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Kamui, le ninja solitaire

Original title: Kamui gaiden
  • 2009
  • Unrated
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Ken'ichi Matsuyama in Kamui, le ninja solitaire (2009)
Trailer 2 for Kamui
Play trailer1:09
2 Videos
11 Photos
ActionAdventureDrama

The adventurous story of a fugitive ninja.The adventurous story of a fugitive ninja.The adventurous story of a fugitive ninja.

  • Director
    • Yôichi Sai
  • Writers
    • Sampei Shirato
    • Kankurô Kudô
    • Yôichi Sai
  • Stars
    • Ken'ichi Matsuyama
    • Koyuki
    • Kaoru Kobayashi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Yôichi Sai
    • Writers
      • Sampei Shirato
      • Kankurô Kudô
      • Yôichi Sai
    • Stars
      • Ken'ichi Matsuyama
      • Koyuki
      • Kaoru Kobayashi
    • 9User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Kamui
    Trailer 1:09
    Kamui
    Kamui
    Trailer 1:07
    Kamui
    Kamui
    Trailer 1:07
    Kamui

    Photos10

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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Ken'ichi Matsuyama
    Ken'ichi Matsuyama
    • Kamui
    Koyuki
    Koyuki
    • Sugaru
    Kaoru Kobayashi
    Kaoru Kobayashi
    • Hanbei
    Kôichi Satô
    Kôichi Satô
    • Lord Gumbei
    Hideaki Itô
    Hideaki Itô
    • Fudo
    Sei Ashina
    Sei Ashina
    • Mikumo
    Terri Doty
    Terri Doty
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    Ege Güner
    • Ege
    Fûka Haruna
    • Tsugumi
    Yûta Kanai
    Yûta Kanai
    • Yoshito
    Mio Miyatake
    Naoyuki Morita
    Mustili
    • Musti
    Shigeru Nakano
    Suzuka Ohgo
    Suzuka Ohgo
    • Sayaka
    Panta
    • Eshi
    Daisuke Ryû
    Daisuke Ryû
    • Kashiwabara
    Fatih Sahin
    • Fatih Sahin
    • Director
      • Yôichi Sai
    • Writers
      • Sampei Shirato
      • Kankurô Kudô
      • Yôichi Sai
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    5.61.1K
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    Featured reviews

    dontspamme-11

    Silly beyond the point of redemption

    After reading the other (positive) reviews, I am still unclear what redeeming qualities this film (purportedly) has. I am particularly boggled by the fact that some of the previous reviewers argued that the film was worth a watch or even deserved to be considered a "classic" (really?) without supplying any explanations or actual reasons, nor provide a comparison between this film and other films in the same genre (although, in what genre would this film really belong? 'Trashbin flicks'?). In fact, I wonder if we actually sat through the same film.

    To provide a quick synopsis, the film has a premise (a rogue ninja hunted by other ninjas, trying to find a 'safe harbour'), but no plot. The story meanders through a series of cliché scenes with predictable outcomes, occasionally interrupted by people flying on wires performing 'special moves' that needed a narrator's help to explain (I guess if you like being treated as an idiot, this film might be for you...), ridiculous twists with nonsensical motivations, and animal cruelty that even I--someone not anything close to being a card-carrying member of PETA--found rather distasteful.

    At some point, the only way to rationalize why we continue to subject ourselves to this filmatic torture was to find some small solace in nit-picking the technical errors and nonsensical development of the story. For example, I don't think the writer actually understood -how- crucifixion works as a form of capital punishment (puncturing the prisoner's body actually works to undermine its effects), and I particularly didn't think it was good parenting to have your 14 old year daughter take off her cloth and use her body to warm a stranger of sketchy background.

    I've never read the manga, and after watching this film, I have no desire to. So if translating the manga into film was intended to extend and expand the franchise, it's failed to do that with me. I am not sure how anyone but the most fervent fans of the manga series might find this film appealing. If you have an attention span of longer than 3 minutes, I recommend you avoid this mess altogether.
    5oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx

    Appealing CGI-festooned lone ninja tale

    This is a film about a ninja called Kamui who decides he doesn't want to be a ninja anymore, problem is, you're not allowed to leave. So death in all it's forms is going to come for Kamui throughout this film. This spawns the familiar trope of the hero who stays alive but gets everyone around him, including his loved ones, killed (like the hardboiled American cop who goes through a fistful of partners as if they were dimes for the telephone). Kamui reminds me of a deciduous tree, the trunk of which remains strong and constant, but whose leaves eventually wilt and abscice. The bounteous autumnal melange of colours preceding the winter barrenness.

    It's chambara here all the way, and as it's very ambitious, it's often CGId - wire work can only take you so far in the arena of awesome stunts. The fighters here have really pretty much supernatural skills that make Crouching Tiger look positively undercooked. There's some fun stuff that Kamui fights with, including a knuckleduster with triangular ridges, that can be used for parrying sword blows (though you'd better be pretty accurate with those parries...)

    As Kamui (Ken'ichi Matsuyama) is a really rather sullen character, who has appeal more as a heartthrob to potential androphile members of the audience, much of the ready humour in the film is delegated to supporting actors including Kaoru Kobayashi (as Hanbei the fisherman), and Hideaki Ito (as Lord Fudoh, the incredibly appealing and roguish pirate captain).

    There's a side story in the movie about a gaily apparelled and brutally petulant daimyo lord. The stories do crossover, but I think the daimyo strand is more there for contrast, the kind of easy god-like existence of the highly undeserving daimyo, with the bleak struggle to survive of Kamui. After all the main threat for Kamui is the ninja fraternity, he's not even a speck on the daimyo's radar.

    There's this thing in Japanese movies where they like to confront characters with a personal hell (one of the few Japanese words I regularly recognise in Japanese movies is jigoku - hell). There's a quite effective example of that in this movie.

    All in all I would tend to say this movie overdoes the CGI, you can see stuff like waves that leave no filmy coating on surfaces after they recede, and you think hang on why are they using CGI for ... water. It is however highly enjoyable.

    One last note is that someone behind the movie should learn a little bit more about shark behaviour maybe, the scenes with them in are funny, but they behave so stupidly and atypically here that it is a little bewildering, even within the encapsulated cinematic world of reduced realism.
    10acuspider

    Great entertainment.

    Great movie & plenty of action throughout. Tale of courage and imperial domination. I found little to complain about viewing this movie.
    5ebiros2

    Modern rendition of Sanpei Shirato's famous ninja comic

    Based on a comic by Sanpei Shirato, Kamui is about a tale of ninja fugitive that survives because of his exceptional ninpo skills. The movie was made with Shirato and Kamui fans in mind and although synopsis of Kamui saga is given at the beginning of the movie, the movie in my opinion is not a true stand alone piece, and the audience would benefit from the knowledge of the original story.

    Unlike other ninja, Kamui was born into an untouchable class, and then became ninja to gain the ability to survive. A long running series that has history of almost 50 years, Kamui is an unusual tale of a lone ninja who is an escapee from his ninja clan (which was act of treason punishable by death). For this reason he is perpetually being targeted by the members of his ninja clan.

    Kamui's skill as ninja comes from his ability to invent his original method of combat tactics. Two famous tactics of his - "Izuna Otoshi" and "Heni Battou Kasumi Giri" is featured in this movie.

    Sanpei Shirato has a very dark mood to his art and story, and this movie succeeds in capturing Shirato's style. CG of this movie has dynamics to it like never seen elsewhere. Especially the scenes with the sharks were superb. Details are vivid, and interactions between characters that was vague in the original comic is shown with new vigor. The character of Kamui also has more "human" aspect compared to the comic. Overall the movie succeeds in showing Kamui saga in a new light.

    Watch the movie as cultural artifact from Japan. It's an uniquely original story where an outcast ninja while being tossed in the hands of fate, tries to find a place of peace in his life.
    7DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Kamui

    A tight schedule meant missing out on this at TIFFCOM last year, but I suppose the strength of popular Japanese actor Ken'ichi Matsuyama's name alone meant that it had a good chance of making it back to Singapore, and the full house this afternoon is just testament of that. Being the chameleon, Matsuyama makes quite an impression as the titular Fugitive Ninja who yearns for the freedom of his dream, but gets continuous hunted down by enemies who want a piece of him. So goes the martial arts world, where the only rule is to kill or be killed.

    I haven't read the manga by Sampei Shirato on which Kamui is based on, but that shouldn't deter anyone game for a ninja flick. However, this is not like any conventional ninja film that I've grown accustomed to, and one of the prime reasons is that the exponents skilled in the art of ninjitsu don't wear black (just like how cliché it is when gangsters have to be decked out in black tie), but are decked in a variety of fancy garb that is functional to hide a multitude of weapons. For the uninitiated like me, you'll get the lowdown on our hero's origins through a series of battles which also serve to showcase his signature skills like Mist Kill, so that will bring you up to speed on things, and whet your appetite for more conflicts to come so that Kamui gets a reason to unsheathe his sword.

    The story however turns out to be quite episodic in nature, since Kamui has the legs for an extended franchise of films, and this one being but a snapshot of his life on the run. It's extremely miserable because there is nobody Kamui can trust, and whenever he gets comfortable with someone, they fall to their demise, like a curse that he and his loved one cannot escape from. Such is the nature of this story, making him quite the cynic with a profound taste of mistrust toward anyone, being on the run in both literal and figurative terms. But an encounter with a fisherman Hanbei (Kaoru Kobayashi) who had just chopped off the leg of a horse belonging to a nobleman (see if you can spot Anna Tsuchiya from Sakuran in a role without dialogue!) brings Kamui to Henta's fishermen village, and here he meets an enemy from the past (played by Koyuki of The Last Samurai fame, and last seen in Blood the Last Vampire) and a potential to change his life for the better through a loved one in Sayaka (Suzuka Ohgo), Henta's daughter.

    With a runtime of two hours, the story admittedly does get a little bloated as we explore the themes of family and that sense of belonging, before it picks up through the introduction of a group of pirates led by Fudo (Hideaki Ito). For some reason there's this very violent attitude and nature toward animals in the film, and although everything is vividly CG-ed with incredible detail, shark lovers may be up in arms over how they get violently depicted (think Jaws with more murderous intent), and then callously dispatched through dismemberment and bludgeoning to the skull. That aside, humans too get killed in quite graphic methods since everyone kills without remorse as a means to survive.

    Thankfully the fight action choreography is top notch. For those tired of quick cuts and edits, or angles that get just too close for comfort and clarity, the techniques here, although spruced up with some wirework and CG, satisfies in abundance. Sensible angles and camera-work allow you to witness battles as if you get ring side seats, and the action gets progressively better, culminating in the final showdown between Kamui and his chief enemy here (no, I won't reveal who), which is a delight to watch, and frankly, I'd watch this show again just to partake in another round of the beautifully designed final fight.

    Ekin Cheng has a bit role here, although I'm not quite sure what value he adds to the story since he didn't actually get to see much action, other than to assure audiences that he'll probably get more screen time should a follow up film be made. A passable story that I think its manga followers will get a kick out of, with outstanding CG work to bring to life a period world with fantastic pugilists.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The actress Koyuki who plays the Kunoichi (female ninja) Sugaru, and is Kamui's mother-in-law in the story, is actually the wife and mother of her three children of the actor Ken'ichi Matsuyama who plays Kamui.
    • Connections
      Follows Ninpû Kamui gaiden (1969)
    • Soundtracks
      Alive
      Performed by Kumi Koda

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 19, 2009 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Kamui Gaiden
    • Filming locations
      • Nago, Okinawa, Japan
    • Production companies
      • Eisei Gekijo
      • Horipro
      • Kinoshita Komuten
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $11,892,634
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital EX
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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