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In the 1963 film High and Low (Tengoku to Jigoku), directed by Akira Kurosawa, there are four confirmed or impending deaths. These deaths are central to the film's second half, as the police work to ensure the kidnapper receives the death penalty rather than a shorter prison sentence.
The kidnapper, Ginjirō Takeuchi, employs two low-level drug addicts (a man and a woman) to help him with the initial abduction and to watch over the chauffeur’s son, Shinichi, at a remote mountain shack.
In one of the film's most harrowing sequences, Takeuchi descends into "Dope Alley" (an area modeled after the Koganechō district in Yokohama) to test the lethality of a second batch of pure heroin.
The film ends with Takeuchi himself facing his end.
It is worth noting that despite the high stakes, both children—Gondo's son, Jun, and the chauffeur's son, Shinichi—survive the ordeal unharmed. Gondo himself survives but is financially ruined by the ransom payment, though he finds a new sense of peace and a more modest professional beginning by the film's conclusion.
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In Akira Kurosawa's High and Low (1963), three people die: two accomplices and one unnamed drug addict. The kidnapper, Ginjirō Takeuchi, murders his two accomplices (a man and a woman) by providing them with uncut heroin, causing fatal overdoses at their seaside hideout. Later, Takeuchi murders an unnamed female addict in 'Dope Alley' by injecting her with pure heroin to test its lethality; police witness this but do not intervene in order to secure a murder charge. Takeuchi himself does not die on screen but is sentenced to death by hanging at the film's conclusion.