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Dr. Akagi (1998)

Dr. Akagi (1998)
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Following up on his acclaimed and Cannes Grand Prix-winning Unagi, veteran iconoclast Shohei Imamura directs this gleefully ragged tale about one very dedicated, though defiantly eccentric, doctor during the waning days of the Second World War. Dr. Akagi (Akira Emoto) is a small-town physician who sports a prim white suit and straw hat as he runs at full gallop from one case to the next. His diagnosis is always the same no matter the symptom: hepatitis. Along the way, he enlists the help of a young lass named Sonoko (Kumiko Asou) whose mother is a prostitute. Before she leaves home, mom gives her this kernel of maternal wisdom: give your physical devotion away to only your true love, make everyone else pay. She decides that the lucky recipient will be Dr. Akagi. Unfortunately, he has little interest in anything other than finding a cure for hepatitis. One day he happens upon a bruised and battered Dutch soldier (Jacques Gamblin) who escaped from the local POW camp. Realizing that returning to the camp would spell death for the lanky escapee, the doctor hides him with the aid of drug-addled fellow doctor (Kotsuke Sera) and an alcoholic Buddhist priest (Juro Kara). In gratitude to Dr. Akagi's kind act, the Dutchman, a lens crafter in quieter times, helps to fashion him a microscope so that the doctor may look at the very hepatitis germ itself. This film was intended as Imamura's swansong, but in 2001 he came out of retirement to direct the surrealist romance Akai Hashi Noshitano Nurui Mizu. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Akira EmotoKumiko Aso, (more)
Director(s):
Shohei Imamura
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Dr. Akagi

Following up on his acclaimed and Cannes Grand Prix-winning Unagi, veteran iconoclast Shohei Imamura directs this gleefully ragged tale about one very dedicated, though defiantly eccentric, doctor during the waning days of the Second World War. Dr. Akagi (Akira Emoto) is a small-town physician who sports a prim white suit and straw hat as he runs at full gallop from one case to the next. His diagnosis is always the same no matter the symptom: hepatitis. Along the way, he enlists the help of a young lass named Sonoko (Kumiko Asou) whose mother is a prostitute. Before she leaves home, mom gives her this kernel of maternal wisdom: give your physical devotion away to only your true love, make everyone else pay. She decides that the lucky recipient will be Dr. Akagi. Unfortunately, he has little interest in anything other than finding a cure for hepatitis. One day he happens upon a bruised and battered Dutch soldier (Jacques Gamblin) who escaped from the local POW camp. Realizing that returning to the camp would spell death for the lanky escapee, the doctor hides him with the aid of drug-addled fellow doctor (Kotsuke Sera) and an alcoholic Buddhist priest (Juro Kara). In gratitude to Dr. Akagi's kind act, the Dutchman, a lens crafter in quieter times, helps to fashion him a microscope so that the doctor may look at the very hepatitis germ itself. This film was intended as Imamura's swansong, but in 2001 he came out of retirement to direct the surrealist romance Akai Hashi Noshitano Nurui Mizu. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
128 mins

Complete Cast of Dr. Akagi


Director(s):
Shohei Imamura
Writer(s):
Daisuke TenganShohei Imamura
Producer(s):
Hisa InoKoji Matsuda
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    Denna B.

    Released in 1993, this movie had more in common with movies from the 1960's with its amateurish special effects and French soundtrack and cinematography. While there were a couple of laughs, calling this a comedy would be inaccurate. The acting and directing were good, but the writing was the weak point. The subtitles are burned into the film. The picture quality is quite dark and is not sharp. The audio defaults to stereo. As for extras, there's a trailer for the movie and a "Photo Gallery". Not really recommended.

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    Mark N.

    Well, as a purviewer of many Japanese films, this one can be skipped without too much fanfare. The poor country doctor routine gets a bit old after the many time he provides the same diagnosis; hepatitus. About the only fun part is the sexy part, but I won't go into it or it would spoil it..... The characters are interesting, but not really worth remembering for very long. All in all, skip this one and you won't miss much.

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    Roger F.

    didn't know what to expect from this one. had a hard time getting through this. i couldn't get a feel for what this film was. it was quirky, but not quirky enough. it was serious, but not serious enough. there were some moments that were really "Shall We Dance" or "Tampopo" funky. But the it would go another direction. however, it does explore the rather strange world of back country WW2 Japan. there's a great deal of japanese political satire in this film as well as this alarmist potential destruction via hepatitis. Of course the ultimate demise would be something much greater and human made. if you're in a funky mood, pop this one in. it's on the longer side though.

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