The best Shinobu Araki’s history movies

Shinobu Araki

Shinobu Araki

25/04/1891- 08/01/1969
We present our ranking of the best Shinobu Araki’s movies. Do you love cinema? Or are you looking for a movie of your favorite actor to watch tonight? Surely you have some to see or that you did not know yet about Shinobu Araki.

Gate of Hell

Gate of Hell
7.1/10
Japan, 1159. Moritō, a brave samurai, performs a heroic act by rescuing the lovely Kesa during a violent uprising. Moritō falls in love with her, but becomes distraught when he finds out that she is married.

The Gambler's Code

The Gambler's Code
6.9/10
  • Genre: DramaHistory
  • Release: 14/06/1961
  • Character: Genemon
One of Japan's most popular stories is the tale of Kutsukake Tokijiro, a traveling gambler who finds that he must take care of the wife and child of a yakuza he had been forced by the code of the gamblers to fight man to man. In a brilliant performance from super-star Ichikawa Raizo, with strong support from two of the greats from Toho, Shimura Takashi (7 Samurai) and Aratama Michiyo (Sword of Doom) the heartfelt story reaches new heights. Tokijiro, having learned the true nature of the boss to whom he was obligated for having spent a night and eaten at the gang's headquarters takes up arms against them in a running battle fought across the back roads of the entire nation. Another powerful rendition of this superb story, it is not to be missed!

The Princess Sen

The Princess Sen
  • Genre: History
  • Release: 20/10/1954
Directed By Keigo Kimura

Goblin Courier

Goblin Courier
  • Genre: History
  • Release: 04/01/1949
Jida-geki by Santaro Marune.

Saheiji’s Casebooks: The Purple Hood

Saheiji’s Casebooks: The Purple Hood
  • Genre: DramaHistory
  • Release: 10/05/1949
  • Character: Kazuô Matsudaira
The purple hood reveals the embezzlement of public money by officials. A remake of Masahiro Makino's 1923 film.

Thus Blew the Divine Wind

Thus Blew the Divine Wind
4.3/10
  • Genre: DramaHistory
  • Release: 11/08/1944
  • Character: Michitoki Kôno
Set in the late thirteenth century, Kakute kamikaze wa fuku (Thus Blew the Divine Wind, 1944) depicts an important historical event as the defense of southern Japan led by the Kono clan against the Mongol invasion in 1281. It features a full-scale hurricane destroying enemy ships, a cast of thousands to drown, and an all-star cast in the lead roles.

A Baby Given by a Fox

A Baby Given by a Fox
6.6/10
A lowly drunken samurai finds an abandoned baby in the woods and takes it home. A gift from a fox. But there's something special about the boy.

Date Masamune the One-Eyed Dragon

Date Masamune the One-Eyed Dragon
6.6/10
The life, adventures and exploits of warlord Date Masamune the One-eyed Dragon: his early youth as an aggressive warrior, the battles he won until subduing almost all his enemies, the lonely comprehension of knowing that he actually can not take over the whole country because he was born too late.

Seven Miles to Nakayama

Seven Miles to Nakayama
7/10
When a corrupt magistrate rapes Oshima, Masa (Raizō Ichikawa) avenges her by killing the officer, becoming thereby a fugitive, haunted and grief-stricken by the fact that Oshima committed suicide. Going underground in the gambling world, perpetually hiding from the law, Masa eventually meets a young woman named Onaka, who looks exactly like Oshima. Tales having two look-alike heroines are a commonplace in Japanese period films, a plot affectation inherited from the kabuki theater. Based on a novel by Shin Hasegawa, Nakayama shichiri was already twice filmed in 1930, one version directed by Namio Ochiai, and from which less than 40 minutes survive, the other directed by Kyotaro Namiki. Both are silent films, preserved by the Makino film institute.

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