
The Real Yojimbo
Moderators: Mayhem, Steve Hubbell, Moderators
The Real Yojimbo
Well today, I found out "None" of my Friends know who Usagi Yojimbo, was- We were talking about Some Yojimbo Char off Final Fantacy- And I was like "Usagi Yojimbo is a whole lot better cuz he's a Bunny with a sword"- And they were looking at me like im a Mute- and I was about to have a noise Bleed!- ^^ Then I pulled out one of my Mangas' and show'd them who he was, -Now that they know who is is- They Understand the real Yojimbo.........
I hope

"Ich wundere mich wie weit es ist zu sonne wenn du ihr entgegen rennst."
- takematsu
- Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
- Posts: 306
- Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2003 10:31 -0700
- Location: Regina, Saskatchewan
Mifune Toshiro, of courseThey Understand the real Yojimbo

Actually, a mailing list I subscribe to has been discussing Kurosawa movies and their influence on later films, and someone points out that there is an American detective novel written in the 1920's-30's that has almost exactly the plot of Yojimbo, so maybe Kurosawa was doing a little borrowing of his own....
"...[H]uman beings are given free will in order to choose between insanity on the one hand and lunacy on the other..."
Aldous Huxley, 1946
Aldous Huxley, 1946
Not to mention Bruce Willis' "Last Man Standing", which was a not-too-well-done American adaption of a classic samurai film.takematsu wrote:Mifune Toshiro, of courseThey Understand the real Yojimbo![]()
Actually, a mailing list I subscribe to has been discussing Kurosawa movies and their influence on later films, and someone points out that there is an American detective novel written in the 1920's-30's that has almost exactly the plot of Yojimbo, so maybe Kurosawa was doing a little borrowing of his own....
Still, a movie that has Christopher Walken with a Tommy-gun does have some merit. <g>
Yojimbo
Well, the Yojimbo plot is pretty similar to Dashiell Hammet's "Red Harvest," but the Yojimbo character is quite different from Hammet's Continental Op. Kurosawa claims to have thought up the idea one day out of thin air, but then, he did read American crime fiction, so it wouldn't be too surprising if he had read "Red Harvest" and registered it subconsciously. Yojimbo has inspired a ton of remakes; before "Last Man Standing" there was the most blatant steal, master filmmaker Sergio Leone's "A Fistfull of Dollars," which is a carbon copy of Kurosawa's film. Apparently Leone watched "Yojimbo" with his wife and stood up in excitement afterwards and told her, "I could make that movie!" Voila.
Gen seems inspired by the Yojimbo character: his unshaven look, his scratching and generally poor hygiene, the way his noble nature keeps appearing under his down-and-out veneer--all things Gen shares with Kurosawa's yojimbo. There's even a two-part Usagi-and-Gen story called "Showdown" in the "Shrouded Moon" collection that appears to be based on Yojimbo--Gen and Usagi play two warring gangs against one another.
I kind of wonder...Stan says that he is very influenced by films, and he often references the Kurosawa and especially the Inagaki films, but I wonder what other films have inspired him? I was thinking especially of the large amount of horror and monster images that have appeared in Usagi's adventures over the years. I wonder if any of these supernatural stories have been inspired by the vivid films of horror directors like Nobuo Nakagawa or Shiro Toyoda? Or the Tokaido Road Monster films? I remember one Usagi story that featured the umbrella monster, and I instantly thought of the Tokaido Road Monster films. There's also a story in which a ghostly woman enlists Usagi to get revenge when her husband murdered her, which reminded me very much of the Ghost of Yotsuya films (of course, this could be just as readily be inspired by the kabuki play rather than the films).
Gen seems inspired by the Yojimbo character: his unshaven look, his scratching and generally poor hygiene, the way his noble nature keeps appearing under his down-and-out veneer--all things Gen shares with Kurosawa's yojimbo. There's even a two-part Usagi-and-Gen story called "Showdown" in the "Shrouded Moon" collection that appears to be based on Yojimbo--Gen and Usagi play two warring gangs against one another.
I kind of wonder...Stan says that he is very influenced by films, and he often references the Kurosawa and especially the Inagaki films, but I wonder what other films have inspired him? I was thinking especially of the large amount of horror and monster images that have appeared in Usagi's adventures over the years. I wonder if any of these supernatural stories have been inspired by the vivid films of horror directors like Nobuo Nakagawa or Shiro Toyoda? Or the Tokaido Road Monster films? I remember one Usagi story that featured the umbrella monster, and I instantly thought of the Tokaido Road Monster films. There's also a story in which a ghostly woman enlists Usagi to get revenge when her husband murdered her, which reminded me very much of the Ghost of Yotsuya films (of course, this could be just as readily be inspired by the kabuki play rather than the films).

"Ich wundere mich wie weit es ist zu sonne wenn du ihr entgegen rennst."
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- Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
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