IMDb RATING
7.1/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
When his father's body is stolen from its grave, Afro takes up his sword again to tear through an army of deadly foes led by a sadistic leader.When his father's body is stolen from its grave, Afro takes up his sword again to tear through an army of deadly foes led by a sadistic leader.When his father's body is stolen from its grave, Afro takes up his sword again to tear through an army of deadly foes led by a sadistic leader.
- Won 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Samuel L. Jackson
- Afro Samurai
- (voice)
- …
Mark Hamill
- Bin
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Grey DeLisle
- Tomoe
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Dave Wittenberg
- Adolescent
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Liam O'Brien
- Shichogoro
- (English version)
- (voice)
Zachary Gordon
- Kotaro
- (English version)
- (voice)
Yuri Lowenthal
- Jinno
- (English version)
- (voice)
Jeff Bennett
- Brother 3
- (voice)
Steve Blum
- Assassins
- (voice)
- …
S. Scott Bullock
- Dharman
- (voice)
- …
Greg Eagles
- Rokutaro
- (voice)
Phil LaMarr
- Teen Afro Samurai
- (voice)
Ariel Winter
- Young Sio
- (voice)
Featured reviews
I really liked the Afro Samurai anime series. It was lots of fun. But I didn't realize there had been a movie sequel until 15 years later. Excitedly, I sat down to watch it, and, uh ... what?
It starts with a fight, and stuff happens, and the unstoppable protagonist somehow gets the prize he worked the whole series to get snatched away by some rando, and then he's, I guess, going to kinda do what he did in the series all over again, except this time to protect his father's ghost?
What?
Anyway, it was just an incomprehensible mess, and after about a half hour I couldn't take it anymore. I'm hugely disappointed.
It starts with a fight, and stuff happens, and the unstoppable protagonist somehow gets the prize he worked the whole series to get snatched away by some rando, and then he's, I guess, going to kinda do what he did in the series all over again, except this time to protect his father's ghost?
What?
Anyway, it was just an incomprehensible mess, and after about a half hour I couldn't take it anymore. I'm hugely disappointed.
i thought that this title was more entertaining than the series because it went all out and just dumped awesome moment after awesome moment on the viewer in a constant barrage of flying limbs and blood. if you want more of the same from the first one, this movie will satisfy.
As for the plot, like the first one it's somewhat lacking, but that can easily be forgiven due to the wicked-stylish animation, great voice-work, and action that impressed me more than anything sense Equilibrium. i give it a solid 8, if the plot was more cohesive it could easily receive a 9 or 10. I bought the special edition DVD for 20$, if you liked the first show it's definitely worth the money to buy the second. i really want to find the soundtrack to this because the RZA did a really good job with the music.
As for the plot, like the first one it's somewhat lacking, but that can easily be forgiven due to the wicked-stylish animation, great voice-work, and action that impressed me more than anything sense Equilibrium. i give it a solid 8, if the plot was more cohesive it could easily receive a 9 or 10. I bought the special edition DVD for 20$, if you liked the first show it's definitely worth the money to buy the second. i really want to find the soundtrack to this because the RZA did a really good job with the music.
First off this movie is WAY better than the first. If you've never watched Anime, this will get you hooked! The soundtrack is PERFECT! Simply on point with every up and down, RZA did a great job. Koike had nothing to do with this series. At all! Also, what do you (Onderhond) mean Afro's sidekick is a "pain in the ear"? Ninja Ninja is great! He's Afro's inner voice and being that Afro is the strong silent type and doesn't say much through out the series makes Ninja Ninja an awesome balancing act. The ending is not vague! What movie were you watching? It's the cycling of the headbands,players,and roles. Nothing vague there. This movie does appeal to a wide audience. Why do you think it got picked up for a second season when it was just scheduled for one. Millions of viewers is why. All I gotta say to who ever has not seen either s1 or s2, go out and pick up both and see for your selves!
10ozerob
Not for the faint of heart, this latest entry in the Afro Samurai series continues a tremendous effort in line drawing style animation, and may by some be seen as frequently a bit too abrupt in frame-to-frame action, but it manages to be so well aligned within the graphic novel genre (so that if you blink during sequences what you retain may be a panel by panel view of what the story needs, and what a comic reader wants). I give it the 10 of 10 full rating as a classic piece that works very well without the usual massive CGI effects most folks seem to expect these days in anything considered 'animated'. Yes, it is more than a bit bloody in nature, but contains a message 'of honor' and more fundamental - the message to carry on if you believe in something. Very well done, thank you Samuel Jackson for the terse comments from a no nonsense character. I highly recommend this film, but it is not for young kids...
Brooding, laconic badass Afro Samurai and his wisecracking alter ego Ninja Ninja (both voiced by Samuel Jackson) once again return to walk the path of demons as a sultry villainess (voiced by Lucy Liu) steals Afro's Number One headband and plots her revenge that involves resurrecting Afro's dead father. The refreshing and intriguing combination of blaxploitation, samurai culture, anime and hip hop (soundtrack by usual suspect RZA) that made the first one such an infectiously cool hack-and-slash yarn is pretty much of the same standards but this time it's let down by a silly story and disappointing ending that was clearly not very well thought out. How easy Afro loses his headband at the beginning of the film left me scratching my head in disbelief but Teddy Bear's change of heart at the end was downright lame. Whereas the first worked so well exactly because of the very simple revenge story - Afro, wearing the Number Two headband, looking for the man who killed his father, all the while having to defend his headband from an assortment of colourful villains, not very different to a video game logic and very enjoyable for that matter - Afro Samurai: Resurrection throws everything and the kitchen sink in the plot and hopes it all makes sense somehow. I also had the impression the gore and blood geysers were less this go around. Fans of the first will probably have a good time as the funky and bloody style are good enough for 90 minutes of brainless fun but take it any more serious and you might be in for a let down.
Did you know
- Trivia' The RZA Presents: Afro Samurai Resurrection The Soundtrack is the soundtrack to 2009 anime television film Afro Samurai: Resurrection. It was released on January 27, 2009, via Wu Music Group/Koch Records, serving as a sequel to RZA's 2007 Afro Samurai The Soundtrack. Recording sessions mostly took place at 36 West in North Hollywood. Produced entirely by RZA, the album features contributions from Kool G Rap, Rah Digga, Shavo Odadjian, Sly Stone, and Wu-Tang Clan members and affiliates'
- GoofsA falcon makes the sound of an owl.
- Crazy creditsThere is a brief scene after the credits.
- ConnectionsFollows Afro Samurai (2007)
- SoundtracksAre You Still Gonna Roll
Produced by Michael Baiardi
Written by Michael Baiardi
Published by Soundfile Publishing (ASCAP)
Courtesy of Soundfile Records
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- Afro Samurai: Thiên Hạ Đệ Nhất Kiếm
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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