Lady Snowblood (Japanese: ???? Hepburn: Shurayuki-hime) is a 1973 Japanese action thriller film directed by Toshiya Fujita and starring Meiko Kaji. It is based on the manga series of the same name, recounting the tale of Yuki, a woman who seeks vengeance upon three people who raped her mother and killed her father and brother.
Lady Snowblood | |
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Japanese release poster | |
Directed by | Toshiya Fujita |
Produced by | Kikumaru Okuda |
Screenplay by | Norio Osada |
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Starring |
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Music by | Masaaki Hirao |
Cinematography | Masaki Tamura |
Edited by | Osamu Inoue |
Production company | Tokyo Eiga |
Distributed by | Toho |
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Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | Japan |
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Screenplay
The plot is nonlinear jumping from present to past; this is a linear plot in chronological order
In 1874, a deathly-ill woman named Sayo gives birth to a baby girl in a women's prison. Naming the child Yuki from seeing the snow outside, Sayo confided to the inmates who helped deliver the baby how she was brutally raped by three of the four criminals who murdered her husband Tora and their son Shiro a year ago. While she managed to stab her captor Shokei Tokuichi to death when the chance presented itself, she was arrested and imprisoned for life. Sayo seduced a prison guard to conceive Yuki, her final words before for the child to be raised to carry out the vengeance against the three remaining tormentors. In Meiji 15 (1882), the child Yuki undergoes brutal training in sword fighting under the priest D?kai to become her mother's wrath incarnate.
Yuki, now twenty and an assassin going by the name Shurayuki-hime, blocks the path of several men and a rickshaw and kills them and their leader Shibayama using a sword concealed in the handle of an umbrella. Yuki appears in a poor village looking for a man called Matsuemon, the leader of an underground organization of street beggars, and asks him to find her mother's surviving tormentors in return of having killed Shibayama for him. Matsuemon's intel leads her to Takemura Banz?, who became an alcoholic wreck with gambling debts while his daughter Kobue took to prostitution to support him. After convincing the gambling house's owners to pardon Banz? after he was caught cheating in a card game, Yuki leads him to the beach and remorselessly kills him after revealing her identity. Yuki then learns that the last of her mother's rapists, Tsukamoto Gishir?, had suspiciously died in a ship wreck three years prior when she first attempted to find him.
After attacking Gishir?'s tombstone in frustration, Yuki finds herself being followed by a reporter named Ry?rei Ashio whom she warned to stay away from her. However, Ashio learned of Yuki's story from D?kai who persuaded him to publish it as a means to draw one of the last of Sayo's tormentors who personally murdered Shiro: Kitahama Okono. Okono sends men to kidnap Ashio, threatening him with torture for Yuki's location as he refuses to tell them. But Yuki enters Okono's estate and kills several of Okono's men while pursuing Okono throughout the estate. Eventually, Yuki and Ry?rei finds Okono's dying body hanging within a room with Yuki slicing Okono in half before her heart can stop beating.
Yuki learns from Ashio that Gishir?, revealed to be Ashio's father, had faked his death when he learned of Yuki's mission. She finds Gishir? at a masquerade ball and kills what she realized is his decoy. Ashio and Yuki find and follow the real Gishir?, who shoots Ashio. Wounded, Ashio grapples with Gishir? and stops him from shooting Yuki as she swings on a lamp between balconies. Yuki stabs through Ashio into Gishir?'s chest. She then cuts Gishir?'s throat as he shoots her, falls over a railing and onto the ground floor full of guests. Yuki, wounded, stumbles outside where is stabbed by a revenge-driven Kobue before she runs off. Yuki falls on her face in the snow, awakening the following morning.
- Meiko Kaji as Yuki Kashima, aka Lady Snowblood
- Mayumi Maemura as young Yuki
- K? Nishimura as Priest D?kai
- Toshio Kurosawa as Ry?rei Ashio
- Masaaki Daimon as G? Kashima
- Miyoko Akaza as Sayo Kashima
- Eiji Okada as Gishir? Tsukamoto
- Sanae Nakahara as Kitahama Okono
- Noboru Nakaya as Takemura Banz?
- Takeo Chii as Shokei Tokuichi
- Hitoshi Takagi as Matsuemon
- Akemi Negishi as Tajire no Okiku
- Yoshiko Nakada as Kobue Kitahama
The film was produced on a relatively low budget and filmed with a minimal length of film (20,000 feet). At one point, a special effect blood spatter went wrong, covering Meiko Kaji in fake blood.
Lady Snowblood was released in Japan on December 1, 1973, where it was distributed by Toho.
The film has a rating of 100% on the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 6 critic reviews. TV Guide gave the film three-out-of-five stars, calling it "certainly entertaining, but unnecessarily distancing".
The film spawned one sequel, Love Song of Vengeance. A 2001 science fiction remake, The Princess Blade, stars Yumiko Shaku.
It was also a major inspiration for Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill. According to Meiko Kaji, Tarantino made the cast and crew of Kill Bill watch DVDs of Lady Snowblood during filming breaks.
The music video for "rockstar" by Post Malone featuring 21 Savage, references scenes from the movie.
Lady Snowblood was released on VHS in 1997, and was later released on DVD by AnimEigo in 2004. In 2012, the film was released in a box set with Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance on Blu-ray and DVD by Arrow Video. In January 2016, the film was again released with Love Song of Vengeance on Blu-ray and DVD by the Criterion Collection.