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A Fugitive from the Past (1965)

7.5 | Jan 15, 1965 (JP) | Crime, Drama, Mystery | 03:03

Three robbers escape with loot from a heist before one of them kills the others. Their corpses wash up near the aftermath of a maritime calamity, provoking a policeman's interest.

Featured Crew

Director
Original Music Composer
Executive Producer
Original Story
Screenplay
Director of Photography
Sound Recordist
Art Direction
Lighting Technician

Cast

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Rentaro Mikuni
Takichi Inukai
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Sachiko Hidari
Yae Sugito
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Kōji Mitsui
Motojima
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Yoshi Katō
Yae's Father
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Sadako Sawamura
Motojima's Wife
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Susumu Fujita
Police Chief
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Akiko Kazami
Toshiko
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Tadashi Suganuma
Detective Sato

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | Sep 05, 2024
Sachiko Hidari ("Yae") is great in this film as the young geisha who shelters "Inukai" (Rentarô Mikuni) from a storm one night. Next morning he leaves her quite a sum of money - one that enables her to change her life, pay her debts - all whilst he disappears. That storm was actually a tornado that sank a local ferry boat. During that investigation, two unknown bodies are identified - and they are soon tied in with a fire that largely destroyed a local village where a robbery had taken place. Where had the money gone? Who killed the men? Many years later, "Yae" spots a photograph in a newspaper that she thinks might be her long lost benefactor and sets out to say thanks - with tragic consequences. It is a long film this, over 3 hours, but the clever - almost internecine - fashion in which the old and new stories are married together; the police investigations and the characterisations are carefully and fully crafted leaves us with quite a complex crime thriller. Now, sadly, what makes the thriller work so well is also what ruined the ending for me. It is flawed in so many ways as to make me want to shout at the screen. It's not that the ending itself is wrong, it is that the police procedures (remembering that there was little science involved in the process) are all just to convenient - far fetched, even. Still, this is a strongly paced, beautifully photographed piece of story-telling cinema that runs parallel narratives well and cohesively.