Rentaro Mikuni
13 titles
Filmography
13 results
A Taxing Woman's Return
(1988)
The Burmese Harp
(1956)An Imperial Japanese Army regiment surrenders to British forces in Burma at the close of World War II and finds harmony through song. A private, thought to be dead, disguises himself as a Buddhist monk and stumbles upon spiritual enlightenment. THE BURMESE HARP is an eloquent meditation on beauty coexisting with death and remains one of Japanese cinema’s most overwhelming antiwar statements, both tender and brutal in its grappling with Japan’s wartime legacy.
Night Drum
(1958)The Last Dance
(1993)
Kwaidan
(1965)Winner of the Special Jury Prize at Cannes, Kwaidan features four nightmarish tales adapted from Lafcadio Hearn's classic Japanese ghost stories about mortals caught up in forces beyond their comprehension when the supernatural world intervenes in their lives: "The Black Hair", "The Woman of the Snow", "Hoichi the Earless", and "In a Cup of Tea".
Zatoichi the Outlaw
(1967)Zatoichi arrives in a town where a gambling house is kidnapping its poor, debt-ridden patrons. A rival establishment moves to pay those debts and free the peasants, but this second house’s seemingly altruistic boss is actually laying the groundwork for a ruthless money-grabbing scheme. The sixteenth Zatoichi film is the first effort from its star’s own Katsu Productions, and it is one of the series’ most daring, with its complex characters, subversive social themes, and moral outrage.

Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto
(1954)After his army loses a battle, a young warrior returns to his village, where he's arrested for treason. He's spared from execution, but must spend three years studying the samurai code to earn his freedom.
Zatoichi at Large
(1972)
Wolves, Pigs & Men
(1964)Three brothers are torn apart in the Yakuza underworld as rival gangs ignite a brutal conflict that tests loyalty, family, and survival.