J?san-nin no shikaku [Region B] (English subtitles)
W**E
Brilliant..........
It's a bit like a 7 Samurai upgrade - I'm not detracting from the Seven Samurai at all here, that's another film I love. I'm not massive on martial arts films with their seemingly impossible moves but this film is different from the norm.The 13 are pulled together by a noble Samurai who does not like the new boy on the scene, a Prince who has no honour and a penchant for rape, torture and cruel, bloodthirsty actions who has to make his way across country to attend a council. They decide to ambush the naughty prince on the way and chose a village through which he must pass to do so.It's a brilliant film, beautiful cinematography, it's a slow burner to start with but picks up pace as we go along. The climax is just what you want sometimes with a film like this, it's not massively over the top - there are not combat scenes with people suspended in mid-air for longer that humanly possible - it's just brilliantly choreographed and ensures an exciting watch.If you like your Samurai/Shogun films without all the Hollywood additions then this is for you.
D**N
Perfect samurai movie
Didn't know anything before purchasing and wow,was blown away by the cinematography and combat,plot is easy to follow very similar to the legendary 7 samurai.but with more emphasis to a villian which is consumed with power.nothing bad to say about it just pure enjoyment to watch.
L**L
Loosely based on true story
The current shoguns half brother is about to pick up a significant role in government, only problem is he a sadistic homicidal loon and his actions are too much even for the samurai of the time. So it is decided byone minister that he will be quietly dealt with.The dealing is anything but quiet and leads to plentiful blood spilling and death as pretty much everybody ends up dead at the action packed denouement.
T**G
13 Assassins - A Masterpiece!
13 Assassins (2010) directed by Takashi Miike is a stunningly beautiful Japanese action movie that kept me glued in front of the TV for the whole 141 minutes running time. It is a feast for all martial arts fans with insights into the philosophy of the Samurai, featuring breath-taking choreography, striking costumes and profound quotes, such as our main character Shinzaemon Shimada telling us: ` No mercy! There's no samurai code or fair play in battle! No sword? Use a stick. No stick? Use a rock. No rock? Use your fists and feet! Lose your life, but make the enemy pay! `The plot follows the creation of a band of 13 warriors who are tasked as assassins, brought together to kill a bloodthirsty politician before he rises to higher office, and thus becomes untouchable. But fear not, the film doesn't expect you to understand feudal Japanese politics, as the main reasons for the assassination attempt are much more graphic, logical and, in the way of the Samurai, honourable.Forming the band and performing their task is nigh-on impossible, as by the finale our intrepid 13 warriors are faced with an army of some 200 soldiers in order to reach their target. Clearly, for some, this will be a one-way mission, but our heroes lay down their lives at the opposition's great expense, and their strategies soon turn disadvantage to advantage. The final, long battle scene brings our warriors face to face with their opponents in a one-horse town, where only one side can be victorious.This is a great piece of historical drama, where the film-makers have tried to keep true to the spirit of Samurai and have avoided adding a Hollywood sheen. It is gritty, realistic, honest and blunt. While we may find some of the Samurai beliefs about `honour' to be confusing and self-defeating, the film never tries to modernise or apologise for how things were. This is history, not revisionist drama. The costumes and weapons are wonderfully accurate and the martial arts are, in most cases (bar the occasional wobble) extremely well performed. There is real affection here for the stories and ways of the Samurai.But there are downsides. Unfortunately, while the picture quality and overall cinematography is superb, the same cannot be said about the use of sound effects, particularly during the fight scenes. They are too much for my personal taste. Too much `Weapons Sound Effects Volume 14 - Swords, Knives and Stabbings'! Just as when movies use squealing tyres SFX for a car on a gravel path (um, just WHAT are the tyres squealing on?), here the film-makers used swooshing sounds for every sword movement (it is quite hard to make a sword `swoosh' and not all swords do it!), metal scraping FX every time a sword is unsheathed (the scabbards - saya - are made of wood, not metal, plus a Samurai wants to be silent when unsheathing their sword!) and clangy/ringing SFX when the swords hit each other (most katana don't make this sort of steel-on-steel sound when they hit). Am I being a tad OTT here? Possibly, but then I am a practising Iaido martial artist and handle Katanas on a daily basis...I know what I am talking about and in a film that gets Samurai right on so many levels, to have them get the sounds wrong is a real let down.The other thing that annoyed me was the use of some CGI cows that had been set alight and used as a weapon. Historically, this may well have been a technique employed by warriors of the time in Japan, and of course, no one expects the film-makers to use real cattle! But the CGI was atrocious, so utterly horrendous that all you can do is laugh and hope it goes away very quickly. There is a similarly bad use of CGI when a bridge explodes and some horses that get blown up. In a film devoid of CGI for a lot of its run-time, these two uses could have been dropped and not harm the movie in any way.The Blu-Ray includes an interview with the director, a trailer plus deleted scenes (nothing thrilling) but the film itself is truly epic. A slow starter, but well worth the watch. It is a Samurai movie that deserves its place in every good martial arts collection. Something for the Katana fans, and something for the general fans, it is a solid historical drama with some superb action, strong acting, beautiful design work and stunning landscapes.
M**N
A homage to Kurosawa?
If you enjoyed The Seven Samurai, then you will enjoy this film. It does not have the same amount of character building that Kurosawa's masterpiece does, but it has plenty of action after a rather slow build up, and the end battle is spectacular. Well worth a watch.
J**C
Epic movie
Definitely a must watch especially for those fans of samurai films.
A**R
Excellent
Very good film glad I watched it
T**Z
Great film suffers from dodgy DVD quality
This is really difficult, as a film I would give this five stars without question. It is sort of remake of Seven Samurai, a group of unemployed samurai at the end of an era are gathered together, there is the wise old experienced head of the leader, the enigmatic master swordsman, the novice, the village idiot who tags along and saves the day (why are all peasants in Japanese films continually scratching?) and the village made into a killing zone. All sounds familiar. The difference is that this time it is not bandits but a young prince who longs for the days of war and views bloodshed as excitement which has left him slightly derranged and the authorities take it upon themselves to dispose of him. This is shorter (thankfully) than 7 Samurai, taughter plot, equally as poigniant and very well acted. If you like big battle scenes then this is for you, the blood splatter count at the end is off the scale.Amazon's customer service is also five star, and they have sought to correct the problem very quickly, however, the three star rating persists and it is because of the following:Two DVD's of this film have now been sent to me and both suffer the same problem, inconsistent subtitles that do not seem to be synched to the film. What happens is acres and acres of Japanese dialogue with no subtitles and then all of a sudden up will pop a susbtitle saying "irreversible" or " his son is". There seems to be a bad batch of this film. My forst viewing was a Love film rental, that was fine, I have also seen it on Sky Movies no problem but seem to be having difficulty getting hold of a fully working item.So, if you like martial arts/samurai films, this is a must but beware of the quality of the DVD you purchase
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago