| Index | 7 reviews in total |
22 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
Brilliant, Disturbing, Fascinating Film, 5 September 2001
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Author:
dorlago
Everything about this movie is powerful! The acting, the direction, the music and the cinematography are Japanese cinema at its best! I usually don't like narration but the narration in this film is awesome. The only thing I can compare it to is the sound of an Uzi being fired! Mifune, at his best, conveys brilliantly the complexities of the samurai/ronin mentality! The film moves frantically through time! Sometimes it is hard to tell past from present but the entire production is so well done that it all makes perfect sense if you just pay attention! This is one of the most brutal Japanese films I have ever seen. The final confrontation takes place in a snow storm and the comparison between the softly falling snow and the bloody battle it is falling on is chilling and surreal! Unlike some of these older films the transfer to video is clear as a bell with easy to read (if a bit hurried) subtitles.
11 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Okamoto comes close but ultimately misses greatness with Samurai Assassin..., 18 July 2008
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Author:
chaos-rampant from Greece
Samurai Assassin is a tricky film. It tries to balance neatly between
the chambara and jidai-geki. As a jidai-geki it falls close to Masaki
Kobayashi's amazing masterpieces Seppuku and Samurai Rebellion in its
resemblance of an ancient Greek tragedy filled with tragic irony and a
sense of inescepable doom. On the chambara front it takes a while to
deliver but when it does, it's all guns blazing; the final fight in the
snow ranks as one of the greatest battle sequences in 60's samurai
cinema.
What hampers Samurai Assassin is both the very convoluted plot (even by
jidai-geki standards) and the narration that should have been skipped
altogether (especially in the ending). The plot although well
constructed may suffer under close scrutiny. Of course nothing a little
suspension of disbelief can't solve. Still, it devotes too much time
and detail to subplots and flashbacks that ultimately detract from its
goal: building momentum for the final confrontation (both physical and
emotional). Tsuruchiyo's backstory for example is spread over 30
minutes and while it gives a solid foundation to the character, you
can't help but wonder what it has to do with the first half hour. It
all clicks together at some point but it would have benefited immensely
from tighter plotting (20 could have been clipped). Less detail,
narration and names-dropping, more visualization.
No matter. Samurai Assassin is still a decent film with some memorable
scenes. It starts to pick up steam after the 70 minute mark and
finishes on a spectacular note. The final battle in the snow is a
marvel to look at and features some top notch swordfighting, with
Toshiro Mifune simply owning every frame with his impeccable physical
skills. It's a very bleak and ironic ending however; there's no
valliance or social status to be gained for Mifune's character. I don't
want to spoil it any further cos it's easily the best part of the
movie.
Okamoto, a great chambara director of the 60's, was well on his way to
bigger and better things. Just one year later, Sword of Doom would go
on to become one of the best Japanese movies of all time. Three years
later, the thoroughly enjoyable Kiru! would add some tongue-in-cheek
spirit to Okamoto's often nihilistic style. Still, Samurai Assassin is
a welcome addition to his ouevre that might not be excellent and thus
not a good entry point to both Okamoto and the jidai-geki but it's
recommended to genre fans.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Slowly paced Chambara film that packs a punch., 8 July 2007
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Author:
massaster760 from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The year is 1860 and Japan is in a very unstable place. A time when the
300 year rule of the Shogunate was drawing to a close, an event which
would simultaneously bring Imperialism to Japan and cause the death of
the Samurai age. This is the setting of Samurai Assassin, a highly
complicated, and character driven Chambara film that is shot in
brilliant black and white. It also features one of Toshiro Mifune's
best performances, as well as an astounding ending battle sequence
that's just too cool for words.
Mifune plays Niiro Tsuruchiyo, a master-less samurai who joins forces
with the multiple clans against the Lord of Hikone, Sir Li Kamonnokami
Naosuke. Li is the right hand of the shogunate and brought upon himself
the wrath of the Satsuma, Mito, and Choshuu provinces after making an
unpopular choice for the appointment of the 14th shogunate. Many
critics arouse after the controversial appointment, and Li initiated
the Ansei Purge to quiet critics of his choices. This in turn, lead to
an assassination plot hatched by the three provinces in order to remove
Li from his position of power. Here enters Mifune, who wants to help
the clans, in order to become a samurai of the Mito house. If that's
not enough, the clans have their own problems too trying to weed Li's
spies out of the plot. Which results in a film full of intrigue,
espionage, underhanded dealings, and of course assassinations. If all
this sounds complicated...it's because it is.
Looking past the intricate plot of Samurai Assassin and the film is
basically a detailed character study of Mifune's Niiro. Much of the
film deals with his mysterious past and is told through flashbacks,
both as first hand accounts and through investigative processes headed
by the clan who is trying to distinguish the followers from the spies.
This serves as both a negative and a positive for Assassin. While it
helps develop Mifune's character (and he's excellent as always), it
also slows the film to a tedious pace. Also hidden in Niiro's past is a
long story of forbidden love. The films first hour concerns itself
mostly with these issues, while the second half slowly builds to an
incredibly brutal finale.
Bottom line- Samurai Assassin takes it's time to get where it's going,
but when it arrives at its destination it redeems the films minor
shortcomings. The finale is a brutal scene filmed in swirling clouds of
snow and features an dizzying, blood soaked, action packed conclusion
sure to satisfy any Chambara fan.
10 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
Irony at it's best, 6 September 1999
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Author:
Yehoshuah Young (Prophet-9) from Los Angeles, CA.
I bought this film about a year ago and just got the opportunity to watch it last night. This film was beautiful brutality, simplistic complexity, unjust justice, and traditional tragedy. The sword duels are quick and brutal, the battle scene is long and horrific. The film jumps through time and space at a frantic pace with out warning. And yet the plot is slowly revealed through the hurried pace. I highly recommend this film that examines the complex psyche of Norii the Ronin. My only warning is that there is a lot of dialogue and it wears a little thin at some times. And the subtitles go by so fast at times it calls for some rewinding. The action is so fast in some parts you will want to watch in freeze frame. One scene looked so real, I would almost swear that they actually had to kill the guy. Go see this film now.
6 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
First-class Film, 13 December 2005
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Author:
Smarth Bali (smarth_bali@yahoo.com) from United States
A first-class film that excels in script, cinematography and acting. It is difficult to name a lot of films that are so well conceived of and executed. The plot is amazing and the twists are well-crafted. The narrator seems an imposition at the start but as the film progresses it only adds to the mood. I found the movement (pace) of the film delightful, juxtaposed between the swift and the languid. Of course, for most of us outside the idiom of Japanese cinema the acting maybe described as melodramatic, but that's pretty much the norm there. And how can anyone not comment on the film's last scene - the snow, the blood, the twist of fate, the camera moves like an assassin itself. I highly recommend it.
13 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
Dull; that is, up until the final sequence, 20 April 2002
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Author:
zetes from Saint Paul, MN
I am rather disappointed in Kihachi Okamoto's Samurai Assassin. I am a
huge
fan of his 1966 film, Sword of Doom, which is, as far as I'm concerned,
the
best "pure" samurai film, at least on the same level as anything by
Kurosawa. Samurai Assassin was made the previous year. It is about a siege
around Edo castle, and concentrates on one warrior, played by Toshiro
Mifune, who desperately wants to become a samurai. He has been turned down
in the past, though, because his mother was a geisha and his father was
unknown.
The script is the main culprit here. It's far too slow, and far too many
names are dropped. For an American, anyway, it becomes increasingly
difficult to process so many multi-syllabic Japanese names. Eventually, I
didn't care at all about what was happening. Okamoto was obviously trying
to
go for the type of slow-build that was achieved, for example, in Misaki
Kobayashi's excellent Sepukku (aka Hara-kiri, 1962), but the script is far
too wordy.
For most of the 2 hour 2 minute run, I was just concentrating on the
beautiful cinematography. The black and white in this film is truly
exquisite. A few good scenes managed to pop up here and there.
Fortunately,
Samurai Assassin ends on a fantastic note. The final samurai battle is one
of the best I've ever seen. Okamoto uses snow as a prop as well as
Kurosawa
uses rain (there is a great snow battle in Sword of Doom, as well), and
the
level of dramatic irony equals some of the best Greek tragedies. My final
judgement: Samurai Assassin is worth watching if you are a fan of samurai
movies, but it is not a high priority. It is definitely a don't-see for
anyone who has never seen one of these films before (start with Kurosawa,
The Seven Samurai, Yojimbo, and Hidden Fortress for starters) or anyone
who
is unsure of whether they would be entertained by something like this.
7/10.
6 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
A complicated tale but delivers the action, 17 September 2002
Author:
gkbazalo from Scottsdale, AZ
Samurai Assassin is a complicated story but easier to follow than director Okomoto's excellent Sword of Doom made a year later. While it is clear that the band of assassins is seeking revenge on an official for an earlier purge on the assassins' clans, we never learn about the original reasons for their enmity. Historically, the disagreements concerned relations with foreign countries who were seeking to open up Japan to trade, but this is never alluded to in the film. The driving forces of the story, and they are good ones, are Niino's (Mifune) ambition to achieve full samurai rank and the paranoia of the leaders of the assassin band. These two forces interact nicely as the plot unfolds. Eijiro Tono (the innkeeper who befriends Mifune in Yojimbo) does his usual terrific job as the merchant who helped raise Niino and tries to protect him from meeting a tragic fate. Highly recommended for samurai and Mifune fans.
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