Mariko Confess Her Sin to Father Alvito | Shōgun Episode 9
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- čas přidán 14. 04. 2024
- Shogun Samurai TV Series
Mariko ask Father Martin Alvito to forgave her sins before commit seppuku. Father Martin pray for Mariko as baptized loyal Christian, Alvito sings chant.
#Shōgun #HiroyukiSanada #Samurai - Krátké a kreslené filmy
I didn't expect Alvito to be such a bro to Mariko, I really like their friendship.
Mariko didn't just confessed, she asked Father Alvito to be John's friend and translator. Before going to Osaka, she knew that death is certain, one way or another.
When did she ask him that?
@@npierce14it is implied before she confesses and the Father later tells John.
She also brokered Anjin's life in exchange for his ship being sunk!
I definitely thought Father Martin was a bad guy from the beginning, in a clever scheming kind of way. Not to be trusted.
Nope, he was just a good dude that was working under some questionable people.
That chant that Father Alvito sings is called "Asperges Me" taken directly from Psalm 50(51)
translated as :
" Thou shalt sprinkle me with hyssop, and I shall be cleansed: Thou shalt wash me, and I shall be made whiter than snow. Have mercy on me, O God, according to thy great mercy"
What’s hyssop?
Gimme a break,man.Pray in LATIN!
@@StandInTheFire A mint flower.
@@StandInTheFire hyssop is a wild shrub used for purification. Scripture shares how hyssop was used as a sign of spiritual cleansing
@@reyesdelavega3105 The Psalm he sings is in Latin....
You could see the sorrow in his eyes. He knew she would go to hell if noone was her second
My fav scene from the series. This scene with the soundtrack is pure art
By far the best friendship in this series.
IIRC, this wonderful scene has no analogue in James Clavell’s novel or the original 1980 miniseries adaptation. And that’s what I love about this version - it takes the original as its starting point, and interprets it for the visual medium, rather than slavishly following it.
I feel like he was the only person in the show she was actually honest with
I need to know what track is playing here. It's sooooo beautiful 😭
Her last moment looked like Our Lady in Akita.
i want to know how it plays out that the new church in Edo will be built next to Club Courtesan
Its perfect placement. Put the church next to the sinners. Toranaga is a man of wisdom
@@jamesonb6231 My first thought was that it was a middle finger - a "f**k you" to Father Alvito and the church. Such a cunning, Toranaga move.
When two cultures come together
Fr. Alvito is clearly a TLM chad
Confesses her sins and then a few hours later does the same thing again. 😂
That’s we called ourselves humans not gods
@@edisonchen0120 That's a lame excuse to do whatever we want.
@@Cobalt1520 yeah well, exploding doors kind of take precedence.
@@Cobalt1520 bro sounds like he already does what he wants... without confession. You no better if that's the case lmao
As a good catholic! lol
美しいシーンでした
Alvito can sing huh
being able to sing is a requirement to be a priest
Soundtrack for this scene?
I tried looking for it too, I don’t think it’s released yet
@@austin1806 please let me know once you know what the soundtrack is - been looking for it too
@@AliHamidunfortunately it looks like it’s not included in the official soundtrack. They added the last ones from the finale and this one isn’t among them :(
@@austin1806 but this was one of the better ones :( - ahh that's sad all good, thank you!
I wonder what inspired the drummer to suddenly start playing? I am not well versed in japanese culture ,so i assume i missed some little detail.
It's their hour system, which back then is different from hours. The drummer essentially signals sunset for the castle.
Most major cities had a drum tower for this exact reason. The drums signal the time to all, before clocks existed there. Their hours are also not 60 minutes like ours, for example in the old times their days had 48 time periods from midnight to midnight
What she did this time?
she was asking for forgiveness for killing herself later
Why does John draw the line in the sand?
He refuses to follow the grain. "To hell with honor and duty if I lose the one I love"
あの砂の模様はこの作品の比喩で石堂(そして大阪城が持つ兵力)を意味しています。按針は横に流れる大きく太い模様に対して縦に線を入れていることから彼の気持ちを察する事ができます。
i thought it was a hidden crucifix
My guess is a small form of protest by making a mess in the sand which was carefully drawn, which can be seen as symbolic of Japanese culture of perfectionism.
A small protest against the formality and rigidity of Japanese culture, which at that moment is causing him tremendous heartbreak and sorrow because of Mariko's planned suicide out of a sense of honor. He can't accept that she must die just because that's the way of things.
Technically, she sinned again after this by having extra-marital sex and cheated on her husband on the night of her death, so by her ridiculous Christian laws, shes still going to hell.
Nahh,
what determines who goes to heaven is more complicated but I'm just gonna say her chance of going to heaven is not less
We (im orthodox) have a proverb of a man who commits fornication, each time truly regretting and genuinely asked God for forgiveness, each time God forgives
🙂👍
+ I think the catholics have place for people who WILL go to heaven but still have some unforgiven or something like dat
she’s not christian
She thought her husband was dead.😮💨
Maybe if the husband treated her better, anjin wouldn't be clapping them cheeks
@@thlee3 She most certainly is. Catholicism is the largest branch of Christianity, and one of the oldest, too.
2:14 CAM ON INGERLAND
scoar sam fukin gol