The Bad Sleep Well is one of Akira Kurosawa's more contemporary classics borrowing from film noir and Shakespeare respectively. Kurosawa's direction and storytelling skills areas always top shelf and its nice to know that a clean-shaven Toshiro Mifune was able to hold his own eve... read more
Toshiro Mifune,
Kamatari Fujiwara,
Susumu Fujita,
Kenjiro Ishiyama,
Kyoko Kagawa
... see more
In this engaging drama, acclaimed Japanese director Akira Kurosawa deftly splices together the nuances of hypocrisy, old feudal misconceptions lingering in modern corruption, and Shakespeare's Hamlet.... read more
DVD Release Date: January 10, 2006
Stats: 297 reviews
Your Rating
Flixster Reviews (297)
-
March 19, 2010
-
January 9, 2010
Akira Kurosawa's noir-ish tale of corporate evil and corruption. An exquisite adaptation of Hamlet that's both reverent and unnerving.
-
March 27, 2008
It takes a certain type person to enjoy a Criterion Collection movie, lets face it if Spiderman, Terminator, Or Lion King is your favorite movie, its very doubtful you will in enjoy a Criterion Collection movie. This one is no exception. A great movie but you must read subtitles ... read more
-
March 20, 2008
This is the first of Kurosawa's contemporary stories I have seen, and once again the visual style and composition is remarkable, melding his unique style with the shadowy world of Film Noir. The plot is a variation on the themes of Hamlet set in the corrupt underbelly of corporat... read more
-
June 15, 2007
High class Kurosawa. Fresh, interesting characters and a darkly twisted plot, superimposed on involving corporate drama, make for a multilayered and frequently successful movie. Granted, he rarely cuts the fat, with long lingering shots and deliberate pacing, so honestly I feel l... read more
-
February 11, 2007
incredible. kurosawa never ceases to amaze me. this is considered one of kurosawas least appreciated films but its so perfect. tashiro mifune offers up another brilliant performance. kurosawa is known for his period films but this one takes place around 1960 when the film was... read more
-
August 19, 2008
[font=Century Gothic]"The Bad Sleep Well" starts with the wedding of Koichi Nishi(Toshiro Mifune) and Yoshiko Iwabuchi(Kyoko Kagawa), daughter of the vice president(Masayuki Mori) of the Public Land Corporation which is being investigated for a kickback scheme. The press is on h... read more
-
November 28, 2011
The film that inspired the wedding scene of The Godfather, and hailed "as perfect as it gets" by Francis Ford Coppola, was a hard movie to rate. A second viewing really helped put this movie into perspective. It was not a hard film to rate because it's awful or anything. I just k... read more
-
June 5, 2006
It's Hamlet. By Kurosawa. Set in postwar corporate Japan. And Toshirô Mifune is Hamlet. I could practically give this 5 stars before even watching it. Kurosawa once again lives up to my exceedingly high expectations of him. Part Shakespeare, part film noir, with an exceptio... read more
-
March 6, 2011
Feb 2011 - This is far from Kurasawa's masterpieces but has some of his characteristic marks. The noiresque view of the events and a lonely hero who is of course played by Mifune. A hero who is seeking revenge in vain especially when he is so much tangled in his own web. This add... read more
Critic Reviews
This is a powerful and interesting picture that Kurosawa has made -- a bit tedious and mawkish in the last reels, but exciting enough along the way to satisfy audiences that know the subject. Full Review
A well-done thriller with Kurosawa's usual social overtones. Full Review
A powerful tale of a son seeking to avenge his father in a world of corporate malfeasance with Hamlet-like dimensions. Full Review
The Bad Sleep Well's ground-breaking concept shows Kurosawa's uncompromised ambition. Full Review
t is almost an anti-thriller, but viewers who are willing to steep themselves in the intricacies of Japanese ceremonies and the banal details of evil will find the experience highly rewarding.
There just seemed to be a missing ingredient to raise this intense psychological drama to the level of a Rashomon. Full Review
Despite having been made more than 45 years ago and in a postwar Japanese setting, in the age of Enron, it may be more relevant than ever. Full Review
Kurosawa rather loaded the film on the side of social significance, while neglecting to capitalise on the noir aspects that underlie it. Even so, his use of the 'scope screen is masterly. Full Review
Critic ratings and reviews powered by RottenTomatoes.com
Fresh (60% or more critics rated the movie positively)
Rotten (59% or fewer critics rated the movie positively)







