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Shogun Assassin

  • 1980
  • R
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Tomisaburô Wakayama and Akihiro Tomikawa in Shogun Assassin (1980)
Watch Trailer [EN]
Play trailer2:35
1 Video
50 Photos
SamuraiActionAdventure

When the wife of the Shogun's Decapitator is murdered and he is ordered to commit suicide by the paranoid Shogun, he and his four-year-old son escape and become assassins for hire, embarking... Read allWhen the wife of the Shogun's Decapitator is murdered and he is ordered to commit suicide by the paranoid Shogun, he and his four-year-old son escape and become assassins for hire, embarking on a journey of blood and violent death.When the wife of the Shogun's Decapitator is murdered and he is ordered to commit suicide by the paranoid Shogun, he and his four-year-old son escape and become assassins for hire, embarking on a journey of blood and violent death.

  • Directors
    • Robert Houston
    • Kenji Misumi
  • Writers
    • Robert Houston
    • Kazuo Koike
    • Goseki Kojima
  • Stars
    • Tomisaburô Wakayama
    • Kayo Matsuo
    • Minoru Ôki
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Robert Houston
      • Kenji Misumi
    • Writers
      • Robert Houston
      • Kazuo Koike
      • Goseki Kojima
    • Stars
      • Tomisaburô Wakayama
      • Kayo Matsuo
      • Minoru Ôki
    • 103User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer [EN]
    Trailer 2:35
    Trailer [EN]

    Photos50

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Tomisaburô Wakayama
    Tomisaburô Wakayama
    • Lone Wolf
    Kayo Matsuo
    Kayo Matsuo
    • Supreme Ninja
    Minoru Ôki
    Minoru Ôki
    • Master of Death
    Shôgen Nitta
    • Master of Death
    Shin Kishida
    Shin Kishida
    • Master of Death
    Akihiro Tomikawa
    Akihiro Tomikawa
    • Daigoro
    • (as Masahiro Tomikawa)
    Lamont Johnson
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Marshall Efron
    Marshall Efron
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Sandra Bernhard
    Sandra Bernhard
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Vic Davis
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Lennie Weinrib
    Lennie Weinrib
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Lainie Cooke
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    • (as Lainie Cook)
    Sam Weisman
    Sam Weisman
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Mark Lindsay
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Robert Houston
    Robert Houston
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    David Weisman
    • Voice
    • (voice)
    Gibran Evans
    • Voice of Daigoro
    • (voice)
    Reiko Kasahara
    • Azami
    • Directors
      • Robert Houston
      • Kenji Misumi
    • Writers
      • Robert Houston
      • Kazuo Koike
      • Goseki Kojima
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews103

    7.311.7K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7robertbhart

    Good but nobody knows why

    I loved this movie but I couldn't even begin to explain why. On paper it is terrible. The movie is made with bits of footage from other movies. It's dubbed. The story line is basic and irrelevant to why I like the movie. Not a great start and yet, once I started watching it, I couldn't stop.

    I used to listen to Wu Tang CDs when I was a kid and the Genius GZA album Liquid swords borrows a bunch of lines from this movie. I always thought they were cool but I didn't know they came from this movie.

    The part that is hard to explain, is that my wife, who doesn't like martial arts flicks or gore, also liked this movie.

    This isn't the kind of movie that you see by accident on TV. You'll probably have to buy it on DVD to see it. I waited for it to be on Netflix but eventually gave up and ordered a copy for $10.

    I'm glad I did. This movie inspired other movie makers and despite its age, it is very cool from start to finish. I promise you won't get bored. People talk about how the footage from taken from other movies but it is the new sound track that is added that makes it special and deserving of being judged as a movie in its own right.

    It ends very suddenly and I wasn't 100% satisfied with where they left it but in general, its and entertaining experience that I wouldn't hesitate to recommend to movie fans. In a world where it is hard to find something different, sometimes you have to look to the past to find something new.
    8stormruston

    One of the classic Samaria sword movies and lots of blood.

    I think this film is almost as famous for its tour de force editing,taking a min-series and making it into a coherent masterpiece of 86 min as it is for its action sequences.

    The basic story is about a Lone Wolf. A very proud samurai who worked as the official decapitator for the shogun.The paranoid shogun sends out his ninja to kill lone wolf, but get his wife instead.At this point there is the classic "choose the(toy) ball and join your mother, choose the sword and join me" the son joins him and we hear the story from his eyes from this point.It is pure carnage from here on in, as the evil shogun sets his ninja out on Lone Wolf along with the brutal Masters of death.

    There is a lot of carnage and blood in this movie...I MEAN a lot. But the father son relationship is touching and strongly developed.

    This movie is a classic that is only just starting to show its age, my 8 might be a bit low of a vote really.

    If you like fast sword play and quick deaths watch this movie.
    Infofreak

    One of the most entertaining action movies of all time. Lone Wolf is a relentless one man killing machine!

    'Shogun Assassin' is actually re-edited footage from two of the early 1970s Japanese Lone Wolf and Cub movies, dubbed into English. The brains behind this idea were Robert Houston, one of the stars of Wes Craven's horror classic 'The Hills Have Eyes', and David Weisman, the writer/director of the Edie Sedgwick cult classic 'Ciao Manhattan'. On paper this really shouldn't have worked, but it does. It not only "works", it's one of the greatest action movies ever made, and a source of inspiration for both John Carpenter and Quentin Tarantino. I only hope that Tarantino's references to 'Shogun Assassin' in 'Kill Bill' introduce it to a whole new audience. Martial arts veteran Tomisaburo Wakayama plays Ogami Itto, aka "Lone Wolf", a samurai who refuses to serve the evil Shogun. After the murder of his wife he hits the road with his young son, who he pushes along in a souped up baby cart. Lone Wolf has one thing on his mind - vengeance. Along the way many assassins and Ninja try to stop him, but he is a relentless one man killing machine. His journey finally leads him to a confrontation with the three Masters Of Death, who are escorting the Shogun's brother. Lone Wolf is one of the coolest figures in action movie history, and the baby cart gimmick really works, especially as his infant son narrates the story. The frequent fight sequences are exciting and very brutal, and there isn't a dull moment in the whole movie. I can't recommend 'Shogun Assassin' highly enough. For me it stands alongside 'Mad Max', 'The Driver', 'For A Few Dollars More' and (the original version of) 'The Getaway' as one of the most entertaining action movies of all time.
    tonyu-2

    Surrealistic voyage into bloodletting

    This film is not for the faint of heart. It's also not extremely realistic, what with blood spurting in all directions at almost every turn. However, it's not intended to be realistic. It's a fantasy ride. It's intended to be entertaining to those who enjoy film making of this genre, and to serve as a vehicle for a hero. And Lone Wolf is a hero of grand stature with a talent for defending himself and his own. And throughout the film, as he's pursued by hired assassins he defends himself and his child with style and brutal grace. Throughout the film, the glorious examples of extreme bloodshed are observed by his young son who accompanies his father... the son narrates the film in a manner that's almost mesmerizing in its effectiveness as events unfold.

    This film has some of the most stylish and expressive swordsmanship you're ever likely to see. And throughout the bloody brutality and edged weaponry action there are some examples of the kindest and most humane exchanges you could ever imagine, particularly between father and son... some profound, some humorous, some just simply ordinary.

    This film is hard to find and it's almost never seen on pay cable anymore, although Cinemax used to run it on occasion some years ago. However, it's still around in some video rental stores and on some of the auction sites now and then, so if you spot this film somewhere grab it. It's an amazing way to spend an evening, watching Lone Wolf and child take on the world. I looked a long time before I found my copy in an older video rental store that was going out of business and was selling off tapes. I bought it for four dollars... I'd have paid MUCH more for this obscure little gem of a film that was actually edited together from episodes of a Japanese TV series that aired in the early 1970s.

    Watch this film with an open mind and with acceptance. It's a journey into furious bloodletting, subtle glory, and profound dignity.
    dr.gonzo-4

    Choose the sword and you will join me...

    I had heard a lot about this movie for quite some time but was never able to get my hands on it. If you have ever listened to The Gza/Genius album "Liquid Swords", it contains several soundbites from the film including the opening commentary by Daigoro(Cub). SHOGUN ASSASSIN is actually a re-released, dubbed version of the first two "Lone Wolf and Cub" films that came out from Japan in the Seventies. When I finally attained a copy of it and watched it, I was comepletely blown away. This has got to be hands down the best samurai/ninja film ever to grace the United States.

    Enter Ogami Itto, aka Lone Wolf, a man who served his shogun well as the royal executioner. Until one day when the Shogun killed his wife and framed him, which sent him on a dark path of vengeance. So begins the story of Lone Wolf and Cub, a father and his little boy who travel from place to place as assassins for hire and are always watching out for the Shogun and his ninja army. Anyone who gets in their way are quickly sliced and diced by Lone Wolf's sword and a wooden baby cart rigged with all sorts of crazy weapons.

    The action sequences are breathtaking, much like Kurasawa's but with ten times more blood. Blood that doesn't just pour, but spurts everywhere like a hose. Ultimately I couldn't help being moved by the story: a father and his son and their eternal bond in vengeance. This is just one of those cult films that you pray at night about, hoping that someday they re-release it in theaters or make a new film just like it. There are six films total in the "Lone Wolf and Cub" series that are avaible uncut on VHS and hopefully soon, on DVD.

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    Shogun

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This movie is watched by The Bride and her daughter at the end of Kill Bill vol ll
    • Quotes

      Voice of Daigoro: When I was little, my father was famous. He was the greatest Samurai in the empire, and he was the Shogun's decapitator. He cut off the heads of 131 lords for the Shogun. It was a bad time for the empire. The Shogun just stayed inside his castle and he never came out. People said his brain was infected by devils, and that he was rotting with evil. The Shogun said the people were not loyal. He said he had a lot of enemies, but he killed more people than that. It was a bad time. Everybody living in fear, but still we were happy. My father would come home to mother, and when he had seen her, he would forget about the killings. He wasn't scared of the Shogun, but the Shogun was scared of him. Maybe that was the problem. At night, mother would sing for us, while father would go into his temple and pray for peace. He'd pray for things to get better. Then, one night the Shogun sent his ninja spies to our house. They were supposed to kill my father, but they didn't. That was the night everything changed, forever. That was when my father left his samurai life and became a demon. He became an assassin who walks the road of vengeance. And he took me with him. I don't remember most of this myself. I only remember the Shogun's ninja hunting us wherever we go. And the bodies falling. And the blood.

    • Alternate versions
      Shogun Assassin is actually an amalgam of two 1972 films titled Baby Cart: le sabre de la vengeance (1972) ("Lone Wolf and Cub: Sword of Vengeance") and Baby Cart: L'enfant massacre (1972) (Lone Wolf and Cub: Baby Cart at the River Styx"). The producer decided to join the best bits of these two films (using around 10 minutes of the first film as a pre-credits flashback sequence to introduce the characters) and create "Shogun Assassin". The English-language dubbing included voice-over narration, ostensibly spoken by the child Daigoro.
    • Connections
      Edited from Baby Cart: le sabre de la vengeance (1972)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 7, 1980 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Japan
      • United States
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Henker des Shogun
    • Production companies
      • Baby Cart
      • Katsu Production
      • Toho
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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