22 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :- wonderful and often overlooked, 25 May 2005
Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
While the Seven Sumarai and Rashomon are wonderful Kurasawa flicks, too
few people are aware that he made other great films that are NOT
samurai films because they are rarely seen in the United States. Only
osscasionally, they are shown on Turner Classic Movies or other
channels and should not be missed.
One of the best examples of this is this movie. The Bad Sleep Well is
extremely well-written and acted and keeps your attention from start
(the cake scene) to finish (the final showdown). I love how Kurasawa
does NOT follow the expected path in this and his other pictures.
Anyone wanting something DIFFERENT should give Kurasawa a try. In
addition, I would strongly recommend Kurasawa's Madadayo ("Not Yet") or
Shubun ("Scandal") as among his lesser-known flicks you MUST see. Among
his slightly more famous, try Throne of Blood (a GREAT remake of
MacBeth) or Yojimbo.
FYI--this story is a slight re-working of Hamlet, though you might not
notice it unless you are looking.
20 out of 25 people found the following comment useful :- Something's Rotten in the State of Japan, 17 September 2002
Author:
gvb0907 from Falls Church, Virginia
Akira Kurosawa's "The Bad Sleep Well" is too dense and frankly too slow a
film to qualify as a thriller in the usual sense. Although the elements
are
there - intrigue, double crosses, revenge, and crimes both naked and
invisible - the pacing is too deliberate and there is little real
suspense.
Yes, it's "Hamlet," though in a subtle, understated, Japanese way. Some
of
the characters are left out, but you'll eventually spot the Prince,
Horatio,
Ophelia, and Claudius. However, unlike his "Macbeth" ("Throne of Blood"),
this is only a partial transposition and Kurosawa wisely does not carry
the
parallels too far.
Although it takes patience, the picture has its rewards. The performances
are good, especially Masayuki Mori as the reptilian manipulator Iwabuchi,
Kamatari Fujiwara as the hapless accountant Wada, and, as always, Takashi
Shimura as master bureaucrat Moriyama. The sharp black-and-white
cinematography gives the film a photo-journal aura of authenticity. And
Masaru Sato's wonderful opening theme, heavy with menace and unease,
certainly sets an appropriate tone.
Toshiro Mifune as Nishi/Hamlet is unusually restrained here, his normal
fire
largely internalized. He's adequate, but this casting against type
doesn't
really suit him.
"The Bad Sleep Well" is Kurosawa's attack on Japan's post-war business
corruption that apparently was endemic by 1960 and perhaps still is today.
His critique is harsh and unsparing, though one can't help but get the
feeling that he's shooting at fish in a barrel.
Beyond the corruption of the corporate scandal, which the film literally
headlines, is a strong sense of inner decay. Nearly everyone, regardless
of their position, is uncomfortable. Even Iwabuchi, for all his power,
must
answer awkwardly to greater, unseen forces. Only the jackal-journalists
who
cover the opening wedding banquet seem immune to the pervasive uneasiness.
Yet all, save Nishi, are prepared to accept this state of affairs in
return
for their security. Ironically, Nishi himself seems most comfortable in
an
old air raid shelter in the ruins of a munitions plant, his own "castle",
as
it were, where he fights for honor as he understands it.
Recommended for Kurosawa fans and anyone interested in Japanese psyche,
culture, or style. Those expecting a slam-bang 1940s Warner Brothers
treatment will be extremely disappointed and probably won't last an hour.
15 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :- The Bad do indeed sleep well in this overlooked Kurosawa..., 20 February 2006
Author:
vikramas1109 from in the corrupt Public Corporation
"The Bad Sleep Well" is a forgotten gem from one of Japan's great
masters, Akira Kurosawa. His other two Shakespeare adaptations, "Throne
of Blood" (Macbeth) and "Ran" (King Lear), are much more famous and
well-regarded, justifiably so if you have seen them ("Ran" is
particular is my favorite of all Kurosawa films). However, this sharp
and caustic adaptation of Hamlet deserves an equal amount of praise and
recognition. It may be the most bleak subject matter that Kurosawa ever
tackled - the corruption in the highest levels of government in
post-war Japan.
The film begins with a long but funny wedding sequence that illustrates
Kurosawa's great skill as a director. We (and the camera) are among a
group of reporters discussing the numerous convenient reasons for the
marriage; the bride is lame and the daughter of Iwabuchi, the head of
corporation, and the bridegroom, Nishi, has aspirations to elevate his
status in the business. We see the comedy of manners play out in this
sequence in increasingly humorous situations as the various parties
deny the rumors and reporters continue comment to each other,
culminating in the panicked looks on the faces of the corporate
higher-ups as the wedding cake arrives - in the shape of their office
building, Public Corp., with a red X marking a spot in one of the
windows where one of their former partners committed suicide. It's a
virtuoso sequence that perfectly sets up the tone of the rest of the
film.
The newspapers have a field day with this, especially when various
members of Public Corp. are investigated for fraud and embezzlement,
yet they stoically remain silent and the case goes nowhere. Then it
heats up again as a few of them commit suicide; the rumors are that
they were goaded into doing so (n fact, they were). However, without
any substance to press the matter, the case is dropped. And that's when
the real story begins - one of the Public Corp executives, Wada,
survives and is rescued by Nishi and his shadowy accomplice, Itakura.
This is followed by a brilliant scene in which Wada is taken to his own
funeral and observes the farce - all the while, Nishi plays him a tape
with Moriyama and Shirai, his former partners, plotting his murder. The
way Kurosawa stages this is masterful; the sublime music emanating from
the funeral is contrasted dramatically with the cold-blooded words of
Public Corp, as Wada listens on. One of the ways Wada contributes is to
scare the living hell out of Shirai - Wada poses as a ghost of himself
in order to freak him out (a clever method of adding in the ghost in
Hamlet). As the plot progresses, Nishi reveals his reasons for saving
Wada and exacting a very personal revenge on Iwabuchi and his cohorts;
and the story's pace becomes more frantic and exciting with a dramatic
but sudden conclusion.
Technically, Kurosawa is at his best here. The wedding and the funeral
are both marvels of observational behavior and they contrast each other
perfectly. He uses a lot of intriguing mise-en-scene compositions for
his interiors that serve to highlight his characters' inner thoughts
but very little movement of the camera in order to manipulate his
audience; the dark nature of the story is enough to suck you in. One of
the fascinating observations in "The Bad Sleep Well" is that nearly all
of the characters are morally bankrupt and filled with secrets - even
Nishi, the protagonist. His wife, the Ophelia character, is the only
one that Kurosawa allows us to feel sympathy for, and even then in the
end she is not fully spared her grief. Taken in this context,
Kurosawa's Hamlet becomes a study in the morality and pragmatism of
revenge but also an incisive jab at the fat cats in modern Japan.
If there is a flaw in the film, it is that the overall pacing is not
always brisk enough to sustain the long running time (2 1/2 hours). The
wedding, despite being absolutely essential, is protracted; the rest of
the film is much quicker but still drags in parts. Also, Kurosawa seems
unsure about his ending; the film ends quite abruptly but appropriately
in terms of his larger point about the hopelessness of fighting the
rampant corruption, I would argue. However, despite these flaws,
overall "The Bad Sleep Well" is a masterful and dark excursion into the
seedy side of corporate crime, using Shakespeare Hamlet brilliantly but
not completely as it's core. Toshiro Mifune in particular gives one of
his most unique low-key performances; instead of his usual fiery
exterior we get a performance full of internalized anger throughout.
Highly recommended.
16 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :- Under appreciated Kurosawa masterpiece, 13 October 1999
Author:
Shawn Taber (filmbuffshawn@netscape.net) from Rock Forest, Quebec
At the start of this film I didn't know what to expect. I thought it might
be a mediocre Kurosawa film. By the end of the film I realized it was one
of
his best. This film about familial discord and corporate manipulation is
breathtaking. Its filled with irony, double crosses, cynicism, manipulation
and revenge. In short, its endlessly interesting and captivating. Definitly
a must see.
14 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- Kurosawa does Nippon Noir with style, 22 March 1999
Author:
Hanichi from Skaville, UK
The Bad Sleep Well is a great film, with excellent acting from all the
actors, especially my favorite Japanese actor, Takashi Shimura as
Moriyama.
Kurosawa shows in this film that no one can or will ever top his skill at
doing tableau shots. The wedding scene in the beginning of the film,
where
the reporters are standing just outside the doors of the reception hall,
commenting on the goings on within, is fantastic. The ending seems very
abrupt, almost as if they ran out of time while making the film, keeping
this one out of the same league as other Kurosawa classics (7 Samurai,
Stray
Dog, Yojinbo).
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- Another Kurasawa classic!, 21 May 2006
Author:
M-Petri from Netherlands
I just watched "The Bad Sleep Well," and finished reading the other
viewers comments. So I will comment on both. "Seven Samurai" is perhaps
my favorite film of all time, and I really like Kurasawa's work. Other
than the brief plot summary, I didn't really know what to expect from
"The Bad Sleep Well." The beginning can be somewhat confusing, as the
reporters throw out lots of Japanese names and the viewer must struggle
to understand what's going on and who is who. But as the film
progressed, I found myself drawn in and completely absorbed by it.
Don't worry if you don't get it at first, all will become clear. I
found this to be an excellent film, and I would recommend it to any
Kurasawa film. Sure, it's not action-packed like his samurai films. And
yes, it is somewhat slow in pace. But I must say that I didn't really
mind that. I found it quite engrossing. There are enough plot twists
and turns to keep the viewer interested. I din't think that Toshiro
Mifune did a bad job either, as some other viewers thought. He's not
wild and crazy like in "Seven Samurai" or "Rashomon" but I didn't think
he was badly cast. Sadly, I am not intimately familiar with "Hamlet,"
so I can't comment too much on the similarities. It seems to be the
general opinion that this "The Bad Sleep Well" is loosely based on
Hamlet, but I also agree that this won't detract from your enjoyment of
the film in any way, and that knowing "Hamlet" doesn't mean that you
will know what happens in this film. I agree with those who say that
this is another underrated Kurarsawa masterpiece, and well worth
seeing. Give it a chance!
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- "Now all Japan has been hoodwinked", 20 February 2007
Author:
nora_nettlerash from Ruritania
For his first film made by his own independent production company,
Kurosawa decided to take advantage of his new creative freedom to make
his most politically daring picture to date. He takes on the corruption
rife in corporate Japan in a film noir of almost epic proportions.
This was Kurosawa's most stylised film so far. He takes a nasty, tragic
film noir plot-line (and yes, there are elements of Hamlet, but not
enough to call it an adaptation) but plays it at some times as if it
was a farcical comedy, and at others like it was a horror. The
villainous characters appear slightly ridiculous and even cartoonish.
Only the most senior amongst them, Iwabuchi, is allowed to keep his
dignity. While the others are just puffed-up minions, easily toppled,
Iwabuchi seems truly immovable.
The establishing scenes are the film's strongest. It opens, like The
Godfather, with a lengthy wedding scene which serves to introduce all
the principle characters and set the tone. Everything about the way
this scene is put together tells us this is not the happy occasion it
should be the hall where the ceremony takes place echoes
off-puttingly, a company official about to make a speech cringes as
champagne corks go off behind him like gun shots. Add to this an
interruption from the police, a gang of journalists and photographers
waiting in the wings, and a best man's speech that turns from jokes to
threats, and you can practically taste the corruption and decadence
that is the focus for this story.
The wedding scene is followed by a montage of newspaper headlines and
newsreel footage, reminiscent of similar devices used by Frank Capra
and Raoul Walsh. Kurosawa brilliantly choreographs this sequence to
music, a rather eerie little dirge more typical of a Japanese period
piece than a modern thriller. It's the only example of this kind of
montage I know of in Kurosawa's work (it was rare for him to expand the
narrative to the bigger picture), but it's a highly effective one-off.
The central plot, of Nishi (Toshiro Mifune) orchestrating spectacular
revenge against the men who killed his father, is full of amazing
set-pieces. There are echoes of Hitchcock in the way Kurosawa shoves
significant objects right up to the camera. The use of music is
dazzling, combining upbeat music with unnerving moments to give a great
sense of irony. Nishi is the last person the villains suspect, and he
often appears innocently in the background with little more
significance than an extra, although of course the audience knows
better. It's a nice touch that Kurosawa has the character wear glasses,
making Mifune almost unrecognisable to us as well.
Sadly, the film's pace slows down after the first hour, and rarely gets
back to the same dizzying heights for the rest of its 145 minutes. The
lengthy runtime does however allow Kurosawa to add a depth that is
absent from your average 100-minute Hollywood Film Noir. Kurosawa could
be bleak, but he never forgot the humanity in his films, and this is
really the focus in the second half of the film. He takes time to put
the spotlight on the innocent victims of revenge (Nishi's wife, Wada's
family), and even show the arch-villain in moments of warmth and
tenderness with his family. And this is perhaps where the story's
biggest similarity with Hamlet is Nishi's revenge falls apart because
he is unable to be totally ruthless and unfeeling.
As for the acting, Masayuki Mori is particularly good as Iwabuchi. Just
look at his reaction when the second wedding cake pulls up behind him
remaining calm, but clearly suppressing concern and annoyance. Kamatari
Fujiwara and Akira Nishimura give great over the top performances as
Wada and Shirai respectively. Unfortunately this is not one of Toshiro
Mifune's great performances. Mifune had an incredible range, but
somehow he doesn't quite work as Nishi. In particular, for me he
doesn't quite get the emoting right when he begins to realise his
feelings for his wife.
Kurosawa always liked to be making some kind of point with all his
films, something which sometimes got in the way of decent storytelling.
The Bad Sleep Well is a political soapbox picture if ever there was
one, but luckily in this case that doesn't water it down quality-wise.
True, it is perhaps a little too long, and there are a few dull
stretches, but Kurosawa's direction was still at its peak and this
stands as one of his best contemporary-set pictures.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Kurosawa in top form, 5 November 2007
Author:
RussyPelican from United States
The Bad Sleep Well is one of the best revenge movies of all time. It
stars the great Toshiro Mifune as a man seeking revenge against the
people who forced his father into committing suicide. Unlike many
revenge movies, The Bad Sleep Well doesn't glamorize its subject.
Instead it shows how in trying to get retribution for a man who is now
dead, Mifune ends up injuring himself and other people he loves who are
still alive. There are a lot of beautiful and haunting images, like
when we see a desperate man struggling to climb a volcano so he can
throw himself in, or a number of scenes that are shot at the bombed out
wreckage of an old WWII munitions plant. The bleak landscape mirrors
the damaged lives of the movie's characters. Powerful and haunting,
this is a movie that will follow you for days.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Classic film-noir - spoilers herein, 14 December 2004
Author:
Marc Fairbrother from Paris
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I have just started watching Kurosawa's film-noirs, and this is the
second one I've seen so far. The first one I saw was Stray Dog which I
believe is slightly better paced than this one which gets a bit too
slow in some parts.
The photography is simply magnificent, the depth and the contrasts
really bring the characters to life, Kurosawa's directing is at its
best with many great shots. The acting is also very good, especially
Toshiro Mifune, but not only him, the other characters, both the "bad"
and the "good" are very well portrayed.
The plot is quite complex to understand at the beginning. The reporters
in the opening scene of the movie who comment the marriage act like a
classic theatrical chorus, it's quite confusing because they mention
many names and events. But as the story unfolds the pieces start to fit
together and everything starts to appear clearly until the revelation
of Nishi's true identity. From then on the movie turns into a
revenge-story. The ending is so shattering that all that's left to say
is "The Bad Sleep Well".
I give this movie an 8/10 because I don't give 10's and as I said it's
slightly too slow at times. The best thing about the film is that it
simply DOES NOT compromise.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Faithful film-noir homage, 15 August 2006
Author:
woofan2 from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
A film that I have had on my shelf for quite awhile until I became ill
and started watching films I have never seen. I am a huge fan of
Kurosawas' work. This is a change of pace for him. Set in the 1960 era
in Japan. A corporate tale, of deception, extreme loyalty to the point
of committing suicide rather than bring shame to their company. A
kick-back scandal erupts in the newspapers. Various officers of the
corporation start doing their suicide thing. Tushiro Mifune in an
under-rated performance plays the secretary of his new father-in-law.
Bent on revenge for his fathers' "forced" suicide. I won't review
entire film but the ending was kind of shocking for me. The death of
Mifunes' character adds to the true to life noir feeling of the
film...so in a way the ending should have been expected yet still
surprising. I love the old cars in the film and Kurosawas' use of the
flashlight as a lighting device in the film....the ominous chiming of
the clock in the background acts as a foreshadowing device...a change
is coming...for good or bad. Definitely a must see...Criterion edition
does a great job again...subtitles are sharp and the deep focus
Kurosawa used is well demonstrated here....a gem of a film....
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22 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :-

wonderful and often overlooked, 25 May 2005
Author: planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
While the Seven Sumarai and Rashomon are wonderful Kurasawa flicks, too few people are aware that he made other great films that are NOT samurai films because they are rarely seen in the United States. Only osscasionally, they are shown on Turner Classic Movies or other channels and should not be missed.
One of the best examples of this is this movie. The Bad Sleep Well is extremely well-written and acted and keeps your attention from start (the cake scene) to finish (the final showdown). I love how Kurasawa does NOT follow the expected path in this and his other pictures. Anyone wanting something DIFFERENT should give Kurasawa a try. In addition, I would strongly recommend Kurasawa's Madadayo ("Not Yet") or Shubun ("Scandal") as among his lesser-known flicks you MUST see. Among his slightly more famous, try Throne of Blood (a GREAT remake of MacBeth) or Yojimbo.
FYI--this story is a slight re-working of Hamlet, though you might not notice it unless you are looking.
20 out of 25 people found the following comment useful :-
Something's Rotten in the State of Japan, 17 September 2002
Author: gvb0907 from Falls Church, Virginia
Akira Kurosawa's "The Bad Sleep Well" is too dense and frankly too slow a film to qualify as a thriller in the usual sense. Although the elements are there - intrigue, double crosses, revenge, and crimes both naked and invisible - the pacing is too deliberate and there is little real suspense.
Yes, it's "Hamlet," though in a subtle, understated, Japanese way. Some of the characters are left out, but you'll eventually spot the Prince, Horatio, Ophelia, and Claudius. However, unlike his "Macbeth" ("Throne of Blood"), this is only a partial transposition and Kurosawa wisely does not carry the parallels too far.
Although it takes patience, the picture has its rewards. The performances are good, especially Masayuki Mori as the reptilian manipulator Iwabuchi, Kamatari Fujiwara as the hapless accountant Wada, and, as always, Takashi Shimura as master bureaucrat Moriyama. The sharp black-and-white cinematography gives the film a photo-journal aura of authenticity. And Masaru Sato's wonderful opening theme, heavy with menace and unease, certainly sets an appropriate tone.
Toshiro Mifune as Nishi/Hamlet is unusually restrained here, his normal fire largely internalized. He's adequate, but this casting against type doesn't really suit him.
"The Bad Sleep Well" is Kurosawa's attack on Japan's post-war business corruption that apparently was endemic by 1960 and perhaps still is today. His critique is harsh and unsparing, though one can't help but get the feeling that he's shooting at fish in a barrel.
Beyond the corruption of the corporate scandal, which the film literally headlines, is a strong sense of inner decay. Nearly everyone, regardless of their position, is uncomfortable. Even Iwabuchi, for all his power, must answer awkwardly to greater, unseen forces. Only the jackal-journalists who cover the opening wedding banquet seem immune to the pervasive uneasiness.
Yet all, save Nishi, are prepared to accept this state of affairs in return for their security. Ironically, Nishi himself seems most comfortable in an old air raid shelter in the ruins of a munitions plant, his own "castle", as it were, where he fights for honor as he understands it.
Recommended for Kurosawa fans and anyone interested in Japanese psyche, culture, or style. Those expecting a slam-bang 1940s Warner Brothers treatment will be extremely disappointed and probably won't last an hour.
15 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-

The Bad do indeed sleep well in this overlooked Kurosawa..., 20 February 2006
Author: vikramas1109 from in the corrupt Public Corporation
"The Bad Sleep Well" is a forgotten gem from one of Japan's great masters, Akira Kurosawa. His other two Shakespeare adaptations, "Throne of Blood" (Macbeth) and "Ran" (King Lear), are much more famous and well-regarded, justifiably so if you have seen them ("Ran" is particular is my favorite of all Kurosawa films). However, this sharp and caustic adaptation of Hamlet deserves an equal amount of praise and recognition. It may be the most bleak subject matter that Kurosawa ever tackled - the corruption in the highest levels of government in post-war Japan.
The film begins with a long but funny wedding sequence that illustrates Kurosawa's great skill as a director. We (and the camera) are among a group of reporters discussing the numerous convenient reasons for the marriage; the bride is lame and the daughter of Iwabuchi, the head of corporation, and the bridegroom, Nishi, has aspirations to elevate his status in the business. We see the comedy of manners play out in this sequence in increasingly humorous situations as the various parties deny the rumors and reporters continue comment to each other, culminating in the panicked looks on the faces of the corporate higher-ups as the wedding cake arrives - in the shape of their office building, Public Corp., with a red X marking a spot in one of the windows where one of their former partners committed suicide. It's a virtuoso sequence that perfectly sets up the tone of the rest of the film.
The newspapers have a field day with this, especially when various members of Public Corp. are investigated for fraud and embezzlement, yet they stoically remain silent and the case goes nowhere. Then it heats up again as a few of them commit suicide; the rumors are that they were goaded into doing so (n fact, they were). However, without any substance to press the matter, the case is dropped. And that's when the real story begins - one of the Public Corp executives, Wada, survives and is rescued by Nishi and his shadowy accomplice, Itakura.
This is followed by a brilliant scene in which Wada is taken to his own funeral and observes the farce - all the while, Nishi plays him a tape with Moriyama and Shirai, his former partners, plotting his murder. The way Kurosawa stages this is masterful; the sublime music emanating from the funeral is contrasted dramatically with the cold-blooded words of Public Corp, as Wada listens on. One of the ways Wada contributes is to scare the living hell out of Shirai - Wada poses as a ghost of himself in order to freak him out (a clever method of adding in the ghost in Hamlet). As the plot progresses, Nishi reveals his reasons for saving Wada and exacting a very personal revenge on Iwabuchi and his cohorts; and the story's pace becomes more frantic and exciting with a dramatic but sudden conclusion.
Technically, Kurosawa is at his best here. The wedding and the funeral are both marvels of observational behavior and they contrast each other perfectly. He uses a lot of intriguing mise-en-scene compositions for his interiors that serve to highlight his characters' inner thoughts but very little movement of the camera in order to manipulate his audience; the dark nature of the story is enough to suck you in. One of the fascinating observations in "The Bad Sleep Well" is that nearly all of the characters are morally bankrupt and filled with secrets - even Nishi, the protagonist. His wife, the Ophelia character, is the only one that Kurosawa allows us to feel sympathy for, and even then in the end she is not fully spared her grief. Taken in this context, Kurosawa's Hamlet becomes a study in the morality and pragmatism of revenge but also an incisive jab at the fat cats in modern Japan.
If there is a flaw in the film, it is that the overall pacing is not always brisk enough to sustain the long running time (2 1/2 hours). The wedding, despite being absolutely essential, is protracted; the rest of the film is much quicker but still drags in parts. Also, Kurosawa seems unsure about his ending; the film ends quite abruptly but appropriately in terms of his larger point about the hopelessness of fighting the rampant corruption, I would argue. However, despite these flaws, overall "The Bad Sleep Well" is a masterful and dark excursion into the seedy side of corporate crime, using Shakespeare Hamlet brilliantly but not completely as it's core. Toshiro Mifune in particular gives one of his most unique low-key performances; instead of his usual fiery exterior we get a performance full of internalized anger throughout. Highly recommended.
16 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :-

Under appreciated Kurosawa masterpiece, 13 October 1999
Author: Shawn Taber (filmbuffshawn@netscape.net) from Rock Forest, Quebec
At the start of this film I didn't know what to expect. I thought it might be a mediocre Kurosawa film. By the end of the film I realized it was one of his best. This film about familial discord and corporate manipulation is breathtaking. Its filled with irony, double crosses, cynicism, manipulation and revenge. In short, its endlessly interesting and captivating. Definitly a must see.
14 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

Kurosawa does Nippon Noir with style, 22 March 1999
Author: Hanichi from Skaville, UK
The Bad Sleep Well is a great film, with excellent acting from all the actors, especially my favorite Japanese actor, Takashi Shimura as Moriyama. Kurosawa shows in this film that no one can or will ever top his skill at doing tableau shots. The wedding scene in the beginning of the film, where the reporters are standing just outside the doors of the reception hall, commenting on the goings on within, is fantastic. The ending seems very abrupt, almost as if they ran out of time while making the film, keeping this one out of the same league as other Kurosawa classics (7 Samurai, Stray Dog, Yojinbo).
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

Another Kurasawa classic!, 21 May 2006
Author: M-Petri from Netherlands
I just watched "The Bad Sleep Well," and finished reading the other viewers comments. So I will comment on both. "Seven Samurai" is perhaps my favorite film of all time, and I really like Kurasawa's work. Other than the brief plot summary, I didn't really know what to expect from "The Bad Sleep Well." The beginning can be somewhat confusing, as the reporters throw out lots of Japanese names and the viewer must struggle to understand what's going on and who is who. But as the film progressed, I found myself drawn in and completely absorbed by it. Don't worry if you don't get it at first, all will become clear. I found this to be an excellent film, and I would recommend it to any Kurasawa film. Sure, it's not action-packed like his samurai films. And yes, it is somewhat slow in pace. But I must say that I didn't really mind that. I found it quite engrossing. There are enough plot twists and turns to keep the viewer interested. I din't think that Toshiro Mifune did a bad job either, as some other viewers thought. He's not wild and crazy like in "Seven Samurai" or "Rashomon" but I didn't think he was badly cast. Sadly, I am not intimately familiar with "Hamlet," so I can't comment too much on the similarities. It seems to be the general opinion that this "The Bad Sleep Well" is loosely based on Hamlet, but I also agree that this won't detract from your enjoyment of the film in any way, and that knowing "Hamlet" doesn't mean that you will know what happens in this film. I agree with those who say that this is another underrated Kurarsawa masterpiece, and well worth seeing. Give it a chance!
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

"Now all Japan has been hoodwinked", 20 February 2007
Author: nora_nettlerash from Ruritania
For his first film made by his own independent production company, Kurosawa decided to take advantage of his new creative freedom to make his most politically daring picture to date. He takes on the corruption rife in corporate Japan in a film noir of almost epic proportions.
This was Kurosawa's most stylised film so far. He takes a nasty, tragic film noir plot-line (and yes, there are elements of Hamlet, but not enough to call it an adaptation) but plays it at some times as if it was a farcical comedy, and at others like it was a horror. The villainous characters appear slightly ridiculous and even cartoonish. Only the most senior amongst them, Iwabuchi, is allowed to keep his dignity. While the others are just puffed-up minions, easily toppled, Iwabuchi seems truly immovable.
The establishing scenes are the film's strongest. It opens, like The Godfather, with a lengthy wedding scene which serves to introduce all the principle characters and set the tone. Everything about the way this scene is put together tells us this is not the happy occasion it should be the hall where the ceremony takes place echoes off-puttingly, a company official about to make a speech cringes as champagne corks go off behind him like gun shots. Add to this an interruption from the police, a gang of journalists and photographers waiting in the wings, and a best man's speech that turns from jokes to threats, and you can practically taste the corruption and decadence that is the focus for this story.
The wedding scene is followed by a montage of newspaper headlines and newsreel footage, reminiscent of similar devices used by Frank Capra and Raoul Walsh. Kurosawa brilliantly choreographs this sequence to music, a rather eerie little dirge more typical of a Japanese period piece than a modern thriller. It's the only example of this kind of montage I know of in Kurosawa's work (it was rare for him to expand the narrative to the bigger picture), but it's a highly effective one-off.
The central plot, of Nishi (Toshiro Mifune) orchestrating spectacular revenge against the men who killed his father, is full of amazing set-pieces. There are echoes of Hitchcock in the way Kurosawa shoves significant objects right up to the camera. The use of music is dazzling, combining upbeat music with unnerving moments to give a great sense of irony. Nishi is the last person the villains suspect, and he often appears innocently in the background with little more significance than an extra, although of course the audience knows better. It's a nice touch that Kurosawa has the character wear glasses, making Mifune almost unrecognisable to us as well.
Sadly, the film's pace slows down after the first hour, and rarely gets back to the same dizzying heights for the rest of its 145 minutes. The lengthy runtime does however allow Kurosawa to add a depth that is absent from your average 100-minute Hollywood Film Noir. Kurosawa could be bleak, but he never forgot the humanity in his films, and this is really the focus in the second half of the film. He takes time to put the spotlight on the innocent victims of revenge (Nishi's wife, Wada's family), and even show the arch-villain in moments of warmth and tenderness with his family. And this is perhaps where the story's biggest similarity with Hamlet is Nishi's revenge falls apart because he is unable to be totally ruthless and unfeeling.
As for the acting, Masayuki Mori is particularly good as Iwabuchi. Just look at his reaction when the second wedding cake pulls up behind him remaining calm, but clearly suppressing concern and annoyance. Kamatari Fujiwara and Akira Nishimura give great over the top performances as Wada and Shirai respectively. Unfortunately this is not one of Toshiro Mifune's great performances. Mifune had an incredible range, but somehow he doesn't quite work as Nishi. In particular, for me he doesn't quite get the emoting right when he begins to realise his feelings for his wife.
Kurosawa always liked to be making some kind of point with all his films, something which sometimes got in the way of decent storytelling. The Bad Sleep Well is a political soapbox picture if ever there was one, but luckily in this case that doesn't water it down quality-wise. True, it is perhaps a little too long, and there are a few dull stretches, but Kurosawa's direction was still at its peak and this stands as one of his best contemporary-set pictures.
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Kurosawa in top form, 5 November 2007
Author: RussyPelican from United States
The Bad Sleep Well is one of the best revenge movies of all time. It stars the great Toshiro Mifune as a man seeking revenge against the people who forced his father into committing suicide. Unlike many revenge movies, The Bad Sleep Well doesn't glamorize its subject. Instead it shows how in trying to get retribution for a man who is now dead, Mifune ends up injuring himself and other people he loves who are still alive. There are a lot of beautiful and haunting images, like when we see a desperate man struggling to climb a volcano so he can throw himself in, or a number of scenes that are shot at the bombed out wreckage of an old WWII munitions plant. The bleak landscape mirrors the damaged lives of the movie's characters. Powerful and haunting, this is a movie that will follow you for days.
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Classic film-noir - spoilers herein, 14 December 2004
Author: Marc Fairbrother from Paris
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I have just started watching Kurosawa's film-noirs, and this is the second one I've seen so far. The first one I saw was Stray Dog which I believe is slightly better paced than this one which gets a bit too slow in some parts.
The photography is simply magnificent, the depth and the contrasts really bring the characters to life, Kurosawa's directing is at its best with many great shots. The acting is also very good, especially Toshiro Mifune, but not only him, the other characters, both the "bad" and the "good" are very well portrayed.
The plot is quite complex to understand at the beginning. The reporters in the opening scene of the movie who comment the marriage act like a classic theatrical chorus, it's quite confusing because they mention many names and events. But as the story unfolds the pieces start to fit together and everything starts to appear clearly until the revelation of Nishi's true identity. From then on the movie turns into a revenge-story. The ending is so shattering that all that's left to say is "The Bad Sleep Well".
I give this movie an 8/10 because I don't give 10's and as I said it's slightly too slow at times. The best thing about the film is that it simply DOES NOT compromise.
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Faithful film-noir homage, 15 August 2006
Author: woofan2 from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
A film that I have had on my shelf for quite awhile until I became ill and started watching films I have never seen. I am a huge fan of Kurosawas' work. This is a change of pace for him. Set in the 1960 era in Japan. A corporate tale, of deception, extreme loyalty to the point of committing suicide rather than bring shame to their company. A kick-back scandal erupts in the newspapers. Various officers of the corporation start doing their suicide thing. Tushiro Mifune in an under-rated performance plays the secretary of his new father-in-law. Bent on revenge for his fathers' "forced" suicide. I won't review entire film but the ending was kind of shocking for me. The death of Mifunes' character adds to the true to life noir feeling of the film...so in a way the ending should have been expected yet still surprising. I love the old cars in the film and Kurosawas' use of the flashlight as a lighting device in the film....the ominous chiming of the clock in the background acts as a foreshadowing device...a change is coming...for good or bad. Definitely a must see...Criterion edition does a great job again...subtitles are sharp and the deep focus Kurosawa used is well demonstrated here....a gem of a film....
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