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  1. Three Resurrected Drunkards (帰って来たヨッパライ, kaette kita yopparai) is a Japanese film directed by Nagisa Ōshima. It was based on the hit song "kaette kita yopparai" by The Folk Crusaders, a folk and pop music group that also appeared in the film. It was released in March 1968.

  2. Three Resurrected Drunkards: Directed by Nagisa Ôshima. With Kazuhiko Kato, Osamu Kitayama, Norihiko Hashida, Kei Satô. A carefree afternoon at the beach turns into a comic misadventure when three young Japanese men are mistaken for illegal Korean residents.

    • (709)
    • Comedy
    • Nagisa Ôshima
    • 1968-03-30
  3. A trio of bumbling young men frolic at the beach. While they swim, their clothes are stolen and replaced with new outfits. Donning these, they are mistaken for undocumented Koreans and end up on the run from comically outraged authorities.

    • O-Noppo
  4. The overall directorial approach here becomes apparent from the beginning, as it shows three Japanese students at the beach, reenacting one of the most famous pictures of the Vietnam war, before they decide to strip to their underwear and go for a swim.

  5. Mar 24, 2021 · Three Resurrected Drunkards (1968) by. nagisa oshima. Publication date. 1968. Topics. film, cinema, movie, japanese cinema. Language. Japanese.

    • 77 min
  6. A trio of bumbling young men frolic at the beach. While they swim, their clothes are stolen and replaced with new outfits. Donning these, they are mistaken for undocumented Koreans and end up on the run from comically outraged authorities.

  7. The film follows a trio of three young men, in real life members of a Japanese pop group called The Folk Crusaders, who become victims of mistaken identity when their matching Beatle-esque outfits (circa Shea Stadium ’65) are swiped and replaced with Korean military uniforms by a mysterious hand emerging from beneath a sandy beach while the ...