Seven Samurai


Watch a movie once and most times it'll lose its luster, the luster a movie fanatic like me feels every time he walks into a darkened movie theater, because more often than not the movie is flawed, a pale regurgitation of plot and character. It's not that Hollywood has nothing new to say, and hasn't for years now, but that the rest of the world is throwing up duds as well. Most times I bear with it, quite often a modern film has an interesting turn on a familiar trope, but the test is in watching it again: A History of Violence, Children of Men and even Watchmen were all films I enjoyed much more the second time around. Classic stories, told well, with none of the artifice or flatulence of undercooked art-house theatre, which brings me to this weeks review. Oh, did I not say that I was going to start the blog again with some recommendations?

Seven Samurai. Akira Kurosawa. Three and a half hours with an old-school intermission inbetween acts. Samurai movies are a dicey bunch usually. Talky most of the time, morality plays about duty and honor, while we confuse them for Westerns and steal from them blind appropriating their history, telescoping their myths into a 20 year window that we call the Old West. The chanbara films depict hundreds of years of lore but the best of the bunch were made early, by Akira Kurosawa before he became the legendary film-maker, revered by George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola, and spent the last years of his life struggling for funding. Last Man Standing, Magnificent Seven, even Pixar's A Bug's Life has stolen from this film. The plot is simple: Japanese villagers are struggling with a bandit problem, they hire samurai to help them and the samurai teach them how to defend themselves, as one way of life gives way to another.

But Seven Samurai is a masterpiece alright. So many of its scenes have been re-shot, roles recasted, set-pieces stolen, whole swaths of film redone to suit modern audiences over and over again, even Kurosawa couldn't help himself later on in life with Kagemusha and Ran, two films highly indebted to his first films. Still, the original holds true despite it all. It's wrily funny, not bogged down with the sort of cultural asides that generally need asterisks at the bottom of a page, and entertaining as hell. What more could you ask for.