

A hot-headed city boy vs. rural chaos in 1900s Japan — and the tea is scalding.
Acting
Hisaya Morishige steals every scene as the smarmy Akashatsu.
Production
Toho's 1953 sets capture Meiji-era rural Japan beautifully.
Director
Seiji Maruyama
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Sōseki's 1906 novel is practically required reading in Japan; this adaptation helped cement Botchan as a cultural archetype of the impulsive but principled everyman.
Hisaya Morishige based his sneering performance on actual corrupt officials he'd observed, making Akashatsu uncomfortably authentic for 1953 audiences.