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    Sword Of The Beast (1965) Criterion Collection [Reuploaded]

    Posted By: TinyBear
    Sword Of The Beast (1965) Criterion Collection [Reuploaded]

    Kedamono no ken – Sword Of The Beast (1965) Criterion Collection
    DVDRip - TinyBearDs | MKV | 824 x 356 | x264 600kbps 23.976fps | AAC 64kbps 2CH
    Language: Japanese | Subtitle: English Included | 85min | 399.45MB | 3% Recovery
    Genre: Action | Drama | IMDb Rating: 7.6/10 (759 users)

    Director: Hideo Gosha
    Gennosuke, a clan retainer, kills one of the clan ministers as part of a plot to achieve reform. He is pursued by his former comrades, each hoping to complete the vendetta put on Gennosuke by the clan. With the help of a master swordsman, Yamane, Gennosuke has a chance at survival.

    Criterion Synopsis:
    Legendary swordplay filmmaker Hideo Gosha’s Sword of the Beast chronicles the flight of the low-level swordsman Gennosuke, who kills one of his ministers as part of a reform plot. His former comrades then turn on him, and this betrayal so shakes his sense of honor that he decides to live in the wild, like an animal. There he joins up with a motley group who are illegally mining the shogun’s gold, and, with the aid of another swordsman, gets a chance not just at survival but to recover his name and honor.
    Rebel Samurai: Sixties Swordplay Classics Boxset
    REBELLION! The political and cultural tumult of the early 1960s shook Japan as it did the rest of the world. Japanese filmmakers responded to the changing times by disguising themes of dissent in the traditional form of the swordplay film, or chanbara. Previously populated by heroic samurai, self-sacrificing ronin, and historical figures who exemplified noble Japanese virtues, the genre began embracing a new kind of hero, or antihero: the lone outcast, distrustful of authority but maintaining a personal code of honor. These four classic films, from four masters of Japanese cinema, turn a genre upside down, redefining for a modern generation the meaning of loyalty and honor, as embodied by the iconic figure of the samurai.
    Sword Of The Beast (1965)
    Samurai Spy (1965)
    Samurai Rebellion (1967)
    Kill! (1968)
    Screenshots:
    Sword Of The Beast (1965) Criterion Collection [Reuploaded]

    TinyBearDs' Criterion Collection