Lady Snowblood | |
---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster. | |
Directed by | Toshiya Fujita |
Screenplay by | Norio Osada[1] |
Based on | Lady Snowblood byKazuo Koike Kazuo Kamimura[1] |
Produced by | Kikumaru Okuda[1] |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Masaki Tamura[1] |
Edited by | Osamu Inoue[1] |
Music by | Masaaki Hirao[1] |
Production company | Tokyo Eiga[1] |
Distributed by | Toho |
Release date |
|
Running time | 96 minutes[1] |
Country | Japan |
Languages |
|
Lady Snowblood (Japanese:修羅雪姫,Hepburn:Shurayuki-hime) is a 1973 Japanesejidaigeki film directed byToshiya Fujita and starringMeiko Kaji.[2] Based on themanga seriesof the same name byKazuo Koike andKazuo Kamimura, the film recounts the tale of Yuki (Kaji), a woman who seeks vengeance upon three of the people who raped her mother and killed her half brother. The film's narrative is toldout of chronological order, jumping between present and past events. Alongside Kaji, the film's cast includes Toshio Kurosawa, Masaaki Daimonm,Miyoko Akaza, andKō Nishimura.
Lady Snowblood was released theatrically in Japan on 1 December 1973, and was distributed byToho. It spawned asequel,Love Song of Vengeance (1974).Lady Snowblood served as a major inspiration for the 2003Quentin Tarantino filmKill Bill and its lead character,The Bride.
In 1874, a woman named Sayo gives birth to a baby girl in a women's prison. Naming the child Yuki from the snow outside, Sayo confides to her inmates how she was brutally raped by three of the four criminals who murdered her husband and son a year ago. While she managed to stab her captor Shokei Tokuichi to death, she was arrested and imprisoned for life. She then seduced many prison guards in order to conceive Yuki. Due to difficulties during the birth, she dies shortly after. Her final words are for the child to be raised to carry out the vengeance against the three remaining tormentors. In Meiji 15 (1882), Yuki undergoes brutal training in sword fighting under the priest Dōkai to become her mother's wrath incarnate.
Yuki, now twenty and an assassin going by the name Shurayuki-hime, kills a group of men and their leader Shibayama. She visits a poor village looking for a man called Matsuemon, the leader of an underground organization of street beggars, and asks him to find her mother's surviving tormentors in return for having killed Shibayama for him. Matsuemon'sintel leads her to Takemura Banzō, an alcoholic with gambling debts whose daughter Kobue works as a prostitute to support him. Yuki kills him, then learns that the last of her mother's rapists, Tsukamoto Gishirō, has suspiciously died in a shipwreck three years earlier when she first attempted to find him.
Yuki is followed by a reporter named Ryūrei Ashio, who learned of her story from Dōkai who persuaded him to publish it as a means to draw out one of Sayo's tormentors: Kitahama Okono. Okono sends men to kidnap Ashio for Yuki's location, but Ashio refuses to tell. Yuki enters Okono's estate and kills several of her men. Yuki and Ryūrei find Okono's dying body hanging in a room. Yuki slices her in half.
Ashio tells her that Gishirō is his father, and had faked his death when he learned of Yuki's mission. She finds Gishirō at amasquerade ball and kills a man acting as his decoy. The real Gishirō shoots Ashio. Ashio stops him from shooting Yuki and she stabs through Ashio into Gishirō. She then cuts Gishirō's throat as he shoots her. He falls over a railing and onto the ground floor full of guests.
Yuki, wounded, is stabbed by a waiting Kobue, who has been pursuing Yuki all this while in her own quest to avenge her father's murder. Yuki collapses in the snow, apparently dead. The following morning, however, she opens her eyes.
Kikumaru Okuda, a producer from theindependent studio Tokyo Eiga, wanted to make a film starring actress and singerMeiko Kaji, known at the time for her role inToei's successfulFemale Prisoner Scorpion series. He felt that a film adaptation of theLady Snowblood manga would be ideal for such a project, and contracted Norio Osada to write the script andToshiya Fujita to direct. Although the two men were friends, they were aware of their differing creative approaches; it was also Osada's first manga adaptation and Fujita's first action-heavy film.[3] According to Osada, Fujita usually preferred a less tight script so he could shape his own films, but Osada presented his first draft to his colleagueKinji Fukasaku, who told Fujita that he would make the film if Fujita was not willing; the director immediately relented.[3] Osada wrote the film with the intention that it would serve as a standalone adaptation of the manga rather than a launching point for a series.[3]
The film's production was first announced in the February 1973 issue ofKinema Junpo; although Fujita was stated to be the director, the announcement revealed thatTomoko Ogawa [ja] was the preferred choice for the title character ofKazuo Koike, the writer of the original manga.[4] When Okuda approached Kaji for the role, she had become increasingly uninterested in theFemale Prisoner Scorpion films, and was dissatisfied with playing roles in violentexploitation films, noting that the lead characters of bothFemale Prisoner Scorpion andLady Snowblood were vengeful women.[5][6] She accepted the role due to a desire to work again with Fujita, as they had developed a rapport when both were contracted toNikkatsu, and after reading the manga.[5] Kaji was also contracted to sing the film's theme song, "Shura no hana" (The Flower of Hell).[1] Toei initially attempted to prevent Kaji from taking the role, although she would return to the studio to make her finalFemale Prisoner Scorpion film,701's Grudge Song, after completing work onLady Snowblood.[6]
Lady Snowblood was produced on a relatively low budget, and filmed with a minimal length of film (20,000 feet).[7] Yuki's sword was made fromduralumin and weighed approximately 1.5 kg, and swinging it frequently hurt Kaji's arm.[6] Kaji also recalled that at one point during production, a malfunctioningblood squib drenched her in fake blood.[7]
Lady Snowblood was released in Japan on 1 December 1973, where it was distributed byToho.[1]
Onreview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 100% based on seven reviews, with an average rating of 8.05/10.[8]TV Guide gave the film three out of five stars, calling it "certainly entertaining, but unnecessarily distancing".[9]
The moderate financial success of the first film spawned a sequel,[3]Lady Snowblood: Love Song of Vengeance, released in 1974. Another adaptation of the original manga, titledThe Princess Blade, was released in 2001.[citation needed]
A 1977 Hong Kong martial arts film,Broken Oath, directed byJeong Chang-hwa and starringAngela Mao in the leading role is an unofficial remake ofLady Snowblood.[citation needed]
Lady Snowblood was a major inspiration forQuentin Tarantino'sKill Bill (2003–2004).[10] According to Meiko Kaji, Tarantino made the cast and crew ofKill Bill watch DVDs ofLady Snowblood during filming breaks.[7]
The 2017 music video for "rockstar" byPost Malone references scenes fromLady Snowblood.[11]
Lady Snowblood was released onVHS in 1997, and was later released onDVD byAnimEigo in 2004.[12][13] In 2012, the film was released in a box set withLady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance onBlu-ray and DVD byArrow Video.[14][15] In January 2016, the film was again released withLove Song of Vengeance on Blu-ray and DVD bythe Criterion Collection.[10][16]