Samurai II - Duel at Ichijoji temple - Criterion Collection (1967) Japan
Samurai II - Duel at Ichijoji temple - Criterion Collection Image Cover
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Director:Hiroshi Inagaki
Studio:Criterion
Writer:Hideji Hojo, Hiroshi Inagaki
Rating:4.0 (10 votes)
Rated:NR
Date Added:2006-03-18
ASIN:6305028699
UPC:037429125526
Price:$29.95
Genre:Foreign
Release:1998-07-28
IMDb:0048579
Duration:104
Picture Format:Academy Ratio
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:Japanese
Subtitles:English
Summary: Picking up where "Samurai I" left off, ToshirĂ´ Mifune's samurai in training Musashi Miyamoto is a wandering swordsman who hones his skills in a succession of duels. When he defeats a succession of students from a local school of martial arts, he becomes marked for death by the school elders and is attacked in a series of cowardly ambushes. Romantic threads from the first film become further complicated when the virginal Otsu (Kaoru Yachigusa) and the sad courtesan Akemi (Mariko Okada) meet and discover their rivalry and Musashi earns himself an archenemy, an ambitious young swordsman named Sasaki Kojiro (Koji Tsuruta) who vows to defeat Musashi to make his name as the finest fencer in all of Japan. Inagaki ably manages the rather complicated plot with unexpected ease (subtitles are employed to help English viewers make a few narrative jumps) while he charts Musashi's education in compassion and humility and his internal struggle with his conflicted love for Otsu. The direction is still as distant and unostentatious as in the first film, while the color and settings become richer and more pronounced: studio-bound locations take on the quality and delicacy of paintings. The dramatic centerpiece of the trilogy, an epic pre-dawn battle where 40 swordsmen ambush Musashi, uses darkness and landscape to great dramatic effect as figures seep in and out of the picture. "--Sean Axmaker"