Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Black Sun (1964 film)

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Director
  
Music director
  
Duration
  

Language
  
Japanese

6.8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, Music, Thriller

Screenplay
  
NoB

Country
  
Japan

Black Sun (1964 film) movie poster

Release date
  
April 19, 1964 (1964-04-19)

Writer
  
Tensei Kono (story), Nobuo Yamada

Cast
  
Yuko Chishiro
(Yuki),
Chico Roland
(Gill),
Tamio Kawaji
(Akira), (Akira's Buddy)

Similar movies
  
Related Koreyoshi Kurahara movies

Kuroi taiyo black sun


[1]Black Sun (黒い太陽, Kuroi taiyō) is a 1964 Nikkatsu film directed by Koreyoshi Kurahara based on a story by Tensei Kono and starring Tamio Kawaji and Chico Lourant (often cited as Chico Roland). The film had many of the same cast, crew, and characters as Kurahara's earlier film The Warped Ones.

Contents

Black Sun (1964 film) 3bpblogspotcom2mwtkZ1OPkYT0AnadeHMEIAAAAAAA

Cast

Black Sun (1964 film) A Journey Through the Eclipse Series Koreyoshi Kuraharas Black Sun

  • Tamio Kawaji as Akira
  • Chico Lourant as Gill
  • Tatsuya Fuji as Akira's friend
  • Shogen Shinda as the Engineer
  • Yuko Chishiro as Yuki
  • Hideji Ōtaki as Old Man of the Junk Shop
  • Zenji Yamada as Owner
  • Plot

    At the start of the film, Mei commits larceny and buys a jazz record, an upbeat recording of "Six Bits Blues". In town, he encounters civil insurrection following the killing of an American soldier, presumably by one of his colleagues who is now missing. When Mei returns to his home and his dog Monk in a half-destroyed church, the missing soldier appears from behind a curtain and points a gun at him. His leg is injured, supposedly by the real assailant's firearm. Since the soldier (Gill) is African-American, Akira is convinced that he will appreciate the jazz record he bought and tries to use it as a way of communication. He plays a few songs on the record, but the G.I. responds badly and, in a fit of restlessness, attacks and kills Mei's dog.

    Black Sun (1964 film) Koreyoshi Kurahara Part I Black Sun and the Sun Tribe on

    Eventually, the soldier asks Mei to take him to the sea, for unknown reasons, and on their way there, they form a bond and become close friends. However, eventually they encounter MPs. In a moment of despair, the soldier sings "Six Bits Blues" as its original blues dirge, affecting Mei. Mei and Gill find their way to the top of a building, overlooking the sea, where Gill ties himself to a balloon. He asks Akira to cut the rope, hoping to float up in the air and from there, to see his mother one more time. Mei reluctantly fulfills his request and they all watch the soldier, buoyed on his airborne balloon, as he approaches the sea.

    Music

    Black Sun (1964 film) Black Sun 1964 Koreyoshi Kurahara Brandons movie memory

    The film featured music by the American jazz drummer Max Roach.


    Black Sun (1964 film) A Journey Through the Eclipse Series Koreyoshi Kuraharas Black Sun

    Black Sun (1964 film) Black Sun 1964 Koreyoshi Kurahara Brandons movie memory

    References

    Black Sun (1964 film) Wikipedia
    Black Sun (1964 film) IMDb Black Sun (1964 film) themoviedb.org