Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuFive warriors challenge Ogami to duels. Each holds a part of information needed to complete the assassination of a mad clan leader.Five warriors challenge Ogami to duels. Each holds a part of information needed to complete the assassination of a mad clan leader.Five warriors challenge Ogami to duels. Each holds a part of information needed to complete the assassination of a mad clan leader.
- Shinnoji Senzo
- (as Akira Yamauchi)
- Mogami Shusuke
- (as Ritsu Ishiyama)
- Dogawa Saburobei
- (as Gakuya Morita)
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Story-wise certainly the most elaborate of the Lone Wolf films, I found this one to be the best.
As per usual, Ogami finds himself caught up in plotting between various factions and must form political allegiances to see him through. The opening of the film sees him tackling a series of martial arts masters, all of whom test him unawares to make sure he's worthy of the job. The plot then takes a lengthy and slightly pointless detour to a market village where Daigoro is accused of helping a pickpocket conduct her business. Although this sequence has been incorporated to allow greater characterisation of Ogami's son, I found it dragged the pacing down to crawling speed.
Thankfully, things pick up for a relatively exciting climax which sees Ogami finishing off his job. There's still a great deal of entertainment value from watching the various characters occupying different positions in Japanese society at this time and how they react to our hero. The cast give understated performances and the action is typically well shot, but I'm actually looking forward to the end of this series now: better to end on a high than dragging it into the ground.
Apart from the main actor, the cub might be the same one too. Since they made them back to back, it is possible. And while especially part 2 and 3 had some innovations gadget and gimmick wise, those are being now repeated or re-used I reckon. That's not overall a bad thing, but just so you know. Not sure where the anime went, but it is obvious that this had something to rely back on. Those who loved the previous entries (though you can watch them however you like almost - except from the evolution of the "weapons"), will like this too - or even love it. Dependng on your taste of course.
Picking up the story of the Shogun's former executioner Ogami Itto and his son Daigoro, this is another tale of betrayal, political intrigue and murder. The Kuroda Clan is in deep trouble, trouble that Ogami Itto's fierce opponents, the Yagyu, want to exploit for their own benefit. Ogami Itto is paid his usual fee (500 gold pieces of course) and bloodshed ensues.
Now as a chambara and LWAC fundamendalist, I will confess upfront that the combination of stylized comic-book violence and the existential, quasi-mythic look at both historical Japan and the genre conventions that form chambara, are a sure win in my book. It might not be as groundbreaking as the first two entries in the series, it is after all following a now well-tested tradition, but it is done with such conviction and deliberation that one has to pay notice.
As with other serialized characters of the chambara universe like Zatoichi or Nemuri Kiyoshiro, it is exactly that it simultaneously meets our expectations as a pure Lone Wolf movie that doesn't disappoint the way Hollywood sequels do and that it breaks the traditional forms of the period drama that make even a fifth entry of this tried and tested recipe so good.
The plot is of secondary value to the actual journey of Itto and his son. They have been through the crossroads at Hades and now into the land of the demons and there is no turning back. What pushes them through piles of dead bodies is revenge, and I say "them" because Daigoro has made his commitment to follow the same path of blood as his father, their fates inextricably linked through life and death; yet as with other Lone Wolf movies revenge is but a vague part of the storyline. A skeleton that gives these movies form and reason to be but they take life beyond that.
In Lone Wolf and Cub's case their journey is an existential fable bathed in blood, like they are doomed to cut their way through the land for all time and it is through the act of killing that their existence takes meaning. It takes one look at Ogami Itto's grim stare to realize that if there is a god and he would dare to appear in front of him, Itto would swiftly cut him down and move on his path. Takashi Miike understood all this crystal clear when he made Izo.
Speaking of blood, yes, there will be lots of it. It's a staple of the Lone Wolf movies and I wouldn't have it any other way. Arterial sprays, chopped heads and bodies sliced in half. And then there is Tomisaburo Wakayama, the man, the myth, crafting the most mesmerizing character role of his career.
Strongly recommended as are all the other Lone Wolf movies. Watch them in order though.
Of the five, the poisoning is the most dramatic and the most interesting. The story is relatively simple except the side trip with the Cub. It's interesting that the Cub has his own little adventure. As always, Lone Wolf and Cub do a mass slaughter in the end. My only concern is that he has kill a little girl. It doesn't matter how bratty the girl gets. He still kills a little girl but I still like the massacre. I also really like Cub having his own adventure.
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- WissenswertesThis film is part of the Criterion Collection, spine #841.
- PatzerIn the fight scene in the sand dunes, the conditions change randomly between overcast (dull light, no shadows) and sunny (bright light, distinct shadows).
- Zitate
Ogami Itto: [slowly pulling his sword partially out of its sheath] I have come for your life.
Abbot Jikei: [Unperturbed] You cannot kill that which is naught. I have brought subjective and objective into one. I have forgotten myself and merged with nothingness. I am but a piece of totality of inside and outside. Thus, you cannot kill my body.
Abbot Jikei: [Turns to look at Ogami] When you meet Buddha, you'll kill Buddha. When you meet your parents, you'll kill them. It's all for nothing, however. You only have the way of the assassin. When you are able to kill me, you will have achieved the gateless barrier on the way of the assassin.
[looks away; Ogami slowly re-sheathes his sword]
- VerbindungenFeatured in Lame d'un père, l'âme d'un sabre (2005)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Lone Wolf and Cub: Baby Cart in the Land of Demons
- Produktionsfirma
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 30 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1