SEVEN SAMURAI

Showings

1966 Hall Sat, Dec 7, 2019 12:30 PM
1966 Hall Sun, Dec 8, 2019 5:10 PM
1966 Hall Fri, Jul 19 1:00 PM
1925 Hall Fri, Jul 19 7:00 PM
Introduction from Kirsten Hahn, Frist Art Museum
1966 Hall Sat, Jul 20 1:00 PM
1925 Hall Sat, Jul 20 7:00 PM
1966 Hall Sun, Jul 21 1:00 PM
1925 Hall Sun, Jul 21 7:00 PM
1925 Hall Mon, Jul 22 3:50 PM
1925 Hall Tue, Jul 23 2:45 PM
1925 Hall Tue, Jul 23 7:00 PM
1925 Hall Wed, Jul 24 3:50 PM
1925 Hall Thu, Jul 25 2:45 PM
1925 Hall Thu, Jul 25 7:00 PM
1966 Hall Fri, Jul 26 2:50 PM
1966 Hall Sat, Jul 27 2:50 PM
1966 Hall Sun, Jul 28 2:50 PM
1925 Hall Mon, Jul 29 3:40 PM
1966 Hall Mon, Jul 29 7:00 PM
1925 Hall Tue, Jul 30 3:40 PM
1925 Hall Wed, Jul 31 7:00 PM

Description

Part of Weekend Classics (Additional Weekday Showtimes may be added)

One Week Run – New 70th Anniversary 4K DCP Restoration —  One of the most thrilling movie epics of all time, SEVEN SAMURAI tells the story of a 16th century village whose desperate inhabitants hire eponymous warriors to protect them from invading bandits. This three-hour ride from Akira Kurosawa — featuring legendary actors Toshiro Mifune and Takashi Shimura — seamlessly weaves philosophy and entertainment with delicate human emotions and relentless action — resulting in a rich, evocative and unforgettable tale of courage and hope.

Digital restoration by Toho Co., Ltd. For the 4K restoration, the 35mm print was supplied by Toho and produced by TOHO Archive Co, Ltd. Images and sound respectively digitized by Arriscan and Sondor Resonances. 70th Anniversary Restoration.

“...Not only a great film in its own right, but the source of a genre that would flow through the rest of the century…. It could be argued that this greatest of filmmakers gave employment to action heroes for the next 50 years.” —Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times (Aug 19, 2001)

“Widely acknowledged as one of Kurosawa’s, and indeed Japan’s and world cinema’s, greatest films… A film of immense emotional impact and one that as Eisenstein would have it, ‘thinks in images’ (and sounds I would add), its pleasures seem inexhaustible.” —Patrick Crogan, Senses of Cinema

“SEVEN SAMURAI…was one of the first Japanese films many viewers had ever seen. It introduced a culture that was foreign yet intriguing, and accessible to audiences weaned on Hollywood westerns.” —Anne Billson, BBC