Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1964


Jakoman and Tetsu (1964 film)

Buy Jakoman and Tetsu (1964 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




, also known as 'One-Eyed Captain and Tetsu' is a 1964 Japanese film directed by Kinji Fukasaku based on an earlier screenplay by Akira Kurosawa and Senkichi Taniguchi that was based on the novel 'Nishin gyogyo' (English: 'Herring Fishery') by Keizo Kajino. The screenplay had previously been filmed by director Senkichi Taniguchi in 1949.

Plot



In March 1947, the 21st year of the Shwa era, aging fishery boss Kyubei is facing another year of financial uncertainty in Kamu Village on the Shimamui Coast on the Shakotan Peninsula in northern Hokkaido. Kyubei and his son-in-law Soutaro borrow money and hire a group of migrant workers as fisherman, but a one-eyed man named Jakoman arrives and throws Kyubei's fishing operation into disarray, terrorizing the other fishermen and vowing revenge on Kyubei for stealing his boat and leaving him nearly drowned at Sakhalin three years earlier. Near the end of the fishing season, Kyubei's young and rowdy son Tetsu, believed to be lost at sea in the Philippines, miraculously returns and decides to confront Jakoman.

Cast



* Ken Takakura as Tetsu ()

* Tetsur Tamba as Jakoman ()

* Isao Yamagata as Kyubei (), Tetsu's father

* Yko Minamida as Masa (), Tetsu's older sister

* Kumeko Urabe as Taka (), Tetsu's mother

* Wakaba Irie as Young farm girl ()

* Hizuru Takachiho as Yuki ()

* Shinjir Ehara as Osaka ()

* Shir saka as Soutaro (), Masa's husband and Tetsu's brother-in-law

Production



It was a very unusual project for Ken Takakura. Takakura had seen the 1949 Toho version when it was first released and was so excited that he couldn't sleep at night, so he asked Shigeru Okada, then the director of Toei's Tokyo Studio, to let him do it. Okada had declared that he would make Takakura a 100-million-yen star in 1964, and decided to produce the film to make Takakura the definitive Toei star of 1964.

When the decision was made to make the film, Takakura Ken went to the Toho Studios to greet Toshiro Mifune, the star of the earlier 1949 adaptation filmed by director Senkichi Taniguchi. Mifune, who happened to be alone in the room, stood up to welcome Takakura's visit and made him some tea. Takakura, who was originally a fan of Mifune, was completely thrilled and came to respect Mifune thereafter.

Takakura was just about to make his breakthrough, but he did not get along well with director Kinji Fukasaku. After the shooting was complete, Fukasaku also said to those around him, "I will never use such a bad actor again." For this reason, Takakura and Fukasaku have only worked together on three films: 'Jakoman and Tetsu', 'Wolves, Pigs and Men', and 'Kamikaze Man: Duel at Noon', in which Takakura made a special appearance. Yasuo Furuhata has said that Ken Takakura was originally intended to play the lead role in 'Battles Without Honor and Humanity', but Shigeru Shundo advised Ken that he should not take the role. The other reason why Ken decided not to appear in the film was because he did not get along well with Fukasaku following the filming of 'Jakoman and Tetsu'.

The film was shot on location on Shimamui Coast on the Shakotan Peninsula from December 1 to December 20, 1963. In the summer the area is crowded with fishermen and swimmers from Sapporo, but in the winter it becomes a lonely fishing village. The town of Irashatomachi welcomed the 80 people from Toei's film crew with a banner reading "Welcome Toei Film crew". Every day the cast and crew were treated to a feast of seafood, including hockey pike, but Takakura hated fish and could only eat squid sashimi. The filming took place on the Shimamui Coast, over the rocky mountains from Irashatomachi. The unit of herring caught was called "one stone" or "two stones", but this area was once called "a thousand-stone fishing ground", and the wide coast was filled with herring. It was one of the best fishing grounds in Hokkaido, where tens of millions of dollars were made overnight. 40 million yen were spent to renovate a dilapidated herring house and a tunnel dug to transport herring by trolley. The usual weather forecast is sunny, but this film was chosen to be shot when the waves of the Sea of Okhotsk were raging in order to bring out the desolate atmosphere of the extremely cold northern sea.

Toshiro Mifune, who played Tetsu in the earlier 1949 film adaptation, had worn a rubber pants on his lower body and had been naked on his upper body, but the night before the location shooting, Takakura claimed, "If it'll make a good movie, I'll do it in just a loincloth." Fishermen go into the sea with grease covering their bodies, but Takakura simply jumped into the sea at minus 16 degrees Celsius, with people around him warning him that he would die. He was immediately pulled out, regretting his decision. He slept for three days and almost died.

Release



The film was released in Japan on February 8, 1964.

References




Buy Jakoman and Tetsu (1964 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1964



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1110558707.