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Seven Samurai
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Directed by Akira Kurosawa.
Akira Kurosawa's epic tale concerns honor and duty during a time when the old traditional order is breaking down. The film opens with master samurai Kambei (Takashi Shimura) posing as a monk to save a kidnapped farmer's child. Impressed by his selflessness and bravery, a group of farmers begs him to defend their terrorized village from bandits. Kambei agrees, although there is no material gain or honor to be had in the endeavor. Soon he attracts a pair of followers: a young samurai named Katsushiro (Isao Kimura), who quickly becomes Kambei's disciple, and boisterous Kikuchiyo (Toshiro Mifune), who poses as a samurai but is later revealed to be the son of a farmer. Kambei assembles four other samurais, including Kyuzo (Seiji Miyaguchi), a master swordsman, to round out the group. Together they consolidate the village's defenses and shape the villagers into a militia, while the bandits loom menacingly nearby. Soon raids and counter-raids build to a final bloody heart-wrenching battle. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
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leeroy711leeroy711 Re:Weekly Theme for July 14: Th ...
by leeroy711 in Weekly Theme
loved it.
"[quote user="unclefestering"] Just before I slipped off to sleep last night I suddenly remembered the scene from the Seven Samurai where the samurai are trying to keep the villagers away from the one bandit they have caputured. They hold everyone back except for the old grandmother whose entire family has been killed by bandits. [/quote] Oh yeah!! I had forgotten that one too, freakin' sweeeeeet. There's a similar scene at the end of Open Range when the bad guys have been run off and most of all the action packed gun fight is over and in the background you see the group of townspeople chasing down the remaining member of the gang and killing him as he tries to escape. " [More]
unclefesteringunclefestering Re:Weekly Theme for July 14: Th ...
by unclefestering in Weekly Theme
loved it.
"Just before I slipped off to sleep last night I suddenly remembered the scene from the Seven Samurai where the samurai are trying to keep the villagers away from the one bandit they have caputured. They hold everyone back except for the old grandmother whose entire family has been killed by bandits. " [More]
smithcosmithco Almost as Good as The Magnifice ...
by smithco in My Ponderings on Cinema
loved it.
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"I finally saw Seven Samurai. It is undoubtably a great film. Though by the intermission came around, I was thinking that it is not as good as The Magnificent Seven (1960) A lot of people may want to fit my neck for a rope for stating that, but that's what I was thinking. For me, comparing the two is an excercise in comparing great works. I hope that my opinion here is not constued as a dislike for Kuosawa's masterpiece. It seemed to me that The Magnificent Seven surpassed Seven Samurai in four areas. First is the pacing. I doubt anyone would notice if forty minutes were cut from Seven Samurai. There's a lot of scenes of people staring at each other, scenes that repeated exposition of the story, and a lot of extraneous battle preperation scenes. Generally, the pacing of The Magnificent Seven is a lot tighter: the same story is told just as effectively in much less time. Second is the dialogue. The snappy banter of the characters in The Magnificent Seven is very entertaining ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Why I got into foreign films
by Risselada in Friends of Foreign Flicks
loved it.
"Yeah that's awesome! I love that guy. I think it was in the middle of that class that the big movie theater in the new building on campus opened up. Many movies we watched I had seen before, but I don't see many movies on a big screen like that, especially older ones. You can't imagine how much more I loved some of my favorite movies after seeing them in there such as Bicycle Thieves, The Seventh Seal, and Seven Samurai. " [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Re:Why I got into foreign films
by leeroy711 in Friends of Foreign Flicks
loved it.
"[quote user="yojimbo73"] For me it was catching Kung Fu Theatre and the old British horror films during summer break from middle school in the 80's. I would check the tv every morning hoping the weather conditions were just right to get a snowy picture from some Baltimore station which was a couple hours away. My local video store (which was in the back of a barber shop) didn't have a foreign section, so it was quite some time before I saw anything else not produced in the states. Eventualy I left home, moved closer to Baltimore and got to enjoy Samurai Theatre which got me hooked on Kurosawa. Then Blockbusters popped up everywhere and I would gobble up everything they had. Now with the internet and region free DVD players I catch the good and the bad from all over. I can't recommend enough getting a region free player. I guess ultimately I got in to foreign films because they told stories that weren't being told here in ways we weren't telling them. Coming from a small town i ... " [More]
paulpaul FilmCouch #22
by paul in paul on spout.com
loved it.
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"Remakes: The Weinsteins are remaking Seven Samurai. Is it sacrilege? What if Pulp Fiction and The Matrix were remakes? We speculate the originals: Pulp Fiction (1975), The Dot-Matrix (1971). Movies remaking (and reshaping) history: Once Upon a Time in America, The New World, The Patriot and more. Download FilmCouch #22 or subscribe in the iTunes store (search for “filmcouch” or click here to launch iTunes) and a new free episode will download every Friday. Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Paul " [More]
downwestdownwest A Timeless Masterpiece
by downwest in downwest Blog
loved it.
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"When I think of Michelangelo, I think of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, or the statue of David. I think of J.S. Bach and I think of Toccata and Fugue in D Minor of Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring. Now, when I think of Akira Kurosawa, I think of Seven Samurai, a timeless classic that will maintain its value in artwork for the rest of human history.The lengths that Kurosawa went to to complete this film were immense. It took over a year in production alone, so that says something to us today when we see films shot in a period of three months or so. The man was clearly a genius, and kept pressing for the vision he wanted, and he got it. Everything from waiting for the wind to blow, so the shadows of a tree would dance on a peasant's skull (to capture the excitement of a scene) to getting a river to flow upwards for a different effect, Kurosawa went for it all. Indeed, Kurosawa was a master of subtlety in composition. One of if not the greatest work of film of the 20th century. " [More]
patchespatches Re: Killer extra features
by patches in Criterion Collection
liked it.
"Seven Samurai's re-packaging is very neat... I agree. That treatment acoss the board woiuld be really great. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Akira Kurosawa
by Risselada in Real movies
loved it.
"I've seen 5 Kurosawa movies but wish it was more.I think Seven Samurai would be a fantastic place to start!Rashomon is my other favorite.If you like Shakespeare check out Ran or Throne of Blood (I haven't seen the latter)If you watch Yojimbo or The Hidden Fortress you may feel some familiarity as the former was remade into many different movies including A Fistful of Dollars. And the latter was a large influence on portions of Star Wars. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Widely considered one of the greatest films ever made, Seven Samurai was both the apex of Akira Kurosawa's long career and the high-water mark of the Japanese period drama. The film's action rivets the viewer in spite of the three-hour-plus running time: the battle sequences, among the best ever filmed, are immediate and visceral; and the characters are complex and so well-rendered that the viewer grieves when one dies. Like few other historical films, it captures not only the physical look of the time but also its essence. Like Jean Renoir's masterpieces Grand Illusion (1937) and Rules of the Game (1939), Seven Samurai illustrates the collapse of social distinctions and the growing irrelevance of old traditions in dangerous and chaotic times. Kambei shaves his much-prized topknot--the symbol of a samurai--to save the kidnapped child, while master swordsman Kyuzo is gunned down by an anonymous bandit with a musket. Kurosawa questions the division between samurai and bandit, between good and evil. In one scene, peasant-born Kikuchiyo heatedly argues that the samurai have been abusing and exploiting the peasants for centuries. In this framework, the samurais' acts of bravery, selflessness, and honor seem absurd, if not pointless. The peasants' choice of the samurai over the bandits is merely one of a lesser evil. Once the bandits are gone, the samurai will no longer be needed. This is underscored in the film's poignant end, when the surviving three samurai leave the village, receiving neither acclaim nor reward, as the villagers plant rice. American audiences were so impressed with Kurosawa's epic masterpiece that it was remade into John Sturges's Magnificent Seven (1960). ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 



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