Is Seven Samuari THE best samurai film of all time?

General discussion about Usagi Yojimbo, the comics, the stories, the characters, collectibles, TV appearances, Stan Sakai, Space Usagi, Nilson & Hermy, and all other related topics.

Moderators: Mayhem, Steve Hubbell, Moderators

User avatar
Maka
Daimyo <High-Ranking Lord>
Posts: 3498
Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2003 20:10 -0700
Location: California

Re: Rashamon

Post by Maka »

Robert Wetherelt wrote:Konichiwa!! Isn't that the one based on Shakespeare's "King Lear"? :?
No. That was RAN. Excellent film.

Rashomon was famous for being one of the first films to use flashbacks to use tell the same story from different perspectives (Like Pulp Fiction). And it had amazing camera work. Great film.

Peace, maka
User avatar
Steve Hubbell
Taisho
Posts: 6050
Joined: Thu Sep 19, 2002 15:25 -0700
Location: Kalamazoo, MI

Post by Steve Hubbell »

And, more recently, Rashomon is the inspiration for Sergio Aragones' Groo VS Conan mini-series which is in the works.
Last edited by Steve Hubbell on Wed Jun 16, 2010 11:08 -0700, edited 2 times in total.
User avatar
goandal
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 202
Joined: Wed Oct 09, 2002 16:38 -0700
Location: Northeast Los Angeles

Post by goandal »

As an FYI...I own the Seven Samurai Criterion Collection DVD and it has an excellent audio commentary by a Japanese Historian.

He explains each scene of how it relates to Japan's culture, actors/directors biography and of course the samurai.

A couple commentaries that stood out was the famous Japanese saying: "The nail that sticks out gets hammered down"...another commentary was the part of stunts: They didn't have computerized special effects back in the day so when they made the scene of one of the bad guys getting hit with an arrow, they actually put a piece of wood onto the guys chest and hoping the marksman would hit the exact same spot...on a moving target!!!!

I highly recommend picking up the DVD and listening through the commentary.
Image
User avatar
Robert Wetherelt
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 308
Joined: Tue Feb 18, 2003 17:42 -0700
Location: toonz@sympatico.ca
Contact:

Thanks Maka...

Post by Robert Wetherelt »

Thanks Maka for setting me straight on "Ran". I knew that it was a one word title,but, got them mixed up.
It's the one with Tatsuya Nakadai as the King Lear character. A wonderful performance! He also gives a masterful performance in the film "Sword of Doom". He and Mifune-sama appeared in a lot of films together over the years. They played off against each other quite well.

Abayo! :D
Robert Wetherelt
User avatar
Robert Wetherelt
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 308
Joined: Tue Feb 18, 2003 17:42 -0700
Location: toonz@sympatico.ca
Contact:

7 samurai...

Post by Robert Wetherelt »

I'm sorry...I've tried twice to watch this film,but,I just couldn't get into it. It starts off too slow for me.But...it is part of my samurai film collection. Maybe one of these days I'll be able to get through it,but, not right now.
I get about 45 minutes into it before I usually give up on it. My favorite has always been "Yojimbo". With "Sanjuro" a close second.

Sorry.

Abayo! :?
Robert Wetherelt
Angilasman
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 234
Joined: Thu Jan 21, 2010 11:28 -0700

Post by Angilasman »

I love Ran... and Seven Samurai (and many other Kurosawa flicks, of which Ikiru is my favorite). I think Criterion's Seven Samurai DVD is my all-time favorite DVD release: all the featurettes, the commentaries, ect. I think when I first got it I justed watched that set all week!
User avatar
Jubei
Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
Posts: 180
Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2005 13:00 -0700
Location: The Bright Sunny South

Post by Jubei »

Seven Samurai is probably the most famous samurai movie and deservedly so. Excellent, excellent film.

My other choices:

Mifune's Samurai Trilogy is very good.

The Lone Wolf & Cub movies are excellent.

For modern movies, 2002's Twilight Samurai is good for depicting the everyday life and trials of a samurai and his family instead of just focusing on battle scenes.

An odd choice, but I love it regardless, and that is The Hunted with Christopher Lambert. He plays an American on a business trip to Japan who becomes embroiled in a long-standing blood feud between a samurai clan and a ninja clan.

Also, the anime Samurai 7, based on the Seven Samurai movie, is great too.
Post Reply