Lady Snowblood (1973) Japan
Lady Snowblood Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Toshiya Fujita
Studio:ANIMEIGO
Producer:Kikumaru Okuda
Writer:Kazuo Uemura, Kazuo Koike
Rating:4
Rated:R
Date Added:2006-03-27
ASIN:B0001I54U2
UPC:0737187005190
Price:$29.98
Genre:Drama
Release:2004-11-05
IMDb:0158714
Duration:97
Picture Format:Anamorphic Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Languages:Japanese, Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Subtitles:English
Features:Anamorphic
Subtitled
Toshiya Fujita  ...  (Director)
Kazuo Uemura, Kazuo Koike  ...  (Writer)
 
Meiko Kaji  ...  Yuki Kashima (Shurayuki-hime)
Toshio Kurosawa  ...  Ryûrei Ashio
Masaaki Daimon  ...  Gô Kashima
Miyoko Akaza  ...  Sayo Kashima
Shinichi Uchida  ...  Shirô Kashima
Takeo Chii  ...  Tokuichi Shôkei
Noboru Nakaya  ...  Banzô Takemura
Yoshiko Nakada  ...  Kobue Takemura
Akemi Negishi  ...  Tajire no Okiku
Kaoru Kusuda  ...  Otora Mikazuki
Sanae Nakahara  ...  Kitahama, Okono
Hosei Komatsu  ...  Genzô Shibayama
Makoto Matsuzaki  ...  Daikashi
Hiroshi Hasegawa  ...  Daihachi Kachime
Takehiko Ono  ...  (as Susumu Kuroki)
Hôsei Komatsu  ...  Genzô Shibayama
Summary: A flamboyantly blood-spattered samurai revenge picture with a twist: the implacable seeker of retribution is a slender female (Meiko Kaji) with a flawless ivory complexion and a dead-center killer stare. Born in prison, Snowblood is raised by a martial priest and trained to fulfill a single purpose: tracking down, and dismembering (or bisecting), the four cackling fiends who killed her father and persecuted her mother to an early grave. Adapted from another manga comic book written by Kasuo Koike, whose most famous work became the legendary Lone Wolf and Cub film series, this 1973 programmer stays close to its pulp-paper roots: images from the comics are deployed in a couple of montage sequences, and the story is divided into four chapters drawn from the monthly manga installments. Stalwart leading man Toshio Kurasawa plays a crusading journalist who writes a series of Japanese dime novels based on Snowblood's exploits, and manages to flush out a couple of the evildoers in the process. --David Chute