Kenshin: La fin de la légende
Shishio a décidé de renverser le gouvernement Meiji et ramener le Japon au chaos, emportant Kaoru avec lui. Afin de l'arrêter à temps, Kenshin s'entraîne avec son ancien maître pour apprendr... Tout lireShishio a décidé de renverser le gouvernement Meiji et ramener le Japon au chaos, emportant Kaoru avec lui. Afin de l'arrêter à temps, Kenshin s'entraîne avec son ancien maître pour apprendre la technique finale.Shishio a décidé de renverser le gouvernement Meiji et ramener le Japon au chaos, emportant Kaoru avec lui. Afin de l'arrêter à temps, Kenshin s'entraîne avec son ancien maître pour apprendre la technique finale.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
- Kenshin Himura
- (as Satô Takeru)
Avis à la une
"Rurôni Kenshin: Densetsu no saigo-hen", a.k.a. "Rurouni Kenshin: The Legend Ends" is one of the best trilogies of cinema industry ever. The duel between Kenshin and Shishio is too long but in the end, the good wins the evil. The ending is very sweet and fortunately Kaoru Kamiya has survived. Fortunately the producers have not made another sequel despite the number of fans. It is better off missing Kenshin than seeing a commercial weak sequence only for the box office. My vote is nine.
Title (Brazil): "Samurai X 3: O Fim de Uma Lenda" ("Samurai X 3: The End of a Legend")
After that cliffhanger from the previous movie, we do get an introduction to that character we saw at the end. And it's a pivotal character to say the least. Since I'm not aware of the Manga or Anime made before this, I can't compare anything. I do know that the dynamic of the movie works nicely. Also the action scenes are really well choreographed (like the previous one). It might be a bit too long with its running time, but it's still very entertaining
A story so big it steals from the characterization and the development of the themes that made the Kenshin tale so interesting in the first place.
I have already questioned why anyone in their right mind would want to spend the better part of 6 hours building up to the "final fight" behind Kenshin and the super-baddie (who is so overdrawn he could just as easily have appeared in a Bond film) ....?
And I see in the IMDb, at least so far, one or two fans have been brave enough to make the very same points I am making.
To be honest, I enjoyed the children's TV series more than this opus. Whether that makes me a poor critic or a child at heart is another matter entirely.
I repeat my view that the point of film is to entertain. If a film fails to entertain, it fails, period.
In this film, the only one who seems to be having fun is Masaharu Fukuyama, playing Kenshin's original Master, conveniently appearing to assist a very tricky plot arc.
The first time he finds Kenshin on the beach, almost dead, he remarks how astonished he was to see his "stupid student" again after almost 15 years.
But he says it with a smile, and we know he is happy to see Kenshin.
At that single juncture, I thought, for one brief shining moment, that this saga was finally going to be fun.
And it was. For the 15 minutes or so that Masaharu Fukuyama appears on camera, we get a peek at what this film might have been.
But just a peek.
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.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOtomo 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.
- Citations
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
- ConnexionsFollowed by Kenshin: Le commencement (2021)
- Bandes originalesHeartache
Written by Takahiro Moriuchi (as Taka) and Arnold Lanni (as A. Lanni)
Performed by One Ok Rock
Courtesy of A-Sketch
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Rurouni Kenshin: The Legend Ends?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Rurouni Kenshin: The Legend Ends
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 41 900 000 $US
- Durée2 heures 14 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1