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Yojimbo? Rashomon?

Posted on 1/30/20 at 9:27 pm
Posted by dirtsandwich
AL
Member since May 2016
7003 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 9:27 pm
Have some down time this weekend. Listened to a recent discussion about Yojimbo and Fist Full of Dollars. Might watch them back to back.

Never seen Rashomon. Watch them all? What other Japanese movies should I check out?
Posted by cigsmcgee
LR
Member since May 2012
5233 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 9:39 pm to
yup. all those are awesome.

Yojimbo has a "sequel," Sanjuro, but i didnt like it as much.


def check out 13 Assassins. its newer, but really badass.
Posted by Jay Are
Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2014
6107 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 10:36 pm to
Any Kurosawa film is worth your time
Posted by Freauxzen
Washington
Member since Feb 2006
38637 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 10:56 pm to
I mean....both?

That's an easy answer.
Posted by LoveThatMoney
Who knows where?
Member since Jan 2008
12616 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 10:57 pm to
Yeah watch all those. Then watch Seven Samurai for good measure.

Then go more modern and watch Infernal Affairs.
Posted by GeauxBayouBengals
Member since Nov 2003
6251 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 11:05 pm to
Yes to all mentioned so far. I recommend Hidden Fortress as well.
Posted by Huey Lewis
BR
Member since Oct 2013
5104 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 11:24 pm to
Throne of Blood
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157018 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 11:30 pm to
quote:

Never seen Rashomon. Watch them all?
Rashomon - director's cut
Posted by mizzoubuckeyeiowa
Member since Nov 2015
39385 posts
Posted on 1/30/20 at 11:41 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157018 posts
Posted on 1/31/20 at 12:03 am to
quote:

What other Japanese movies should I check out?
LINK ]Momotaro's Divine Sea Warriors (1945)
quote:

the first Japanese feature-length animated film. It was directed by Mitsuyo Seo, who was ordered to make a propaganda film for World War II by the Japanese Naval Ministry. Shochiku Moving Picture Laboratory shot the 74-minute film in 1944 and screened it on April 12, 1945. It is a sequel to Momotaro no Umiwashi, a 37-minute film released in 1943 by the same directo
quote:

After completing naval training, a bear cub, a monkey, a pheasant, and a puppy say goodbye to their families. While they are preoccupied, the monkey's younger brother falls into a river while chasing the monkey's cap and is carried towards a waterfall. The dog and the monkey work together to save the child just before he is swept downstream. A time skip occurs and Japanese forces are seen clearing a forest and constructing an air base in a Pacific island with the help of the jungle animals. A plane lands in the airstrip and from inside emerges Momotaro, depicted as a General, together with the bear, monkey, dog and pheasant, who by this point have become high-ranking officials. The subsequent scenes show the jungle animals being taught the alphabet via singing, washing clothes, given military training, and loading weapons in warplanes. The animal residents of the island are shown as simple primitives who are star struck by the glamorous and advanced Japanese animals.

A narration of the story of how the island of Celebes was acquired by the Dutch East India Company follows and it is revealed that the Japanese are attempting to invade it. The monkey, dog and bear cub become parachute jumpers while the pheasant becomes a pilot. The paratroopers ambush a halftrack and hastily invade a British fort, causing the unprepared British soldiers to panic and flee. Momotaro, the monkey and the puppy are then shown negotiating with three clearly terrified, stammering British officials and after a brief argument, the British agree to surrender Celebes and the surrounding islands to Japanese rule. A brief epilogue shows children playing at parachuting onto continental America outlined on the ground. Plainly the United States is to be the target of their generation.
The film's final scene, where the cute little animals practice parachuting onto a giant map of the US, and then stroll joyously into the sunset near Mt. Fuji, is kind of a classic.

Allegedly the British officer was voiced by an actual British POW. What happened to him is unknown.






Posted by Jackie Chan
Japan?
Member since Sep 2012
4894 posts
Posted on 1/31/20 at 1:33 am to
I like the ones already mentioned.

Kuroneko and Onibaba if you want good classic Japanese horror movies.
Posted by dirtsandwich
AL
Member since May 2016
7003 posts
Posted on 2/3/20 at 3:14 pm to
Watched Yojimbo on Friday night and again on Sat night after I could buy Hang Em High for some reason.

Yojimbo was awesome. I loved it.
Posted by iwyLSUiwy
I'm your huckleberry
Member since Apr 2008
42152 posts
Posted on 2/3/20 at 3:17 pm to
Cant go wrong with either. Definitely add Seven Samurai and The Hidden Fortress to your list.
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