Kwaidan
In the tradition of "RASHOMON" and "GATE OF HELL."
Taking its title from an archaic Japanese word meaning "ghost story," this anthology adapts four folk tales. A penniless samurai marries for money with tragic results. A man stranded in a blizzard is saved by Yuki the Snow Maiden, but his rescue comes at a cost. Blind musician Hoichi is forced to perform for an audience of ghosts. An author relates the story of a samurai who sees another warrior's reflection in his teacup.
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Cast

Michiyo Aratama
First Wife (segment "The Black Hair")

Rentaro Mikuni
Husband (segment "The Black Hair")

Misako Watanabe
Second Wife (segment "The Black Hair")

Kenjirō Ishiyama
Father (segment "The Black Hair")

Fumie Kitahara
(segment "The Black Hair")

Otome Tsukimiya
(segment "The Black Hair") (uncredited)

Tatsuya Nakadai
Minokichi (segment "The Woman of the Snow")

Keiko Kishi
Yuki the Snow Maiden (segment "The Woman of the Snow")

Yūko Mochizuki
Minokichi's Mother (segment "The Woman of the Snow")

Kin Sugai
Village Woman (segment "The Woman of the Snow")

Noriko Sengoku
Village Woman (segment "The Woman of the Snow")

Akiko Nomura
(segment "The Woman of the Snow") (uncredited)

Torahiko Hamada
(segment "The Woman of the Snow") (uncredited)

Jun Hamamura
(segment "The Woman of the Snow")

Katsuo Nakamura
Hoichi (segment "Hoichi the Earless")

Tetsuro Tamba
Warrior (segment "Hoichi the Earless")

Takashi Shimura
Head Priest (segment "Hoichi the Earless")

Yoichi Hayashi
Attendant (segment "Hoichi the Earless")

Eiko Muramatsu
Kenreiinmon (segment "Hoichi the Earless")

Kunie Tanaka
Yasaku (segment "Hoichi the Earless")
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
I'm always a little daunted when I settle down in a cinema seat for a film that is 3 hours long - I fear the last glass of wine may have been one too many - but this simply flew by. It is a compendium of four different Japanese "poems" that deal with just about every emotion in the human panoply - love, hate, greed, joy, fear, envy, betrayal... You name it! Each story has a central theme that, perhaps not terribly sophisticated to anyone with a fairly well-centred moral compass of their own, delivers a salutatory lesson in what is decent and what is flawed about human nature, even amongst the best of us. "In A Cup of Tea" - is a wonderfully intriguing story and my personal favourite is "Hoichi" - featuring a blind priest who can sing such beautiful songs but at such a fearful price. The staging is superb, though the fight scenes - especially on the water - maybe a little too studio-bound to be truly effective. The colours and sounds test every range of your senses; ecstasy and despair, bliss and rage and leave you, at the end, feeling as drained and fulfilled, simultaneously, as any film could hope to possibly engender... This really is a glorious roller-coaster of a ride!
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