Directed by:
黒澤明Cinematography:
Asakazu NakaiComposer:
Fumio HayasakaCast:
Takashi Shimura, Daisuke Katō, Minoru Chiaki, Isao Kimura, Seiji Miyaguchi, Toshirō Mifune, Kamatari Fujiwara, Atsushi Watanabe, Isao Yamagata, Reiko Mori (more)Plots(1)
With their village raided every year by vicious bandits, a group of peasants hire seven warriors to protect them. Initially met with suspicion, the warriors eventually gain the trust of the peasants and they join forces to face the bandits. Endlessly copied but never surpassed, Seven Samurai is a truly timeless classic. (British Film Institute (BFI))
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Reviews (10)
One of those films that is not glorified unnecessarily. It's a breathtaking opus that is long, but not unnecessarily so. There's drama, humor, action, and emotion here. All of this is part of the story of one village just trying to fend off bandits. Great characters and great scenes that are impossible to forget. Above all, the ending is truly poignant and shows what form gratitude can take for people who died for you. ()
Kurosawa’s gem is a tad slow for my taste, but precise in every detail. This picture was a foundation stone for so many stories, where a handful of brave men stand up for the weak, even though they are heavily outnumbered. These days we should value these films all the more, because even after all these years they tell us more about people than any others. Your head is on the block and all you think of are your whiskers? ()
Even though I'd been interested in Kikuchiya for a long time, even though it entertained me and made me laugh, it was too long... Yes, it's a legendary film that a lot of directors have taken their cue from. It's typically Japanese, those who don't know a bit of the Japanese mentality may be surprised by many things (the film remains misunderstood in many aspects); it flows slowly, it flows gradually, it flows with the seasons. And apparently it's a must for anyone who wants to get to know Kurasawa-sama a little :-) But let's not kid ourselves, the running time is just overlong... :-D ()
Seven stars for seven samurais. Oh, I can’t give that many, can I... So at least five of them. The still unsurpassed original which, unlike its more famous remake, loses only in not having a “star" amongst the baddies. Like Calvera in The Magnificent Seven. The western version also wins in terms of pace. In all other aspects, the Kurosawa version is better and since everybody is aware of the qualities of the American remake, I don’t have to sing the Samurais’ praises any further. Along with Red Beard and High and Low, this is Kurosawa’s best piece. ()
The Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven clearly demonstrate the difference in the nature of Japanese and American cinema. Where one is distinguished by tough guy gestures, strong speeches, and heroic archetypes, the other relies on a slow pace, pleasure in storytelling, drawn characters, and a much more universal message of war. Even the conclusion of Seven Samurai (the legendary "we were not the ones who won") is completely without pathos and rather involves the tragedy of men who cannot stop fighting because war is their livelihood. Kurosawa's film may be too relaxed for the action genre, permeated with beautiful dialogues and magnificent "twists and turns", but that's what makes it a hundred times more valuable than Sturges' subsequent remake. It's not just a story of few against many, but a story of a real war (which is what the samurai call the defense of the village), which surprisingly lacks the inescapable feeling of "they will wipe them out". The final scene pits 13 highwaymen and a village full of determined defenders against each other! There is no classic villain! The absence of the usual scheme of good vs. evil (the samurai are certainly not saints) and its replacement by believable characters led by the incredible freak Toshiro Mifune endows the film with beautiful poetry that the American bubblegum version can only wish it had. Definitely one of the best war films ever made. Wise, prudent, deep. [I really like The Magnificent Seven, but...] ()
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Photo © Toho Company Ltd.
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