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Harakiri ()


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The Buddhist priest wants the Daughter of the Daimyo to become a priestess at the Forbidden Garden. The Daimyo thinks if he were in Europe that his daughter should decide on her own, but he is denounced and has to commit harakiri. She... See more »

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Cast

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Paul Biensfeldt ...
Daimyo Tokuyawa
...
O-Take-San
...
Buddhist Monk
Meinhart Maur ...
Prince Matahari
...
Karan
Erner Huebsch ...
Kin-Be-Araki
Käte Küster ...
Hanake (as Kaete Juster)
Niels Prien ...
Olaf J. Anderson
Herta Heden ...
Eva
Loni Nest ...
Child

Directed by

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Fritz Lang

Written by

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David Belasco ... (play "Madame Butterfly")
 
Max Jungk ... (writer)
 
John Luther Long ... (play "Madame Butterfly")

Produced by

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Erich Pommer ... producer

Cinematography by

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Max Fassbender
Carl Hoffmann ... (unconfirmed)

Production Design by

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Heinrich Umlauff

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

The Buddhist priest wants the Daughter of the Daimyo to become a priestess at the Forbidden Garden. The Daimyo thinks if he were in Europe that his daughter should decide on her own, but he is denounced and has to commit harakiri. She meets Olaf, a European officer, falls in love and marries him, but after a few months he has to return to Europe. She gives birth to a child and is waiting for him, while he marries in Europe. When he comes back to Japan 4 years later, he is accompanied by his European wife... Written by Stephan Eichenberg

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Also Known As
  • Madame Butterfly (France)
  • Харакири (Bulgaria, Bulgarian title)
  • Харакири (Russia)
  • Madame Butterfly (Netherlands)
  • Madame Butterfly (Denmark)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 80 min
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Did You Know?

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Trivia The film was originally released in the United States and other countries as Madame Butterfly because of the source material on which it is based and which also inspired Giacomo Puccini's eponymous 1904 opera. See more »

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