Drunken Angel

7.6
19481h 38m

In postwar Tokyo, a blunt, alcohol-soaked doctor diagnoses a swaggering young yakuza with tuberculosis, forging an uneasy bond that’s tested when the gangster’s ruthless former boss returns and drags him back toward the swampy underworld he can’t escape.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Drunken Angel 1948

Drunken Angel 1948

Cast

Photo of Taiji Tonoyama

Taiji Tonoyama

Shop Proprietor

Photo of Yoshiko Kuga

Yoshiko Kuga

Schoolgirl

Photo of Sachio Sakai

Sachio Sakai

Guitar Player

Photo of Mayuri Mokushô

Mayuri Mokushô

Daughter at Flower Shop

Photo of Yōko Sugi

Yōko Sugi

Dancer (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

Takashi Shimura is impressive in this slightly squalid tale of a dipsomaniac doctor ("Sanada") charged with caring for a population housed in a bombed out part of the city. A large stagnant pond amidst their community is as likely to prove a source of toxicity as the pervading Yakuza activities. Those centre around "Matsunaga" (Toshirô Mifune) who turns up at the surgery with an injured hand. The doctor treats the wound but also suggest that the man might want to get treated for what he suspects is a case of tuberculosis. The two men fight - verbally and physically - and things continue to worsen when his boss "Okada" (Reizaburô Yamamoto) gets out of prison and starts to reassert his authority amongst the shopkeepers. Despite the initial hostility, Kurosawa manages to generate a considerable degree of amity between the two men as the story progresses. It is a friendship - of sorts - borne out of frustration and a desire to drink a great deal, and that dynamic becomes more engaging as the inevitability of parts of the story become ever clearer. There is some lovely guitar accompaniment to Fumio Hayasaka's score and the dialogue sparingly but convincingly guides us along as these two opposites start to attract. It is tightly paced with plenty of action as well as engendering, for me anyway, quite a degree of sympathy for the physician caught in a maelstrom of despair that is as much self-induced as anything.

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