What Kurosawa's 7 Samurai Taught Me About Movies

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2020
  • Legendary film director Akira Kurosawa has been my latest obsession. I've recently seen his films; Ran (1985), Ikiru (1952), and most recently Seven Samurai (1954). All three of these films have been logged into my list of 100 greatest films and all three are worthy of their own video analysis. Today, I'm diving into Kurosawa's Samurai epic. A near perfect 200 minute experience that showcases talented performances, passionate writing, and gorgeous visuals. I feel like selecting the clips for this video was the easiest task I've had as a film reviewer. Every second of this film looks beautiful and it was easy to visualize my review thanks to cinematographer Asakazu Nakai. The more time I spend watching and re-watching this film the more I recognize it's influence in films today. I'd recommend watching the film before watching this review!
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Komentáře • 88

  • @jitendradoc
    @jitendradoc Před 3 lety +44

    Thank you for this review. The younger generation must be introduced to these gems of films. Though our collective senses are numbed and blunted by endless use of CGI, gore, cacophony and meaningless gimmicks, we can still go back in time and watch moviemaking at tis best.
    Seven Samurai teaches us to delve into human emotions and nobility in face of adversity. It teaches us the use of shadows and lines. It is the example of the mesmerizing power of stories to capture our emotions.
    Thank you again

  • @DadCanInJapan
    @DadCanInJapan Před 2 lety +15

    I don't know how many times I have seen this movie. When I first moved to Japan in 1989, I had a chance to see a remastered version in the theatre with my girlfriend (Japanese). During the movie, I leaned over and whispered that I love this particular scene. She asked me if I understood the Japanese since there were no subtitles. I said that I didn't; I just remembered what they were saying since I had seen it so many times.

  • @waitingisfun
    @waitingisfun Před 3 lety +11

    The greatest movie of all time. I doubt we will make one as good as this.

  • @marklloyd4087
    @marklloyd4087 Před rokem +5

    Brilliant film, watched it when I was 12,54 now still a great film.

  • @tetrisitaliaclipsmlnz2042
    @tetrisitaliaclipsmlnz2042 Před 3 lety +43

    This video is very underrated, great job, really! i'm studying to become a comic book writer and this movie changed me A LOT!

    • @bobthabuilda1525
      @bobthabuilda1525 Před 3 lety +3

      Good luck with your career! I hope it goes well for you. I always wanted to be a comic book writer myself

    • @speedycube3239
      @speedycube3239 Před 2 lety +3

      same

  • @tahnadana5435
    @tahnadana5435 Před 2 lety +4

    i cry every time i watch the scene where the samurai just arrived at the village and no one would come out to greet them, and than kikuchiyo did the false alarm thing.. all the villager panicked and the samurai just ran out to saved them... without knowing anything... that just get me.. they are trained elite warriors given a high risk test which essentially just for thank you and a pat on the back

  • @iakona23
    @iakona23 Před 3 lety +2

    Great analysis. Thank you!!

  • @katelynnweaver593
    @katelynnweaver593 Před 4 lety +15

    Firstly, I have to say I am in love with the color contrast in Ran. Also, I completely feel you when it comes to modern day movies cutting the run time by not having enough character development. I do wonder... What are some of the (modern) movies that you know that don't do this? Would you say that the "spaghetti western" movies also have focus on selflessness within the characters like in this film?
    P.s. I love the layout of the video!! I can't wait to see what you put out next! :)

    • @thefilminformer
      @thefilminformer  Před 4 lety +3

      All of Paul Thomas Anderson's movies are long, close to three hours if not more. He is great at building his characters and exploring their minds. Though, his films usually focus on anarchists, who are not all likeable. Anderson makes great character studies!
      Tbh I haven't seen enough of the spaghetti westerns yet to really say. While the war Lord's and bandits would qualify as selfish I would say that Seven Samurai is more about the kind hearted ronin building a relationship with the town of farmers, which is not a common situation in this time period.

  • @pickleman40
    @pickleman40 Před 16 dny

    7:40 something i only realized the last time I viewed the movie is that the bandits are attacking because they are equally desperate for food as well. When Kikichiyo disguises himself one of the bandits reveal this, and is also evidenced by the scene of the deserting bandits.

  • @jitendradoc
    @jitendradoc Před 3 lety +10

    Happy to see this great review. This movie is actually a textbook on movie making.
    This movie tells us that the story is foremost and its movement propels the capable actors to do what they should.
    You have done a review completely different.
    Thank you
    With love from India

    • @thefilminformer
      @thefilminformer  Před 3 lety +2

      Comments like these make my day so thank you so much for being awesome and I'm glad you enjoyed it

    • @jitendradoc
      @jitendradoc Před 3 lety +1

      @@thefilminformer Actually creators like you make CZcams a better place. Sometimes the reviews initiate us to unknown and lesser known movies which are in fact great pieces of art.
      There are many reviewers for recent movies. But, people like you create interest among us about classic movies.
      In these days of boisterous, meaningless and soulless blockbusters, the movies of Kurosawa, DeSicca, Bergman, Satyajit Ray and other masters feel like breath of life and fresh insight.
      I sincerely hope that creators like you grow and become beacons of meaningful discussion in future.
      With love from India
      Jiten

  • @bobschenkel7921
    @bobschenkel7921 Před 2 lety +1

    So happy I have all the Kurosawa movies you talked about, plus a few more, on good ol' Blu-Ray. To have and to hold. Watching them again is like visiting old friends. You just want to check in on them, and make sure they're doing okay.

  • @37view37
    @37view37 Před 3 lety +3

    Nicely done video. Watched this wonderful movie twice this weekend and then along with a quartet of film scholars’ commentary. I feel so uplifted by the time I’ve spent exploring this long-time favorite of mine. I’m so fortunate to have seen Ran first-run in a theater. I saw Seven Samurai the first time in a 50 year old theater running art-house titles in Newport Beach back in the late ‘70’s. I love your wisdom for a relatively young person. I’ll be checking out your other videos.

    • @thefilminformer
      @thefilminformer  Před 3 lety

      Exploring Kurosawa's filmography was and still is an enrichment of my life and I aim to share his work, along with others like Bergman, Luis Bunuel, Tarkovsky - with younger film enthusiasts as well as develop a conversation with those who have more experience than I. Thanks for your time and enjoy the other vids!

    • @37view37
      @37view37 Před 3 lety

      All your listed master directors had showings rotated at the old Balboa Cinema in Newport Beach, CA back in the ‘70-80’s. I remember being amazed by Solaris there. Wish I’d taken the opportunity to view Mirror there as well. It’s so much richer seeing these on a big screen. Bunuel had that amazing Un Chien Andalou collaboration with Dali that is a must viewing once, like Eraserhead. Bunuel was also a very good writer for more mainstream films. Bergman’s Virgin Spring was a watershed viewing for me very early in my life (talk about Kurosawa’s influence - wow). When Von Sydow gets ritually prepped for his vengeance still echos in my mind - it’s so, well, Biblically informed. Keep up your fantastic work holding out these works of art for all generations even as the movie-going experience apparently wanes. They still touch hearts and minds. It’s the outworking of our being created in God’s image, and that is a good thing.

  • @hrsantiago
    @hrsantiago Před 2 lety

    great work!

  • @ericrecano8557
    @ericrecano8557 Před 2 lety +1

    Agree on all points-every few years when I put this film on-I HAVE to watch it to its completion. It’s THAT good. Thank you for putting in words what I’ve always felt about this masterpiece.

  • @GriffinSteve15
    @GriffinSteve15 Před 3 lety +4

    Great content! thank you

  • @bobo8741
    @bobo8741 Před 3 lety +10

    One of the greatest films never made

  • @MrrAlien
    @MrrAlien Před 3 lety +1

    This was awesome!!!

  • @alexandervue9464
    @alexandervue9464 Před 2 lety

    Amazing video

  • @b.t.walker2295
    @b.t.walker2295 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I enjoyed your analysis of my favorite movie, but the samurai didn't have a year to train, only the time it took for the mountain barley to ripen. Since the town's low-land barley is already ripe, it's only a matter of one or two weeks, at most a month, before the bandits attack.
    Kambei's hair only grows a little in the movie. He would have regrown his topknot in the year's time you suggest.

  • @w00master
    @w00master Před 3 lety +6

    Kurosawa = the greatest director.

  • @MyOwnNameWasTaken
    @MyOwnNameWasTaken Před 3 lety +10

    At 2:56, the Fellowship of the Ring is an odd example, given that it is an adaptation of a book that was written before The Seven Samurai was filmed. Are there specific elements in the composition or execution of the film adaptation which can be traced directly to The Seven Samurai?

    • @leedobson
      @leedobson Před 2 lety +4

      I agree that was a misjudged choice

    • @calebclendenin7073
      @calebclendenin7073 Před rokem +1

      Yes. Even if Lotr were younger than Seven Samurai, the assembly of the Fellowship is not much like the assembly of the Seven

  • @TheSunMoon
    @TheSunMoon Před 3 lety +4

    Seven Samurai + The 13th Warrior + 13 Assassins. Recruiting-a-team trope done pretty well. Yeah, I like The 13th Warrior, don't judge me pls 🥺

  • @scottlibman7870
    @scottlibman7870 Před rokem +1

    I have watched this movie so many times. And I will watch it many times more. I never get tired of watching it.⛩️🇯🇵

  • @venkatbalu6844
    @venkatbalu6844 Před 3 lety

    Good work, keep doing videos

  • @Finarphin
    @Finarphin Před rokem

    10:45 -- Toshiro Mifune never forgot that speech.

  • @powerofberzerker9487
    @powerofberzerker9487 Před 2 lety +1

    LOTR FOTR and 7 Samurai are GOATS.

  • @milannikolic7401
    @milannikolic7401 Před 2 lety +2

    Fantazija odlican film. Veliki pozdrav iz Srbije 🇷🇸❤️

  • @Ronariverah
    @Ronariverah Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks

  • @mitchycool92
    @mitchycool92 Před 9 dny

    “Kurosawa did in under 4 hours what Marvel took a decade to do.”
    Well put!

  • @nickmitsialis
    @nickmitsialis Před 2 lety +2

    I saw 'Ran' a bazillion years ago in the theater; when Gen. Kurogane kills Lady Kaeda at 11:56 it was quite shocking, in spite of everything that has happened up to that point, especially when Kurogane matter of factly tells his Liege Lord, they're doomed and he better prepare to die and that he (Kurogane) will be joining him shortly.

    • @pickleman40
      @pickleman40 Před rokem

      You are very lucky, that moment, and entire sequence must have been intense in theaters, I know it always leaves me speechless

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Před rokem

      @@pickleman40 there was the shock at first, but my audience laughed a bit, given Lady Kaeda got what was coming to her.

  • @yahirosama863
    @yahirosama863 Před 3 lety

    Whats the name of that piano melody you used ?

  • @myearsloveit
    @myearsloveit Před rokem

    thanx👍

  • @entertainingandfun2719
    @entertainingandfun2719 Před 2 měsíci

    I have always desired to know what colors they are all wearing. Anyone know if any props or records survived?

  • @tkgawa
    @tkgawa Před 2 lety +1

    You say that much of what you note in this video is not original to you, and that may very well be so, but you are the only CZcamsr I have ever heard acknowledge the ambiguity between the "samurai" and the "bandits." They are all bushi, just under different circumstances, lending currency to Kurosawa's assertion that morality is a choice. Unfortunately, the samurai who works for rice is much more of an invention than the one who takes it by force. Even then, the mere belief that the virtuous bushi could exist, is what we need to carry on.

  • @Rocky-xx2zg
    @Rocky-xx2zg Před měsícem

    The actress Mother of the kidnaped child is not listed in the Cast, if anyone knows her name , let me know. Thank you in advance.

  • @summerwell8262
    @summerwell8262 Před 3 lety +5

    His sword is not too big, in medieval Japan there were different schools of fencing and one of them was specialised in long swords. In medieval Europe there were also knights fighting with Two-handed swords, Claymores or Zweihänders.

    • @danortiz
      @danortiz Před rokem

      It is big. It's out of the norm. Even if the samurai were proficient in it, it would not be his weapon of choice to carry and travel.

    • @summerwell8262
      @summerwell8262 Před rokem

      @@danortiz nodachi and odachi swords were very long and were used in battle
      czcams.com/users/shortsLDdS2LCLB4w?feature=share
      And anyway, that character uses it because he just wants to show off he is a “real” samurai

    • @danortiz
      @danortiz Před rokem +1

      @@summerwell8262 "used in battle" yup. Not carried around

    • @summerwell8262
      @summerwell8262 Před rokem

      @@danortiz i agree: normally warriors wouldn’t carry it around but that character wants to show off, therefore it makes sense he carries it around as a macho symbol of his supposed prowess

    • @danortiz
      @danortiz Před rokem

      @@summerwell8262 exactly

  • @randywhite3947
    @randywhite3947 Před 3 lety

    The Asphalt Jungle did the same thing Seven Samurai did but 4 years prior.

  • @wolverinex4243
    @wolverinex4243 Před 2 lety

    This and movies like Zatoichi set the standard for movie making.

  • @hasaan_b
    @hasaan_b Před 4 lety +2

    gg brother we got em real good

  • @richardla8656
    @richardla8656 Před 4 lety

    What mic do u use

  • @user-ty7ko4mb5u
    @user-ty7ko4mb5u Před 2 lety

    멋진 풍경을

  • @Chisoceanu
    @Chisoceanu Před rokem

    you forgot about "the 13th warrior"

  • @sup7751
    @sup7751 Před 4 lety +1

    You welcome

  • @absarsyed3013
    @absarsyed3013 Před 4 lety +1

    Yo GGs bro we were a sick valorant team

  • @---ws5xd
    @---ws5xd Před 10 měsíci

    日本人の誇りだ。

  • @peterdollins3610
    @peterdollins3610 Před 2 lety

    Great film. Though 'La Strada' by Fellini is the greatest film ever made.

  • @rando_webb8704
    @rando_webb8704 Před rokem

    It's highly likely that A Bugs Life got its inspiration from 7 samurai.

  • @user-fd8fe9hk9q
    @user-fd8fe9hk9q Před 2 lety

    westerns were around before seven samurai and it didnt "spawn the genre"

    • @user-fd8fe9hk9q
      @user-fd8fe9hk9q Před 2 lety

      @@NiclasLoof fair enough, the Western wouldn't be the same without the samurai film. I was just saying westerns were around before seven samurai

    • @pickleman40
      @pickleman40 Před rokem

      Its a really interesting parallel between cowboy westerns and samurai movies where there was this desire to idealize the cowboy/samurai according to the culture at the time, and the challenge movie makers had when they moved away from that. Blazing saddles comes to mind as well

    • @calebclendenin7073
      @calebclendenin7073 Před rokem

      @@pickleman40 another funny thing people have pointed out is that some Samurai movies, such as Yojimbo, are set during the same time as Westerns, just in a different place

    • @pickleman40
      @pickleman40 Před rokem

      @@calebclendenin7073 thats a good example of moving away from tradition, showing samurai at their lost vulnerable and desperate place in history was very common in kurosawas work, yojimbo in particular occurs almost directly before the boshin war

  • @jaknife99
    @jaknife99 Před 3 lety

    Lord of the rings an american classic?

  • @TRIPP5_Shurikens
    @TRIPP5_Shurikens Před rokem

    Philosophy has really made it impossible to watch these things without getting annoyed.
    You keep referring to the guys as "selfless" whenever they do something that benefits other people.
    Does no one even entertain the possibility that it might be in one's self interest to benefit other people?

  • @jamesess9943
    @jamesess9943 Před 11 měsíci

    Marvel movies are a joke. I wish we still had directors like Kurosawa.

  • @toofan123
    @toofan123 Před 3 lety +11

    Your analysis has no depth and no knowledge of the time the movie is made. Seven samurai made after WWII. The Japanese pride ruined by the decisive defeat. The village represents the Japan, the bandits represent the defeat and sense of postwar hopelessness. 7 samurai depict the Japanese pride, spirits and the solution to their struggle. The message is to unify villagers (Japanese) based on Japanese values and cultures. In order to do that, villagers should abandon the homes outside the village to protect larger interests. This is a very symbolic movie deeply influenced by the condition of Japan at the time.

    • @amaulana090
      @amaulana090 Před rokem +5

      While I understand what you are saying... I don't think it's necessary to know the circumstances behind the movie to appreciate it. This analysis has shown that the 7 Samurai is a great movie, fullstop. It's a film you can simply sit and watch and fully appreciate without prior context.
      These days, it's easy to see people praising unremarkable art, explaining how the circumstances and history behind the art makes it so great... But when you have to explain why the art piece is good, then that artwork isn't all that good, is it?
      7 Samurai is a great film that can be enjoyed in a vacuum, and that's what matters most.