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La Légende des huit samourais

Titre original : Satomi hakken-den
  • 1983
  • 2h 13min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
1,4 k
MA NOTE
Hiroyuki Sanada and Hiroko Yakushimaru in La Légende des huit samourais (1983)
Dark FantasyMartial ArtsSamuraiActionAdventureDramaFantasyRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre languePrincess Shizu was born under a terrible curse. Only the eight legendary samurai, hailing from across Japan, can protect her from an ancient supernatural clan to fulfill their destinies as f... Tout lirePrincess Shizu was born under a terrible curse. Only the eight legendary samurai, hailing from across Japan, can protect her from an ancient supernatural clan to fulfill their destinies as foretold by prophecy.Princess Shizu was born under a terrible curse. Only the eight legendary samurai, hailing from across Japan, can protect her from an ancient supernatural clan to fulfill their destinies as foretold by prophecy.

  • Réalisation
    • Kinji Fukasaku
  • Scénario
    • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Toshio Kamata
  • Casting principal
    • Hiroko Yakushimaru
    • Hiroyuki Sanada
    • Shin'ichi Chiba
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    1,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Scénario
      • Kinji Fukasaku
      • Toshio Kamata
    • Casting principal
      • Hiroko Yakushimaru
      • Hiroyuki Sanada
      • Shin'ichi Chiba
    • 22avis d'utilisateurs
    • 37avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 4 nominations au total

    Photos23

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    + 16
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    Rôles principaux61

    Modifier
    Hiroko Yakushimaru
    • Princess Shizu
    Hiroyuki Sanada
    Hiroyuki Sanada
    • Inue Shinbei Masashi
    Shin'ichi Chiba
    Shin'ichi Chiba
    • Inuyama Dosetsu Tadatomo
    • (as Sonny Chiba)
    Etsuko Shihomi
    Etsuko Shihomi
    • Inusaka Keno Tanetomo
    Minori Terada
    • Inumura Daikaku Masanori
    Masaki Kyômoto
    Masaki Kyômoto
    • Inuzuka Shino Moritaka
    Shunsuke Kariya
    • Inuta Kobungo Yasuyori
    Takuya Fukuhara
    • Inukawa Sosuke Yoshito
    Kenji Ôba
    Kenji Ôba
    • Inukai Genpachi Nobufuchi
    • (as Kenji Ohba)
    Keiko Matsuzaka
    • Princess Fuse
    • (voix)
    Akira Shioji
    • Genjin
    Mamako Yoneyama
    • Funamushi
    Nagare Hagiwara
    Nagare Hagiwara
    • Yonosuke
    Akira Hamada
    • Akushiro
    Tatsuo Endô
    Tatsuo Endô
    • Hikiroku
    Taiji Tonoyama
    Taiji Tonoyama
    • Hikojii
    Ryôichi Takayanagi
    • Ohta Masaharu
    Mikio Narita
    Mikio Narita
    • Ohta Sukemasa
    • Réalisation
      • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Scénario
      • Kinji Fukasaku
      • Toshio Kamata
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs22

    6,41.4K
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    Avis à la une

    groovycow

    Something old, something new...and a lot of blue.

    LEGEND OF THE EIGHT SAMURAI, on its most base level, is every kid's dream movie: it has eight (count 'em!) mystical warriors, immortality, monsters and evil deities, sacrifices and heroic deeds, and a pointless breast or two. Unfortunately, the elements of the film fail to tie together into a good, coherent film.

    The movie deals with a princess destined to destroy some evil undead guys (unfortunately, they're not zombies, which are always B-movie gold). Told through a confusing Chinese manuscript back story, she is apparently the reincarnation of a martyred girl from generations ago. Over the course of 133 long minutes, she is joined by the titled eight warriors (although I think only two of them even come close to being samurai...), including Sonny Chiba as the typical fighter-dude, a huge cave-dweller and his son, a female ninja assassin, and an evil general who sees the light side...or something.

    As earlier mentioned, this movie is one of those martial-arts epics that attempts to cram everything that should be cool into one two-hour feature. This story might work exceedingly well as a video game (Final Fantasy, anyone?) but just as FINAL FANTASY: THE SPIRITS WITHIN failed to convey a sense of a coherent world, LEGEND OF THE EIGHT SAMURAI also tends to focus more on (poorly conceived) set pieces and monsters than atmosphere and action. There are a few good moments to be found in the ending storm of the bad-guy fortress, but the sacrifices made and the triumph attained mean nothing to the viewer due to the huge amount of material thrown in their face. My rating: 6/10
    8mobey-99377

    Tongue in cheek

    Swords and sorcery films are one of my preferred genres and a pleasant pass time for me and when I came across this lesser known gem of a movie; imagine my surprise when (for me at least) it ticked most if not all boxes. In fact this is not a S&S movie like say "The sword and the sorcerer" or the two original "Conan" movies but it is an enjoyable (cheesey) rendition of the genre. It wold be better to say that this is a genre of it's own, namely Samurai, magic and princesses. OK, so what did I make of this hokey and laughable highly enjoyable film? Well...in a nutshell...I really enjoyed it. Slow to start off but stick with it and it grows on you. Of course we have the well known actor Sony Chiba in this (from "kill Bill" as if you don't know) which is reason alone to see this. There was one song in this that got stuck in my head and I had to know what it was called. Having hit a dead end using Siri on my iPhone to identify the song I headed to the good ol' internet and IMDb where i discovered that the song was written especially for the dubbed version of this movie and not a bonafied standalone song. Nevertheless I managed to get a copy and play it on iTunes now.I would love to know what other people make of this movie and the soundtrack so if you are into sword, sorcery, samurais and light shows (don't ask) then give this a chance. Hopefully, you'll enjoy it as much as I did.
    8seishino

    Should be one of the legends of campy Japanese Film

    Satomi Hakkenden will be understood the moment the viewer realizes that the soulful, classically Japanese score is being played on a cheap Casio synthesizer, and that somehow that is good. Being one of the country's very traditional legends (stolen from China), the writers drew from literary sources to make their movie, and it shows. The movie has heaping doses of melodrama, decapitations, and dead children. It also has characters dressed like a costume shop exploded, giant flying snakes hanging by ropes, a truly terrible 70's power ballad love song, and a plot so stereotypically Japanese it can be considered prototypical.

    None of that is to say that the movie is bad. All of those things add to the ambiance of the movie. It also contains incredible special effects for 1983, some of the moments are surprisingly poignant, and the fight scenes are great. The plot may be telegraphed from a mile away, but it is still entertaining to watch it all unfold. If you are at all a fan of Japanese culture, you have seen this movie before, in one way or another. Yet if this sounds at all appealing to you, you owe it to yourself to see the original. Satomi Hakkenden deserves a larger spot in great camp history.
    10NinjaChampion

    If you play videogames, you've already seen this movie. See it again anyway!

    Every once and awhile (Normally among the younger generation, such as myself) you will see a movie and think "Wow, every movie I have ever SEEN has stolen ideas from this!" You will probably be overjoyed, having finally found that one adrenaline pounding action flick that you've always searched for. Thats how I felt when I first saw "Yojimbo" anyway. "BUT!", you say, "this isn't about "Yojimbo"! You need to explain the "Legend of the Eight Samurai"!" And indeed I do, but first, the comparison has to be made. If "Yojimbo" is the movie that every martial arts director has in some way emulated, "Legend of the Eight Samurai" ("LOTES") is the movie that every Japanese made videogame has, in some way, borrowed from. Stop reading if you want to be surprised, but I will present the partial list of comparisons between this film and classic videgames.



    Plot Summary: There are a group of warriors (Almost any videogame) who possess Eight Glowing Crystals (The original final fantasy, other crystal-heavy games) which must save a Princess (Mario, Zelda, Lolo, etc.) from an Evil Evil Demonically Resurrected Warlord With Weird Magic Monster Stuff (Castlevania, Final Fantasy, etc.). Along the way, an unlikely hero (almost every videogame ever) will enlist the help of a Ninja Assassin (any videogame from the 80's), the One Bad Guy Who Turns Good at the Last Minute(any Final Fantasy Game), the One Guy Who Can Somehow Use Gunpowder(any Fantasy Setting Game), the Young Boy(every game from Pokemon to Zelda). In the course of the movie, the heroes will fight a giant centipede (everything from Abraxis to Zelda), miracously cure all of their wounds with only One Night of Sleep (EVERY game). Actually defeating the final badguy requires the life sacrifice of many characters (Most games), one Ultimate Powerful Bow and Arrow that was forged by good for, well, I don't really know (Zelda), and the ending has the credits roll while a confusingly translated Japanese Pop song plays.

    Now, that may have sounded funky, but you REALLY have to see this. If you aren't convinced already, here's one more incentive: it has Sonny Chiba! If you've never heard of Chiba, you should look into his work. The goriness (and hillarity!) cannot be done with more attention to detail than in a Chiba movie.

    I started watching this movie because of Chiba. I kept watching because of the Big Freaking Centipede. In the end, I felt like I understood the source of every videogame and anime plot since 1975. You should see this movie even if you don't play videogames. At the least, you'll find it entertaining for the action sequences and the occasionally (And suprisingly well translated) bits of dialogue.
    reemakabu

    Hilarious rip off

    Legend of Eight Samurai...aka...Japanese Ripoff of American Blockbusters of late 70s and early 80s.

    The majority of the plot stitched together by the patchwork of the first three Star Wars films.

    So bitterly ironic since Lucas has credited the Japanese classic The Hidden Fortress by the late, great Akira Kurosawa as a heavy influence for his first Star Wars film.

    Open as an evil empire converges at their fortress to solidify their evilness with the heads of the entire royal family. All save for one! A Princess?! They need to find the princess to complete their task!

    And of course, that feisty princess is on her way to meet up with her uncle.

    But runs into a feisty, bratty pretty-boy who wants to be a fighter like the others. As well as her older protector who will unite a band of special warriors to defeat the Empire... Sound familiar?

    This flick is chock-ful-o-Lucas-clichés:

    Darth Vader...err... I mean, the evil queen proclaiming the pretty-boy is her son. NOOOO! I'll never join you!

    The group fighting a serpentine creature in the trash compacto...err... I mean, bowels of the Death Sta...err... I mean, Castle.

    Obi Wan...err... I mean, Sonny Chiba's character constantly being the sage leading the feisty princess... all the while knowing his time is finite.

    There's even rip-offs of the other great Lucas franchise, Raiders of the Lost Ark:

    The re-creation of the famous boulder opening. Snakes, why does it always have to be snakes. And the over-abundance of pistols... even though everything else in the film dates it to a time long before pistols were even invented. Speaking of which, you gotta dig the times when they failed to eliminate modern elements from the shots. Like telephone poles.

    Still, campy fun. Thought truly painful at times. Like the love scene with the cheesy early 80s rock ballad score. They keep cutting back and forth between some painful, badly framed love-making shot and one of the eight samurai statues. So you keep counting off each Samurai statue shot, urging the editor to cut to another statue fast in order to end the painful scene.

    And as far as that other review I read that claimed video games ripped THIS movie off?! That is giving this little seen flick far too much credit.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      In the public domain on VHS and DVD.
    • Gaffes
      When Shinbei goes "evil" and attacks the princess and her friends when he jumps off the back of the horse you can see the black wire that's attach to his back that's keeping him off the ground. Futhurmore if you check out the top corner of the screen you can see the winch that the other end of the wire is connected to swinging around.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Playlist: Instruments of Destruction (2012)
    • Bandes originales
      Satomi Hakken-den
      Written by Joey Carbone, Kathi Pinto, David Palmer

      Performed by John O'Banion

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ13

    • How long is Legend of the Eight Samurai?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 10 décembre 1983 (Japon)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Legend of the Eight Samurai
    • Sociétés de production
      • Kadokawa Haruki Jimusho
      • Toei Company
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 13 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Hiroyuki Sanada and Hiroko Yakushimaru in La Légende des huit samourais (1983)
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