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Ran
The Lord of the Seventies, years after the consolidation of his empire, revolves around this feat. Now, the great Lord Heidetura Ishimunji decides to give up and divide his space among his three sons one by one. Things turn upside down when the Lord discovers that two corrupt people will turn on him at that moment.
1947, Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan
8 October 1947, Shimane, Japan
15 March 1920, Tokyo, Japan
15 April 1951, Tokyo, Japan
17 November 1936, Shenyang, Occupied Manchuria
6 September 1955, Saitama, Japan
1 January 1928, Tokyo, Japan
14 February 1957, Tokyo, Japan
24 May 1929, Tokyo, Japan
8 August 1952, Osaka, Japan
19 August 1910
19 March 1955, Osaka, Japan
5 April 1966, Tokyo, Japan
13 December 1932, Tokyo, Japan
25 June 1946, Osaka, Japan
11 December 1958, Kumamoto, Japan
20 January 1958, Kobe, Japan
July 8, 1915 in Tokyo, Japan
1 December 1947, Yamanashi, Japan
25 February 1927, Mie, Japan
April 07, 2016
It's the intimacy of even the most gargantuan conflict that hits home in Kurosawa's masterful hands.
April 03, 2016
A magisterial achievement.
August 08, 2016
One can never be short of things to look at while Kurasawa's Ran is in the world.
April 05, 2016
Akira Kurosawa's Ran is virtually in a class of its own.
April 23, 2014
Ran is one of the cinema's greatest works, a film of true tragic vision.
May 20, 2016
Ran is high classical tragedy several times over.
March 29, 2016
Its true power is found in the small moments.
April 23, 2014
One of the supreme cinematic achievements of the last quarter-century.
April 23, 2014
Less a director's return to form than an essay in solipsism and self-pity run amok.
February 23, 2016
Ran remains gripping because it depicts not only the long-ago past, but also our hellish present.
February 25, 2016
This is one of the year's major cinematic events. It's well worth leaving the house for, should that opportunity arise.

