Red Beard - Criterion Collection buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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Features
• Anamorphic
• Black & White
• DVD-Video
• Subtitled
• Widescreen
• NTSC
In Theaters : 19 December, 1968
DVD Release : 16 July, 2002 |
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Red Beard - Criterion Collection description
Featuring the final collaboration between esteemed director Akira Kurosawa (Kagemusha, The Seven Samurai) and actor Toshiro Mifune (Yojimbo, Hell in the Pacific), this 1965 film explores the complex and tumultuous relationship between a doctor and his protégé, and the meaning of compassion and responsibility. Mifune plays the title character, a revered but stern and unbendable physician ministering to the poor in a clinic, driven by a sense of calling to the profession of medicine and to mankind. He is assigned a young brash intern whose rebellious and arrogant attitude threaten to disrupt the hospital and destroy his burgeoning career. Under the intense tutelage of the relentlessly stern doctor, however, the young doctor in training goes from a spoiled wunderkind insulted at having to work at a clinic he thinks is beneath him, to one who appreciates the compassionate nature of a doctor's calling. A long, intimate, and engrossing film, it displays some of Mifune's finest work as a man whose profound sense of higher purpose touches all around him. An earnest exploration of duty and honor, Red Beard is an unlikely but worthy addition to the enduring legacy of Akira Kurosawa. --Robert Lane |
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Red Beard - Criterion Collection Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥
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The title qualifies but never enables!
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It's widely known the epic gaze that made from the great master Akira Kurosawa, an undeniable supreme filmmaker. So under this perspective - at least according my view- this movie - based on a charity clinic , is somehow an original way to explore the countless facets of the human behavior, in which concerns to misery, sickness that is used by Kurosawa as a smart metaphor, but an incisive scalpel to carve in relief an epic statement respect the way we must deal the existence, day by day.
A ferrous drama that demonstrates once more the lavish genius of Kurosawa. And despite it's overlong its intrinsic virtues are disseminated in every frame of the picture. The youthful irreverence of a young doctor who pretends his knowledge belongs exclusively to him, but since the moment he enters to that clinic he will have to deal with the life and death, some issues that are not explicit in the books, slowly but progressively his initial arrogance will decay through this life's lesson.
Another artistic feat of the Japanese master!
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