Les débuts du guerrier légendaire Musashi Miyamoto sont ici décrits: ses années comme guerrier aspirant, puis hors-la-loi et finalement en véritable samouraï.Les débuts du guerrier légendaire Musashi Miyamoto sont ici décrits: ses années comme guerrier aspirant, puis hors-la-loi et finalement en véritable samouraï.Les débuts du guerrier légendaire Musashi Miyamoto sont ici décrits: ses années comme guerrier aspirant, puis hors-la-loi et finalement en véritable samouraï.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
- Terumasa Ikeda
- (as Sakae Ozawa)
Avis en vedette
Takezo (Mifune) is the strong and wild character all the woman likes, but he cant handle the attention very well so he keeps running. All the characters as well as the story is not hard to get, so this is one to bring in the kids on.
Will defo check the rest of the series out, maybe the books as well.
However, you have no inkling of this at the beginning of the movie. What we see is dirt and squalor and a desperate chance to get out from beneath the mud. It all goes wrong and things look desperate.
As the movie progresses in the slow, methodical, often obtuse, Japanese fashion we become engrossed in the plot and the lives of our protagonists. Toshiro Mifune shows a vast range of emotion, power and character growth in these this movie. To get the full flavour of the story you must also watch the next two movies in this trilogy (2) "Duel at Ichijoji Temple"(1955) (USA)and (3) "Duel on Ganryu Island" (1956)(USA.
The DVDs feature not very well restored prints, maybe it was the best they could do, and there is no supplemental material.
The movie itself is a fun and lively retelling of the legend. Mifune is more wooden than usual, but this is a time when Japanese action films were taking their cues from westerns, and his Musashi grows from a wild spirit to the requisite strong, silent type. For a modern, charismatic, manga-style Musashi, try to get your hands on 2003's "Musashi" NHK miniseries.
The film is brightened considerably by a widow (Mitsuko Miko) and her daughter (Mariko Okasa), who the pair stumble across in the country. We find out that they make their living stripping dead samurai of their belongings, and soon both of them try to seduce Mifune's character. The daughter looks up at him with adoring eyes and lips parted after they fall from a horse together, and the mother, flush with excitement after seeing him in battle, tells him "Take me ... do whatever you want with me." Takezo demurs, and the pair then run off with his friend, but not before smearing his name.
One of the interesting aspects of the film was its theme of needing to have faith and trust in a loved one's character when they're away. We see this break down when Takezo's friend believes the widow's false accusations and runs off without him, and when Takezo in turn believes that his friend has abandoned him (and the man's fiancée) out of cowardice. The villagers are ready to believe the worst about the pair, and are soon marshalled into a manhunt. Meanwhile, the fiancée character (Kaoru Yachigusa) becomes attached to Takezo, and we see her faith tested over years while he is imprisoned. It's only a pure, enlightened soul who can pass such tests, but sometimes, ironically, life can still be bitter, and the film's ending is certainly poignant.
There is also something wonderful about the transformation of this character from an unruly guy dubbed "The Lawless," to someone on the samurai path, with the discipline to know that sometimes self-restraint is necessary in life. The way to enlightenment is not to try to make a name for oneself by blindly throwing oneself into battle, it's through calmness and the harnessing of one's natural strengths. It's the priest (Kuroemon Onoe) who is actually the hero here. He's always relaxed, feeling no shame when partially clad in front of a young woman ("Human beings are born naked"), nor fear while capturing the renegade. He smiles beatifically in all situations, even when the bandit threatens him, fearless of having his head lopped off.
There is an education that thus happens in this first episode, but I liked how Inagaki did not belabor the details. In the beginning the two men leave their village and quickly we see them being routed in battle, without the filler scenes of them being assimilated into the army or its preparations. Similarly, when Takezo is imprisoned, we see him exhorted to read spiritual texts to improve his mind, but we don't see long-drawn out scenes of this happening, only the result in Mifune's demeanor a few years later. He wisely kept the film to 93 minutes, and with fewer brush strokes, painted a great picture here.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAn often repeated myth is that the production of Les sept samouraïs (1954) and Godzilla (1954) nearly drove Toho into bankruptcy. This myth neglects to mention this film, which was another large production made by Toho and the second most expensive Japanese film up until that point, behind Les sept samouraïs (1954) and ahead of Godzilla (1954). All three of these films were financial risks for Toho, but there is little evidence to suggest that Toho was ever at risk for bankruptcy. The studio released a total of sixty-eight feature films in 1954, the most successful of which were Seven Samurai, this film, and Godzilla respectively. Their success would ensure Toho's position as the industry leader in Japanese cinema.
- Citations
Otsu: As I was gazing at you, Takezo-san, bound and hanging, I saw that I too was bound by an unseen rope. And I could not cut the rope by myself. Takezo-san, I cannot go back. Take me with you.
Musashi Miyamoto (Takezo): [choking back sobs] Do you hate me?
Otsu: Once. But now...
- ConnexionsFeatured in The 79th Annual Academy Awards (2007)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 33m(93 min)
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1