Samurai X - El Fin de la Leyenda
Shishio ha zarpado en su barco acorazado para derrocar al gobierno Meiji y devolver a Japón al caos, llevando a Kaoru con él. Para detenerlo a tiempo, Kenshin entrena con su antiguo maestro ... Leer todoShishio ha zarpado en su barco acorazado para derrocar al gobierno Meiji y devolver a Japón al caos, llevando a Kaoru con él. Para detenerlo a tiempo, Kenshin entrena con su antiguo maestro para aprender su técnica final.Shishio ha zarpado en su barco acorazado para derrocar al gobierno Meiji y devolver a Japón al caos, llevando a Kaoru con él. Para detenerlo a tiempo, Kenshin entrena con su antiguo maestro para aprender su técnica final.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
- Kenshin Himura
- (as Satô Takeru)
Opiniones destacadas
The key moments are well done, but in between those key moments things tend to drag on. I understand these are manga characters, so they tend to be on the unrealistic side. But something just feels off in the delivery of the dialogs, they seemed... disconnected. But once I got to those key moments I was thoroughly entertained.
The fights are fantasy style katana combat, but very creative and well choreographed. As a fan of martial arts movies, I enjoyed them very much. The "final boss fight" was fantastic and worthy of the climax of the trilogy. Bravo.
If you like action, especially martial arts action, I say this trilogy is worth a watch, but just keep in mind this came from comic books. As with most action movies, if you look too deep everything falls apart, so just sit back and enjoy.
Though the first act isn't as action packed like Kyoto Inferno first act was, I found it extremely well written and truly a strong point of the long length, it did everything it needed to do to build up for the climax and ending fight with Kenshin and Shishio. It tells us more about our main character and hero, and the darker characterization is truly perfect here. The second act is where The Legends Ends truly begin to shine, story and individual character arcs that Kyoto Inferno started come full circle, and it's where Aoshi Shinomori makes his anticipating return. Something that have been in the ten years making and something he told us in dialogue multiple of times, his need to kill Kenshin. I would actually say the fight sequence between them was way better than the one Aoshi had with Okina "Elder", it was fast and engaging but also epic in terms of quality and how the music played into it. The second act is stronger but the act that truly brings this samurai film to a 10 is the third and final act. Everything about it is breathtaking and incredible, a satisfying and action packed climax.
The fighting choreography and action sequences are like the previous film, truly superb and also beautifully shot. The sets that are used in this film are great, especially where Kenshin trains with his old master. Many sets and locations in these two films are beautiful, this second installment of the duology having the most stunning ones. The musical score during action sequences and in other scenes, are like Kyoto Inferno, quite brilliant. The music is powerful and memorable, edited well into the scenes so it flows really well.
Now this is far from the best film I have ever seen, but these two films together are some of the most entertaining films I've seen. Not a single minute went by that I found myself bored, Keishi Otomo created a film worth coming back to. If not just for the brilliant and epic action sequences, Kyato Inferno and The Legend Ends will become classics in the samurai/action genre. Without a doubt.
Cons: I' have loved them to develop some characters further, or give the backstory at least (Sojiro, Aoshi and some of the Juppongata) to create more drama and depth, as well as inclide some more epic fight scenes.
Overall: 8/10
One of the best things I enjoyed about the movie(s) was obviously the action sequences costume designs and how the settings mimic'ed Tokyo & Kyoto was portrayed in the series. It felt like I was in that time line. Some hardcore fans would be disappointed that it was not EXACTLY like the series as far as the plot but how much can you condensed from a series into a 3-part movie. I thought it was well done.
The biggest difference between the anime series and the movie is that, in the series they focus on how techniques work and analyze fighters style in great detail & length. There is none of that in the movie which was not a big deal whatsoever.
I would LOVE to see if they could make a movie of the OVA series with Kenshin being the Manslayer (Hitokiri Battousai) and tell the story of the cross scar on his face.
Any one else agrees?
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOtomo said the final fight scene was the most difficult scene to shoot, mainly due to how Satoh and Fujiwara did not use stunts. Nevertheless, the director found it as an "epic" scene.
- Citas
Seijuro Hiko: Cherry blossoms in Spring. Stars cover the sky in Summer. Full moon shines in Autumn and in Winter, the snow covers the ground... All these things make sake taste good. If it tastes bad, it's because there is something wrong with you
- ConexionesFollowed by Kenshin, el guerrero samurái: El principio (2021)
- Bandas sonorasHeartache
Written by Takahiro Moriuchi (as Taka) and Arnold Lanni (as A. Lanni)
Performed by One Ok Rock
Courtesy of A-Sketch
Selecciones populares
- How long is Rurouni Kenshin: The Legend Ends?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Rurouni Kenshin: The Legend Ends
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 41,900,000
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 14 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1