematic Talent!
One year removed from his film "Drunken Angel," Akira Kurosawa would reunite two of Japan's cinematic giants, Toshiro Mifune and Takashi Shimura, in this remarkably captivating... Read more
Published on August 14, 2006 by Ernest Jagger

4.0 out of 5 stars Post war Tokyo crime spree
Akira Kurosawa's 1949 film noir "Stray Dog" is a gritty crime drama shot on the streets of a sweltering post WW2 Tokyo. Read more
Published on January 24, 2006 by Cory D. Slipman

3.0 out of 5 stars Police Procedural, Kurosawa style
Stray Dog gets off to a surprisingly slack start, not helped by some utterly redundant narration that repeats what we have heard in the previous scene and will see in the next... Read more
Published on January 6, 2006 by Trevor Willsmer

5.0 out of 5 stars A story that has real meaning in today's world.
"Stray Dog" is a story about a Japanese veteran who comes home to a destroyed world after W.W.I.I.. Many veterans returning home today could probably relate. Read more
Published on October 6, 2005 by Monty Finnell

4.0 out of 5 stars Slow to start, but then it really picks up!
Actually, I give this 3 1/2 stars. I'm a big Mifune/Kurosawa fan, but the extremely slow start of this movie really took it down a notch or two. Read more
Published on September 20, 2005 by Kris7

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