FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

FindKeyについてロケ地 (試験中)利用規約プライバシーポリシーお問い合わせ
© 2026 Bennu Inc.TMDB Logo

本サービスはTMDB APIを利用していますが、TMDBによる推奨・認定を受けたものではありません。

サムライ
サムライ

サムライ

“俺は負けない、絶対に。”

19671h 45m★ 7.8犯罪スリラードラマ

あらすじ

殺し屋ジェフ・コステロは、依頼を受けてナイト・クラブのオーナーを殺害する。だが、その日、出演していたピアニストの女性ヴァレリーに顔を見られてしまう。警察はオーナー殺しの犯人捜しに躍起になり、ジェフも呼び出され、クラブの従業員たちを前に面通しをされるが、なぜかジェフをしっかり見ていたはずのヴァレリーは彼ではなかったと証言をする。ジェフは放免されたものの、操作責任者の警視は彼への疑いを消し去ることが出来ず、尾行をつける。

作品考察・見どころ

ジャン・ピエール・メルヴィルが描く静寂の美学は、犯罪映画を超えた崇高な儀式です。主演アラン・ドロンの冷徹な眼差しと、無駄を削ぎ落とした様式美は、孤独に生きる男の矜持を極限まで体現しています。青みがかった色彩と沈黙が、観客の神経を研ぎ澄ませ、映像の端々に漂う死の気配を鮮烈に際立たせています。 宿命に抗いつつ自らの規範を貫く侍の精神は、現代社会の孤独と尊厳を深く問いかけます。緻密な演出とドロンのストイックな演技が融合し、虚無の中に衝撃の結末を刻む本作は、映画という表現が到達した究極の形です。この孤高の魂を、ぜひ全身で浴びてください。

興行成績

興行収入: $215,245 (0億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

口コミ

あなたの評価を記録する

Amazon Prime Video
Hulu
Cinefil Wow Plus Amazon Channel

劇場情報

2026年4月24日 公開予定です。

Googleでお近くの上映館を探す

予告・トレイラー

配信サービス

サブスクリプション

Amazon Prime Video
Hulu
Cinefil Wow Plus Amazon Channel
Amazon Prime Video with Ads
FOD

レンタル・購入

Amazon Video

キャスト

アラン・ドロン
アラン・ドロン
Jef Costello
フランソワ・ペリエ
フランソワ・ペリエ
Superintendant
ナタリー・ドロン
ナタリー・ドロン
Jane Lagrange
カティ・ロジェ
カティ・ロジェ
Valérie
Michel Boisrond
Michel Boisrond
Wiener
Catherine Jourdan
Catherine Jourdan
Locker Room Girl
Jean-Pierre Posier
Jean-Pierre Posier
Olivier Rey
Robert Favart
Robert Favart
Bartender
No Image
Jacques Leroy
Walkway Man
Roger Fradet
Roger Fradet
Inspector #1

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: ジャン=ピエール・メルヴィル

脚本: Georges Pellegrin / ジャン=ピエール・メルヴィル

音楽: François de Roubaix

制作: Raymond Borderie / Eugène Lépicier

撮影監督: Henri Decaë

制作会社: Compagnie Industrielle et Commerciale Cinématographique / Fida Cinematografica / Filmel / TC Productions

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

John Chard
John Chard
★ 9

Magnifique. Le Samouraï, one of the most highly praised French films of the 1960s, and justifiably so. Having only just caught it for the first time, I'm not sure what more I can say about a film that has been discussed, dissected, praised and pored over for nearly five decades now. Plot is simplicity, hit-man Jef Costello (Alain Delon) enacts a hit but he is witnessed fleeing the scene and spends the rest of the film trying to make sure his alibi holds up. His employers want him erased so as to avoid detection themselves, the head detective on the case knows Jef did it but can't quite close the noose around his neck, and Jef is mysteriously drawn to a sultry piano player who happens to be the chief witness against him! Sparse of dialogue, this is a masterstroke decision by director Jean-Pierre Melville, because what chat there is makes us hang on every word being spoken. It also re-enforces the loneliness essence of the hit-man's life. Jef's apartment is so bland and devoid of personality, the only thing of beauty there is a bird in a cage, the metaphor of such is hard to ignore. Jef himself is beautiful, he also is perpetually in an emotionally frozen cage. Attired in trenchcoat and fedora hat (or is it a trilby?), it's obvious that Delon and Melville are homaging with great respect the American film noir classic cycle. It's also quite amazing that although the film is technically filmed in colour, it still feels like one of those black and white noirs of the 40s and 50s. There's a coldness to Henri Decaë's (Ascenseur pour l'échafaud/Elevator to the Gallows) photography that so befits the story, the interiors are stripped of life, the exteriors almost always gloomy. And with the brilliant Delon as cool as an Eskimo's wedding tackle, icy veneers are all the rage here. Hugely influential, Le Samouraï deserves every plaudit that has come its way. Best thing about it is that it actually gets better on a repeat viewing, because the surreal edge disappears the next time and in its place is an awareness of what the director is doing, and with that comes an appreciation of great film noir film making. Hell! Even the finale is pure noir of heart. 9/10

CRCulver
CRCulver
★ 8

Jean-Pierre Melville's 1967 film <i>Le Samouraï</i> is the story of a hired assassin who slips up on a hit and his race against time to set things right. Jef Costello (Alain Delon) is given a contract to kill a nightclub owner, but on the way out he is seen by the club's pianist (Cathy Rosier) and then gets himself picked up in a police sweep. He finds himself pursued by both a cunning detective (François Périer) and by his disappointed employers. As the film progresses, Costello manages to elude both threats while remaining true to his bushido-like code of honour. The strongest aspect of <i>Le Samouraï</i>, I feel, is Alain Delon's performance. Beginning with an utterly stoic mien and confidence, Costello gradually loses his cool over the course of the film, and Delon skillfully depicts this subtle collapse. Melville's direction is remarkable for its ability to sustain suspense (even across multiple viewings, when one already knows how it will go down), and it's curious how the audience is led to sympathy for this man who is basically a cold-blooded murderer. We are even denied a back story that might serve as an apology for his profession. Instead, Costello is just a robotic killing machine, but the film makes us feel concern for him nonetheless. There is also memorable soundtrack by François de Roubaix, an early example of electronic music. Some aspects of the policework are presented in a clunky or unbelievable fashion (the detective has memorized every building in Paris, seriously?), so I cannot rate this as a flawless masterpiece. But still, it's a good film, and part of the basic education of a cinephile: <i>Le Samouraï</i> has proved vastly influential in the decades since its release, and those who have seen more recent films like Jim Jarmusch's <i>Ghost Dog</i> or Michael Mann's <i>Collateral</i> will recognize various aspects of those to be hommages to Melville's classic. <i>Le Samouraï</i>, in turn, looks back like many French films of this time to American film noir, as well as to the then-recent French New Wave.

markavrelii
markavrelii

Amazing movie! Withstood the test of times. Was watching it with a great interest unlike many movies of this era. Delon is magnifique! Unexpected plot and ending, but the title should have prepared me for it.

おすすめの作品