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47 Ronin - Le sabre de la vengeance

Original title: Blade of the 47 Ronin
  • 2022
  • R
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Mark Dacascos, Aimee Garcia, Akira Koieyama, Tim Kwok, Joseph C. Nemec III, Dustin Nguyen, Dan Southworth, Ron Yuan, Joseph Hahn, Luna Fujimoto, Alec Puro, Charles Norris, L.T. Chang, Mike Moh, Yoshi Sudarso, Chris Pang, A.J. Mendez, John Swetnam, Anna Akana, Teresa Ting, Nino Furuhata, and Chikako Fukuyama in 47 Ronin - Le sabre de la vengeance (2022)
Ancient Japanese Ronin warriors set 300 years after 47 Ronin, in a modern-day world where Samurai clans exist in complete secrecy.
Play trailer0:31
1 Video
53 Photos
SamuraiActionDramaFantasy

Ancient Japanese Ronin warriors set 300 years after 47 Ronin, in a modern-day world where Samurai clans exist in complete secrecy.Ancient Japanese Ronin warriors set 300 years after 47 Ronin, in a modern-day world where Samurai clans exist in complete secrecy.Ancient Japanese Ronin warriors set 300 years after 47 Ronin, in a modern-day world where Samurai clans exist in complete secrecy.

  • Director
    • Ron Yuan
  • Writers
    • John Swetnam
    • Aimee Garcia
    • A.J. Mendez
  • Stars
    • Anna Akana
    • Mark Dacascos
    • Teresa Ting
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ron Yuan
    • Writers
      • John Swetnam
      • Aimee Garcia
      • A.J. Mendez
    • Stars
      • Anna Akana
      • Mark Dacascos
      • Teresa Ting
    • 53User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:31
    Official Trailer

    Photos53

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Anna Akana
    Anna Akana
    • Luna
    Mark Dacascos
    Mark Dacascos
    • Shinshiro
    Teresa Ting
    Teresa Ting
    • Onami
    Mike Moh
    Mike Moh
    • Reo
    Dustin Nguyen
    Dustin Nguyen
    • Nikko
    Chris Pang
    Chris Pang
    • Arai
    Dan Southworth
    Dan Southworth
    • Yurei
    Nino Furuhata
    Nino Furuhata
    • Dash
    Chikako Fukuyama
    Chikako Fukuyama
    • Aya
    Yoshi Sudarso
    Yoshi Sudarso
    • Sun
    Eniko Fulop
    • Hana
    • (as Enikő Fülöp)
    Luna Fujimoto
    Luna Fujimoto
    • Mai
    Akira Koieyama
    Akira Koieyama
    • Ikeda
    Dai Tabuchi
    • Hirano
    Gen Seto
    Gen Seto
    • Maeda
    Michael Daramola
    • Okoro
    Kallay Saunders András
    • Bully
    • (as András Kállay-Saunders)
    Sabrina Shuang Wu
    • Hostess
    • (as Shuang Wu)
    • Director
      • Ron Yuan
    • Writers
      • John Swetnam
      • Aimee Garcia
      • A.J. Mendez
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    4.72.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6IonicBreezeMachine

    Despite the headscratching nature of Blade of the 47 Ronin's existence, I can't deny it's entertaining as a B-level action film.

    Set in the not too distant future in Budapest, Hungary, the ancient clans of Japanese Samurai continue to operate in the shadows of society on a global scale as they did in Feudal Japan. Yurei (Dan Southworth), a descendant of the witch Mizuki who was an adversary of the 47 Ronin, sets his sights on acquiring the Witch Blade and Warrior Blade so he can form the Tengu Blade and wipe out the Samurai for good. As the Samurai lords meet to discuss the rising threat, it is learned only a descendant of the 47 Ronin may wiled the blade that will defeat ancient evil as dictated by the prophecy, but with the death of Lord Arai (Chris Peng) at the hands of Yurei the bloodline is seemingly ended, until Lord Shinshiro (Mark Dacascos) suggests the possibility there is another descendant in the American born Luna (Anna Akana) who has come to Budapest to claim the sword willed to her by Arai. Shinshiro's niece and onna-bugeisha, Onami (Teresa Ting), enlists the help of Ronin and friend Reo (Mike Moh) in tracking down Luna and after saving her from Yurei's henchman begin the task of introducing her to the world of Samurai and convince her to embrace her destiny.

    Blade of the 47 Ronin is the latest release from Universal's direct-to-video label Universal 1440 which specializes in mining assets owned by Universal for production of direct to video genre films (Tales from the Hood 2&3, Dragonheart 3-5, etc.) with their work varying from decent timekilling fare to absolute trash like Welcome to Sudden Death and Woody Woodpecker the movie. The fact that 2013's 47 Ronin got a sequel (even a direct-to video sequel) is certainly surprising as 47 Ronin was one of the biggest bombs released to theaters that year after going through a troubled production which resulted in the director having a nervous breakdown. However, it's important to note that 47 Ronin was the last film Keanu Reeves was in (as a supporting player despite being plastered on the poster) before Reeve's career spectacularly re-ignited thanks to the success of John Wick and making Reeves as popular as he was in the 90s with The Matrix. With that new success it stands to reason his fans probably helped 47 Ronin eek into "break even" territory with rental and home media sales which gave Universal enough confidence for this follow-up. Directed by martial artist/stunt choreographer Ron Yuan, the movie ditches any pretense of "traditional" trappings the original film attempted and instead goes into full on genre bending insanity as the film plays like a mixture of John Wick, the Scott Adkins' Ninja films, and even some sprinkling of Star Wars mixed in to create some colorful and entertaining action nonsense.

    Thanks to the 300 year time jump the film takes with its quasi-future establishment, Blade of the 47 Ronin largely ditches the dour and fatalistic tone of the first film that ended with all of the 47 Ronin (save for one) committing seppuku to regain their honor and goes instead for more of a comic book noir fantasy approach to the material but with some humor mixed in so it takes itself far less seriously than its predecessor did. The movie looks pretty good for a direct-to-video film with some nice looking costumes, colorful visuals, and on point choreography to the action scenes (not surprising given it's directed by a veteran stunt coordinator) but it does take a while to introduce the audience to this world as the first act of this movie has a LOT of exposition to get through that's pretty confusing and with how many names, macguffins, and rules are established it can feel overwhelming especially since our protagonist does show up to fill the position for a good 20 minutes or so.

    Once the movie does move past the burdensome exposition the movie finds its footing thanks to a solid ensemble of performers with the likes of Anna Akana, Teresa Ting, Mike Moh, Chris Pang, and Mark Dacascos making for fun and engaging presences in the film who have some great chemistry with one another in both performances and fight sequences. The movie certainly delivers on the fight sequences and they are a sight to behold with these fluidly choreographed sword fights with waves of Ninja deliver with high energy and intensity. The only real shame with the fight scenes is the usage of CGI blood and gore because it does take you out of the movie a little bit, especially when you consider all the great spatter and gore artists working in the industry today that could've really added that extra "something" to these sequences, but with the nature of the industry being about cutting time spent on the project, it's understandable how much pressure there is to deliver these things "on schedule". Another criticism I had was in Dan Southworth's Yurei as our antagonist and I honestly wasn't really that impressed by him in the role, while Southworth does have experience in action such as Power Rangers: Time Force playing the Quantum Ranger, his fight sequences here feel very stiff and restrained and he's also not that intimidating in his performance either.

    Despite the baffling nature of its existence at all, Blade of the 47 Ronin does its job in delivering colorful action nonsense in entertaining and efficient measure. Some of the opening exposition is a bit unwieldly, and the CGI blood and a not all that intimidating antagonist are a little disappointing, but for a movie that didn't really need to exist I'm honestly kind of glad it does.
    4dancurtis-info

    25 minutes and I'm bored already

    This should not be a "sequel" at all, it is not worthy in the slightest. 47 Ronin was a great film, this 'sequel' is a disservice. Starship Troopers 2 was a better sequel to the original than this -- and thats not saying much.

    Blade is totally uninspiring, boring, not sure why I am still watching. For now its on the "watch a bit more of it later" roster; movies that take me 3 or 4 days to finish. Something to have running while I fall asleep.

    Look at it this way, I'm 25 minutes in before I decide "you know what? I'm going to look up the rating in imdb before I continue at this point." Just wanting to make sure I'm on the same page as everyone else. With a 4.7 right now, it appears we are in agreement.
    6rich7354

    Live action anime

    It's campy, it's cliched, it's corny, and it's fun. The key to watching this movie is to not take anything seriously. It's filled with just about every martial arts trope there is, and that just adds to its charm.

    The basic plot (if you want to call it that), is that a magic using "witch" will wipe out all the samurai remaining in the 21st century unless he is killed by a descendant of the 47 ronin. Pretty thin, but it sets up the story for lots of cheesy dialog, and copious amounts of martial arts mayhem. If you sit back and just go with the flow the movie is enjoyable (but not great by any stretch of the imagination), and a fun way to pass a couple of hours.
    5edwards_trina-560-690634

    The acting was ewww

    The acting was horribly distracting. There might have been 1 or 2 good actors, but they couldn't save the plot AT ALL!!! The CGI blood was also bad. Master Shinshiro (I think his name was), is obviously one of the better actors. I'm very upset none of the females were good at acting. The choreography was good but could have been better executed. I didn't watch the other Ronin movie with Reeves, but I hope it was waaay better than this one. I'm trying to figure out how it was in Netflix top ten . I guess if your a lover of fighting in movies, you might enjoy it. The problem wasn't their slow movement, but that they were so slow, it looked like they were acting it out. Very few scenes were executed well. I would never recommend to anyone to watch. EVER!!!
    4smp1227

    It Wanted to Be Good......

    Thought this was going to be a good martial arts movie but it just didn't get there. Acting was okay but some real corny parts. When you think of martial arts movies, you think of respect and honor. The character Omani was pretty annoying. She didn't do as she was told and lacked discipline. There was a fight scene which was a practice and the fighting was poor. Clearly did not make them look like elite killers. The positive was having Dustin Nguyen and legend Mark Degascos in a movie together. Overall disappointing considering how decent the first one was. Probably should have rewatched the first one.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Both Dan Southworth and Yoshi Sudarso have been on Power Rangers with Dan portrayed Eric Myers/The Quantum Ranger on Power Rangers: La Force du Temps (2001) and Yoshi portrayed Koda/The Dino Charge Blue Ranger on Power Rangers Dino Charge (2015) respectively.
    • Goofs
      In the early sword fights at the restaurant and hotel, at least two of the anonymous ninjas reacted as if fatally slashed, despite the obvious lack of contact between their bodies and the wielded weapon.
    • Connections
      Follows 47 Ronin (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Euthanasia
      Performed by Anna Akana ft. Daemon

      Written by Anna Akana, Shayon Daniels, Nicole Funicelli, Michelle Macedo, Damon Murray

      Produced by JENGA Productions

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 25, 2022 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Blade of the 47 Ronin
    • Filming locations
      • Budapest, Hungary(on location)
    • Production companies
      • Universal 1440 Entertainment
      • Hero Squared
      • Scrappy Heart Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 47 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Mark Dacascos, Aimee Garcia, Akira Koieyama, Tim Kwok, Joseph C. Nemec III, Dustin Nguyen, Dan Southworth, Ron Yuan, Joseph Hahn, Luna Fujimoto, Alec Puro, Charles Norris, L.T. Chang, Mike Moh, Yoshi Sudarso, Chris Pang, A.J. Mendez, John Swetnam, Anna Akana, Teresa Ting, Nino Furuhata, and Chikako Fukuyama in 47 Ronin - Le sabre de la vengeance (2022)
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