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    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Posted By: FNB47
    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)
    1467 MB | 1:56:59 | Japanese with English s/t <F> | XviD, 1490 Kb/s | 528x400

    A bad day gets worse for young detective Murakami when a pickpocket steals his gun on a hot, crowded bus. Desperate to right the wrong, he goes undercover, scavenging Tokyo's sweltering streets for the stray dog whose desperation has led him to a life of crime. With each step, cop and criminal’s lives become more intertwined and the investigation becomes an examination of Murakami's own dark side. Starring Toshiro Mifune, as the rookie cop, and Takashi Shimura, as the seasoned detective who keeps him on the right side of the law, Stray Dog (Nora Inu) goes beyond a crime thriller, probing the squalid world of postwar Japan and the nature of the criminal mind. Criterion

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Murukami, a young homicide detective, has his pocket picked on a bus and loses his pistol. Frantic and ashamed, he dashes about trying to recover the weapon without success until taken under the wing of an older and wiser detective, Sato. Together they track the culprit. (http://imdb.com/title/tt0041699/plotsummary)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    A classic crime film steeped in the vivid environs of postwar Tokyo, Stray Dog is arguably Akira Kurosawa's finest film preceding the international success of Rashomon. A classic theme–the identification between criminal and crime fighter–is presented here in one of its earliest incarnations, as a promising young detective (Toshiro Mifune) struggles to retrieve his stolen pistol. The missing gun is used in a robbery and murder, and Mifune's superior (Ikiru's Takashi Shimura) is caught in the case's volatile crossfire. (–Jeff Shannon - Editorial Reviews - Amazon.com)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    As the detective closes in on his lethal alter ego, his own moral compass spins out of control, into a psychological tempest that inspires Mifune to give one of his best early performances. Using real locations and a sense of sweltering heat rivaled only by Do the Right Thing, Kurosawa (who first wrote this film as an unpublished novel inspired by an actual incident) maintains an atmosphere of lurid urgency perfectly suited to this riveting film noir scenario. (–Jeff Shannon - Editorial Reviews - Amazon.com)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)

    Akira Kurosawa-Nora inu ('Stray Dog') (1949)