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Zatoichi: The Blind Swordsman (Kitano) Recommended by MovieMail

Zatoichi (Special Edition)  Sleeve

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Film Description

'Beat' Takeshi takes on one of Japan's most popular cultural heroes - the blind swordsman Zatoichi. Injecting the hero with his own inimitable flavour he delivers a martial arts epic filled with distinctive good humour, fabulous music and a showstopping tap-dancing finale.

 

Film Information

Director Takeshi Kitano
Starring Takeshi Kitano

 

Genre World Cinema

 

Country Japan Language JAPANESE   Year 2003

 

DVD Extras

Two discs; Tin box packaging; Limited & numbered film cell; 3 art cards, 12 page booklet with production notes; Interviews with director, producer and designers; Takeshi Kitano masterclass; Making-of documentary; stills and poster galleries; Theatrical trailer; Filmographies.

 

Technical Details

Certificate 18   Length 111 mins   Label ART-E
Cat No ART281DVD   Format DVD   Colour
Region2   Aspect Widescreen
Subtitles English.

 

Film Media

5 Stills

 

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1 Trailer

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Reviews & Articles

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Review by Barry Forshaw on 1st October 2004

It goes without saying that when the unique vision of Kitano (director and star of some of the most sardonically funny – and violent – Yakuza movies) is applied to the classic Blind Swordsman series, the result will be something special – and this is precisely the case in this diverting entry.

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Review by Pasquale Iannone on 1st July 2004

The blind wanderer, skilled swordsman, masseur and incorrigible dice gambler Zatoichi was one of Japan’s most popular cultural heroes of the 1960s and 1970s. Set in the mid-19th century, the pulpy, highly successful series of films featuring the eponymous hero made a star out of actor Shintaro Katsu.
Breathing new life into the much-loved character, ‘Beat’ Takeshi Kitano’s Zatoichi (2003) is effortlessly stylish – a heady, unlikely brew of violence, knockabout humour and musical effervescence. As a director, Kitano has always been weary of the constrictions of genre filmmaking and with this latest film, continues to gleefully toy with the established aesthetics of individual genres.
The seemingly conventional narrative –Zatoichi (Kitano) drifts into a small town and joins up with a brother and sister out to avenge the murder of their parents – belies the strikingly original and expressive use of mise en scène. Shot by Katsumi Yanagijima primarily in shades of grey (reflecting perhaps Zatoichi’s impaired vision) the use of rich or bright colour assumes heightened importance - the deep red of a kimono, Zatoichi’s own bleach blond hair, or indeed the dazzling primary colours of the film’s tap-dancing finale. Keiichi Suzuki’s score is also crucial to the film’s structure. Whole sequences unfold to a clearly defined rhythm imposed by diegetic music and sounds. The film’s invigorating musicality culminates in the aforementioned routine, a finale which is in no way incongruous in the context of the film as a whole.
As might be expected, the several action set-pieces are beautifully crafted. In one sequence the camera glides behind a group of swordsmen assembled in lashing rain around the glowering hero. Zatoichi’s balletic swordplay cuts them down one by one and the camera then pulls away to capture the full extent of the rain-soaked, blood-spattered carnage.
With Zatoichi, Kitano’s first period film, the director not only reactivates one of Japan’s most loved celluloid icons but - through the film’s refreshing aesthetic palette - continues his own development as a filmmaker, certainly one of contemporary cinema’s most important, vital talents.

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Review by Gary Ramsay on 1st July 2004

Retaining the trademark screen violence of Brother and Sonatine, Takeshi Kitano’s pyrotechnic take on the Japanese folk hero Zatoichi – the blind masseur samurai who boldly dispatches justice with a slash of his blade – is an exhilarating ride that rattles along with buckets of digital blood.
Zatoichi (Takeshi Kitano) enters a remote mountain village under the thumb of local warlords the Ginzo gang, who are protected by Ronin (a rogue samurai for hire) Hatori (Tadanobu Asano). Whilst in the village, Zatoichi befriends a local gambler and his family who he takes under his wing, plus two strange geishas who are out to revenge the deaths of their families at the hands of the Ginzo gang. With a central premise of a revenge and redemption, Kitano is in playful mood with many surreal and funny touches including a series of smartly observed scenes inside the local gambling den and with a lunatic next door neighbour. Lush and beautifully framed throughout, the rain swept village is perfect territory for Zatoichi's antics.
Keiichi Suzuki’s beautiful score – a mish-mash of traditional Japanese strings and modern synthesizers – is a significant addition to the movie’s impact and complements the visuals perfectly, especially during a number of scenes where farmers working in the fields have their movements matched in syncopation with the chops of the soundtrack.
After the final showdown between two master samurai, the movie descends into a riotous climax, where the entire cast climb on stage and tap-dance to an implausible but joyous finale that leaves you feeling like you have just wandered out of the circus.
With every release, Kitano seals his reputation as one of the most talented and single minded auteurs in world cinema. More fun than Tarantino’s self-conscious Kill Bill, Zatoichi is the real deal – violent, stylish, hip and funny – and arguably Takeshi Kitano's career high-spot to date and certainly one of the essential films of 2004

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Article - "Zatoichi" by Pasquale Iannone
Thursday 1st July 2004

The blind wanderer, skilled swordsman, masseur and incorrigible dice gambler Zatoichi was one of Japan’s most popular cultural heroes of the 1960s and 1970s. Set in the mid-19th century, the pulpy, highly successful series of films featuring the eponymous hero made a...  View article in full

 

 

Article - "There is nobody quite like … Takeshi Kitano" by Peter Wild
Friday 9th November 2007

There is nobody quite like Takeshi Kitano. Not in the East, not in the West. Nobody. It's difficult, at first, to come to terms with precisely what this means.

In Japan, for example, Kitano is not known primarily as the auteur film-maker the rest of the w...  View article in full

 

 

 

 

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