Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn ancient Japan, a good lord is killed and his throne is taken by the trecherous Yuki Daijo and his wizard friend Oroki-maru. The young prince Ikazuki-maru is rescued from the jaws of death... Tout lireIn ancient Japan, a good lord is killed and his throne is taken by the trecherous Yuki Daijo and his wizard friend Oroki-maru. The young prince Ikazuki-maru is rescued from the jaws of death by a magic bird sent by a wizard. Ten years later, Ikazuki-maru embarks on an adventure t... Tout lireIn ancient Japan, a good lord is killed and his throne is taken by the trecherous Yuki Daijo and his wizard friend Oroki-maru. The young prince Ikazuki-maru is rescued from the jaws of death by a magic bird sent by a wizard. Ten years later, Ikazuki-maru embarks on an adventure to avenge his parents and the wizard's death with his magic powers he learned from the wiza... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Spider Woman
- (as Sen Hara)
Avis à la une
Also, a word of warning. This film has been released on DVD as part of a "double feature" with Gamera tai Gyaosu (aka. Return of the Giant Monsters). The quality of the film on DVD is not that great, but if you can get past that, I still recommend the film.
This production looks big budget with everything put up on screen and celebrated. The costumes and sets are quite fantastic and even the special effects don't disappoint, with a mix of men in monster costumes and scenes of flying heads and magic spells and the like. THE MAGIC SERPENT is an involved and involving fantasy film and one which really grabs the viewer's attention.
The story is about an evil usurper and the baby that escapes from a massacre. Years later, the baby has grown into an upstanding young hero under the tutelage of a wise old mystic, so he goes on an odyssey of revenge against the traitors. Along the way he teams up with a poor farming family and encounters various allies and enemies en route to the castle. There's plenty of action here and none of it disappoints, from the sword and gun battles to the hulking monster smash action. It's a colourful action romp, and highly satisfying with it.
But, thankfully, all is not lost. Toei Co. Ltd., a studio known more for it's sentai than for anything else, saw to it that this title, along with several other films that are nearly impossible to find, was released to Laserdisc in 1993. While currently out of print, the laserdisc is not impossible to find. If you have a player and some extra cash (while not impossible to find, a copy runs anywhere from $45 to well over $100 these days) I highly recommend it.
Kairyu Daikessen tells the story of a prince who's kingdom is over-taken by an evil warlord sometime in medieval Japan. A hawk sent by a kind wizard saves the young prince from a group of ninjas and a giant dragon that has killed off the rest of the royal lineage. The boy grows up with the wizard as his surrogate father and mentor. Eventually the prince goes out on his own to take back the kingdom, facing ghosts, ninjas, and an evil wizard along the way. The conclusion is an all out battle between the good prince and the evil wizard, who have transformed themselves into (respectively) a giant frog and a dragon.
As the other two reviewers have noted, the influence of this film on Star Wars is fairly obvious, though the character genders are reversed (the Luke Skywalker of the story is female while the Princess Leia is male). The special effects sequences are very dated but were very well managed for the time. The action sequences are imaginative and plentiful. The monster suits for the ending of the film are based on traditional Japanese art renditions of dragons and frogs. Overall, this is a very fun film, though it is infinately more enjoyable if viewed in its original format. I'm still hoping for a fully restored Region 2 dvd of the title to be released.
The film also closes with some entertaining monster action, when Ikazuchi-Maru, now all grown up and trained in the ways of fighting and magic, returns to his father's castle to take revenge, hero and villain assuming the shapes of a giant horny toad and a dragon respectively to do battle. A massive spider also gets in on the action, blasting foam from its butt!
Unfortunately, almost everything sandwiched between these enjoyable kaiju bookends is rather uninspired chanbara action, with only the occasional appearance by ninjas to liven things up a bit (ninjas always improve a film). After Ikazuchi-Maru shows that he capable of losing his head in a fight (literally) but still carry on living, the fantasy stuff largely takes a back seat to the predictable revenge plot, plus the burgeoning romance between our hero and pretty Sunate (Tomoko Ogawa), who is searching for her long-lost father. All of the drama and family-friendly sword swinging tends to cause the film to drag on a bit (dragon a bit - see what I did there?) ; more of the crazy magic stuff in the middle and I think it would have flowed much better.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJiraiya's giant toad was used in another ninja-themed production from Toei, the popular TV series Kamen no ninja Aka-Kage (1967), as a monster-of-the-week.
- Versions alternativesIn the AIP-TV version, the giant monsters' roars were redubbed with those of Toho and Tsuburaya monsters (The Orochi-Maru Dragon roars like Godzilla and Gaira/Green Gargantua, the Ikazuchi-Maru/Jiraiya Toad roars like Rodan, the giant eagle sounds like Mothra, and Sunate's giant spider gives a metallic creaky sound).
- ConnexionsReferenced in Star Wars: Épisode IV - Un nouvel espoir (1977)
- Bandes originalesKairyû Daikessen
("Mystic Dragons' Great Decisive Battle")
Opening Theme (Japanese version only)
Music by Toshiaki Tsushima
Lyrics by Masaru Igami
Vocals by Young Fresh
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Durée1 heure 34 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1