Back home

High and Low

1085 votes

Producing House

A Yokohama shoe executive faces a wrenching choice when kidnappers mistakenly seize his chauffeur’s son but demand the ransom anyway.

movie

Status: Released

Released Date: 1963-03-01

Runtime: 142 mins

Director: Akira Kurosawa

Spoken language: 日本語

Genres: Drama, Crime

Original title: High and Low

Production Companies: TOHO, Kurosawa Production

Production Countries: Japan

Reviews

B

Brent_Marchant
I’m always amazed at how a single film can be fundamentally characterized in multiple ways, but that’s understandable when the picture combines an array of diverse elements, each of which has a validity all its own that can subsequently lead to different overarching interpretations. Such is the case with this 1963 film classic from famed Japanese auteur Akira Kurosawa, which provides the cinematic inspiration behind filmmaker Spike Lee’s current reimagination, “Highest 2 Lowest,” now playing theatrically. Like the current iteration, “High and Low” follows the story of a wealthy businessman, Kingo Gondô (Toshirô Mifune), who’s looking to take control of the shoe manufacturing company for which he works, a plan that requires him to leverage his entire personal fortune to make it possible. But, just as he’s about to close the deal, he’s distracted by the alleged kidnapping of his young son (Toshio Egi), a crime for which the perpetrator demands a ransom equal in value to the funds needed to cover the pending transaction. However, not long after hearing about the kidnapping, Gondô learns that the culprit has nabbed the wrong child, erroneously taking the son (Masahiko Shimazu) of his chauffeur (Yutaka Sada). But Gondô is not off the hook: the kidnapper still demands payment of the ransom, even though the crime doesn’t involve his son. This leaves Gondô with a huge moral dilemma: does he use the money to close his business deal or to pay the ransom of his employee’s child? As Gondô grapples with this decision, an intense police investigation ensues to discover the kidnapper’s identity and to figure out a way to retrieve both the victim and the ransom money. Unlike the current film, though, Kurosawa’s version focuses less on the particulars driving this scenario and more intently on the ethical questions that the protagonist is left to wrestle with, issues ultimately symbolic of the divisive class and economic disparities in Japanese society. Indeed, while the picture provides viewers with its share of intense thriller moments, in many regards it’s really more of a morality play, not only where Gondô is concerned, but also in its exploration of the inherent chasms between rich and poor, privileged and impoverished, and control and servitude. (This attribute, in turn, helps to shed light on the nature of the film’s character and the relevance of its original Japanese title, “Tengoku to jigoku,” which translates to “Heaven and Hell,” in my opinion a more fitting appellation that probably should have been retained when renamed in English.) The foregoing aspects of the picture thus distinguish this predecessor work from the current release, even though the exact nature of the nexus between kidnapper and target is not developed as fully here as I believe it should have been (one of the few ways in which the present offering modestly improves upon the original). In addition, there are times in the opening act, as well as in the run-up to the film’s conclusion, when the storytelling could have been a little brisker (the slower pacing style of the period in which the picture was made notwithstanding). Still, this offering’s social and cultural themes are nevertheless intriguing, and their place here has a tendency to grow on audiences as the picture progresses. And those thematic aspects, when combined with the contrast of the narrative’s riveting criminal investigation, make for an intriguing mix, one that undoubtedly accounts for the differing perspectives that this release often evokes among viewers. While “High and Low” may not be Kurosawa’s best work when compared with such pictures as “Rashômon” (1950) and “Ikiru” (1952), it stands out as one of the filmmaker’s most thoughtful and engaging works, one that probes the heaven and hell that reside here on Earth, both individually and at their points of intersection, and how the lines between them can become all too easily blurred, a caution to us all.
2025-08-27

Z

Zak_Jaggs
A well worked, high stake crime thriller. The stakes are deeply personal to our main characters and puts them in an impossible situation. The performances and direction are very solid, the story is engaging and ultimately, it's a simple yet enjoyable film. Kurosawa comments on modern corporate greed and poverty in post-war Japan, and he does it very well.
2024-12-19

G

Geronimo1967
I didn't take to this initially. The scenario reminded me a little of an episode of "Columbo" - a rather sterile, studio-set environment that came across as quite limiting. Once it gets going, though, it's one of the best crime thrillers I've seen in ages. It all centres around the kidnapping of a small boy for whom the anger-prone, shoe millionaire "Gondo" (a strong contribution from Toshirô Mifune) is supposed to pay a ransom of ¥30 million - a colossal sum. It turns out, though, that it's not his son who has been snatched - it's the child of his chauffeur. Why ought he to pay? Will he just get on with his impending company takeover or will he risk bankruptcy for the young "Shinichi"? This is a film split into three sections. The first deals with the decision making process around will he/won't he/why should he. Next, the police must try to apprehend this individual. This process is meticulously carried out and Kurosawa has chosen to immerse us in some of that detail, rather than just cursorily skip through it. This makes the whole detection process a much more interesting part of the film; allowing some aspects of the characterisation of the police officers to develop and also introducing some dark humour to the proceedings. Finally, we reach the denouement with it's own rather curious and not entirely explicable agenda. There's an element of "what would you do?", there's a grim depiction of a seamier side of Japanese (heroin-fuelled) culture that we seldom get to see and there is a rather starkly effective dose of humanity presented here as the story juggles aspects of human nature, nurture and good old fashioned greed in quite an effective fashion. It's based on an Ed McBain book (which I haven't read) but the entire project has been successfully subsumed into it's guest culture for a gripping and detailed mystery that flies by.
2023-09-04

Recommendations

All That Jazz
3.8

All That Jazz

1979-12-16

Joe Gideon is at the top of the heap, one of the most successful directors and choreographers in mus

Theru Naaigal
0

Theru Naaigal

2017-09-22

A group of young men kidnaps a politician-gangster, who is awaiting the results of an election. What

Valladesam
4.3

Valladesam

2017-09-22

A woman is shot at and her daughter kidnapped by an international gang of arms dealer. Who is this w

The Colditz Story
3.4

The Colditz Story

1955-01-25

The Germans believed that no man could escape from Colditz Castle, set as it was in the heart of the

The Cruel Sea
3.4

The Cruel Sea

1953-02-24

At the start of World War II, Cmdr. Ericson is assigned to convoy escort HMS Compass Rose with inexp

The White Demon
0

The White Demon

1932-11-19

When Albers takes his drug-addicted opera star sister Gerda to a sanitarium, they both become target

They Drive by Night
3.4

They Drive by Night

1940-07-26

Joe and Paul Fabrini are Wildcat, or independent, truck drivers who have their own small one-truck b

Last Holiday
3.6

Last Holiday

1950-05-15

George Bird is a salesman of agricultural machinery who finds out that he hasn't long to live. On hi

A Shot in the Dark
2.5

A Shot in the Dark

2005-03-17

A baby is kidnapped in a Brazilian airport. Years later, the mother lives in Lisbon and works in a s

The Asphalt Jungle
3.7

The Asphalt Jungle

1950-05-12

Recently paroled from prison, legendary burglar "Doc" Riedenschneider, with funding from Alonzo Emme

The Petrified Forest
3.5

The Petrified Forest

1936-02-08

Gabby, the waitress in an isolated Arizona diner, dreams of a bigger and better life. One day pennil

The First of the Few
3.4

The First of the Few

1942-09-14

This 1942 fictionalized biopic chronicles the true story of how two of the most remarkable men in av

The Glass Key
3.3

The Glass Key

1942-09-08

A crooked politician finds himself being accused of murder by a gangster from whom he refused help d

12 Rounds
3

12 Rounds

2009-03-19

When New Orleans Police Detective Danny Fisher stops a brilliant thief from getting away with a mult

The Woman in the Window
3.7

The Woman in the Window

1944-10-25

A seductive woman gets an innocent professor mixed up in murder.

Ace of Hearts
3.2

Ace of Hearts

2008-05-06

Daniel Harding is a distinguished member of the K-9 police unit. His partner and best friend is Ace,

Days of Heaven
3.7

Days of Heaven

1978-09-13

In 1916, a Chicago steel worker accidentally kills his supervisor and flees to the Texas panhandle w

All About Lily Chou-Chou
3.7

All About Lily Chou-Chou

2001-10-06

Charts the troubled teenage years of students Yūichi Hasumi and Shūsuke Hoshino, exploring the shift

Whisky Galore!
3.4

Whisky Galore!

1949-06-16

Based on a true story. The name of the real ship, that sunk Feb 5 1941 - during WWII - was S/S Polit

Woman in the Dunes
4.1

Woman in the Dunes

1964-02-15

A vacationing entomologist suffers extreme physical and psychological trauma after being taken capti