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The Yakuza By Marshall Fine
Complex to the point of being pleasingly convoluted, this Sydney
Pollack film (from a terrific script by Robert Towne and Leonard and Paul
Schrader) is an intriguing blend of Western and Asian sensibilities.
Mitchum, in one of his best roles of the Super70s, is drawn to the Orient
by an army buddy (Brian Keith), whose daughter has been kidnapped. But
when he gets to Japan, Mitchum finds that her kidnappers are the shadowy
Yakuza, the Japanese Mafia--an organization that is as vicious as it is
tradition-bound. He must call on friends he made after World War II for
favors and finds himself unintentionally trampling on issues of honor,
even as he battles for his life and that of the girl he is seeking.
Surprisingly heartfelt and deliciously exciting, the film features a
sorrowful performance by Mitchum and a stoically touching one by Ken
Takakura. And what great samurai swordplay!
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Sydney Pollack
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|  | Stars: Robert Mitchum, Ken Takakura, Brian Keith, Richard Jordan
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|  | Released: March 19, 1975
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|  | Availability: VHS | | |
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