Part one – Heroes & Villians “re-made” – Pete's OCA Learning Log https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com my journey towards a BA in photography Thu, 21 Dec 2017 13:31:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 The Origins of Auteur Theory by Filmmaker IQ https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/the-origins-of-auteur-theory-by-filmmaker-iq/ Tue, 24 Jan 2017 11:32:24 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1307 Read more]]>

Stumbling through Youtube I came across a very interesting channel Filmmaker IQ, who have produced a few very interesting videos which summarise some of the theory’s explored in this course. The videos are clear and concise and help with some the background reading.

The above video nicely explains the Auteur theory, and has potentially given we some ideas for a rework of assignment 1. If i follow some of the ideas mentioned, together with tutor suggestions and further reading.

 

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IFC Assignment One – Submission to Tutor https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/ifc-assignment-one-submission-to-tutor/ Tue, 02 Aug 2016 10:31:25 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1100 Read more]]> Peter Walker – 514508

OCA Photography – Introduction to Film Culture

Assignment 1 – Hero’s and Villains ‘re-made’.

 

The has been an interesting exercise to watch five movies; three inspired by two of the others and a more interesting decision as to which two to reflect on together with the “Seven Samurai”. It would have been a much easier decision if had have reflect on any three – but I guess that would have drawn everyone to the low hanging fruit of “Yojimbo” and its two offspring. However, I want to reflect on the two I think that have had the most effect on me, “Yojimbo” and “Fistful of Dollars”.

 

As I have revealed earlier in exercise 1.2, I came to the Seven Samurai as an admirer of the Magnificent Seven and while not wanting to get into comparisons here between those two films it is significant to mention it as it has a bearing on how I viewed Kurosawa’s masterpiece work.

 

It is evident when you watch the “Seven Samurai” why it has inspired so many filmmakers; not only the recognised re-make the Magnificent Seven but others such as the Guns of Navarone and the Dirty Dozen. The film explores so many themes, from the cultural significance of the Ronin in Feudal Japan to the motivation of individuals and beyond; all wrapped in a package that any blockbuster Hollywood movie now or then would be grateful to have.

 

What is does have though above all it imitators is its running time, at over hours Kurosawa allows the plot points to develop slowly, the characters to marinate so that they become rounded individuals. It does not rely on an overly dramatic showdown that many of its offspring have, nor is there a “happy ending” of redemption for the group either in an honourable death or survival. No, what Kurosawa is showing in this film is that violence breeds violence and that for a warrior survival can be a form of death. They become obsolete there are no longer required and because of the class systems in feudal Japan they cannot quietly retire into the community, they have saved. The fact that they are ronin available in the first place is because of this class system, and Kurosawa shows that perpetual cycle to great effect in this movie.

 

The same director shows a different style in Yojimbo, classed as a thriller – the story is less class based and could be easily transported in any period as has been demonstrated with the two remakes we have studied. Here the director has focused on an individual and his mission to rid a town of two feuding gangs. While still set in feudal Japan, it is quite clearly at a period which is contemporary with the American western, as shown with the use of a Colt 45 or similar. The overall feel of the film is more of a western than the thoughtful subtleties of the directors earlier Chanbara masterpiece.

 

 

There are much more comic elements, and the score is heavier and more humorous if not cartoon in style, but overall the Kurosawa has pushed the samurai film away from its origins to show more realistically how brutal death can be in particular by a sword. However, unlike the more real characters that he has produced in the Seven Samurai, the hero is more the of the modern day action hero. Seemingly unstoppable and able to single-handedly bring down the “bad guys” no matter what happen to him, which is in nearly every modern day film, although, somehow I am drawn to a comparison to John McClane in Die Hard; how he can defeat the terrorists despite being barefoot.

 

In “A Fistful of Dollars” Sergio Leone remakes the Yojimbo while bringing a style to the film which pays homage to both Kurosawa and the chanbara and the great blockbuster American Westerns of the likes of John Ford. “A Fistful of Dollars” was the beginning of the Spaghetti Western and Leone had produced a film which was not a shot for shot remake make of Yojimbo nor has it the same tone. I would describe it as a more serious film than it predecessor. Yes, the overall story is the same, but the development of most charictors is less characteristic than Yojimbo, and the direction leads the way the use of extreme close-ups on the actor’s eyes that became a trademark of the spaghetti western.

 

A Fistful of Dollars is very much a western, and you can see that influence in the wide shots which bring in the landscape – especially when compared back to Yojimbo; mainly set within the claustrophobic surround of a village.

 

The overall look of Leone film is very similar in feel to both Yojimbo and Seven Samurai, but this achieved differently. Kurosawa makes great use of light and shadow for the dramatic effect his films; shot in black and white and the contrast gives the grittiness and darkness. Whereas “A Fistful of Dollars” is in full colour, but unlike many of it contemporary American Westerns there is a layer of dust over everything as you would expect in the American West – not the shiny bright colours of Hollywood.

 

Overall I think these two directors over these three movies have made a great contribution to each genre they represent, in Leones case even helping to give birth to the Spaghetti Western. They have transported them to another level for all that followed to look up to whether within the genre or outside. They have spawned many remakes, sequels and homages some less successful than others but they all owe that existence to the three films we have talked about today.

 

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IFC Part One: Exercise 1.5 https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/project-5-exercise-1-5/ Tue, 02 Aug 2016 07:01:53 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1097 Read more]]> Exercise 1.5
Where the magic happens

Editing as the title of this exercise alludes to, is what brings a movie together; it stitches the individual shots within a scene together, as well as the stitching the scenes themselves together to create a coherent narrative.

Here we have three versions of effectively the same film, and when looking at their editing styles are very similar between the two older films, “Yojimbo” and “Fistful of Dollars”. “Last Man Standing” pays homage to the earlier films in the movement between scenes the style in which it was done is very different.

It seems wrong to compare them this way because Yojimbo came before the Spaghetti Western but there is a feeling of a Spaghetti Western in Yojimbo. I think I feel this way because I have come to Yojimbo later in my film-watching life. The mixture of wide to close up shots, how in the open sequences the edits allow the viewer to observe the unfolding scene from the protagonist’s point of view, switching back to medium/close shots of the actor to show reactions and emotions. The fact that the openings of these two films are almost wordless except for background chatter is significant to my enjoyment.

“Last Man Standing” on the other hand does not just use simple cuts between shots to set the scene and drive the narrative; there are fades between shots, overlays and mixes between the scenes – feel I am watching a film inspired more by a music video than Akia Kurosawa. And the ill-advised voice over commentary to tell me what is being thought, without allowing me to interpret from the how the scene is being acted.

In the final duel of Fistful of Dollar, the edits added drama to the use of to extreme close up on the eyes, the close-up detail shots of the loading of guns and switch back from these to longer shots the few has no doubt in what is happening – if slightly melodramatic.

While similar to Fistful the showdown in Yojimbo is less exaggerated. The opponents walk straight towards each other, but this is not shown as a side or wide view, there are switches from one to the other. With each switch, the shot is tightened from wide to long to medium giving the audience the sense how the opponents are getting closer. However, the sword and knife fights, while beautiful choreographed, that leads to does not have the same strength as the gunfight in Fistful.

Finally in “Last Man Standing” the showdown is edited in just a way that moves the viewer’s sight of the action, it flows but in a common way; very much like the overall feeling of the film. It doesn’t add to the drama nor to take away it is just vanilla.

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IFC Part One: Exercise 1.4 https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/exercise-1-4-music-maketh-the-movie/ Mon, 01 Aug 2016 11:39:28 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1093 Read more]]> Exercise 1.4

Music maketh the movie?

The score for Fistful of Dollars and its two equals are undoubted some of the of the most iconic music in cinema. They blend perfectly with the movies and drive the action without being overly intrusive to the viewing experience.

From my understanding, Morricone was commissioned the majority of the music for these was composed before the film was shot as the Sergio Leone wanted the must to so integral to the movie – and some scenes length were driven by the music length to ensure the music didn’t end prematurely. This leads to a great score which perhaps lifts what could be probably a mediocre film without it.

Yojimbo, in contrast, the heavy score I felt was intrusive to my viewing experience, and this was echoed by my flatmate who was not watching the film but working in separate room but comment that the music did not appear to fit the Japanese setting of the movie.

This does not say that the score does not complement the action, like Fistful of Dollars, the music builds your anticipation of the action – perhaps a maybe even a little too much. There is very much an overall feeling with Yojimbo of influence by the western genre and to me, that is very prevalent in the score.

Last Man Standing I have to say the score left me cold I did feel in added anything to the film – I didn’t notice it all. It did not build any tension nor did it drive the action.

Overall Last man standing was lacklustre, and the score is a major factor in that for me together with unbelievability of the main character. If there was a drama over heavy score from Yojimbo or the ironically haunting tones of Fistful of Dollars, then the movie may have been lifted somewhat and made its running time flow – whereas as it stands watching Last Man Standing is a lot like running in treacle.

Unfortunately I have been unable to compare the alternative soundtracks of Last Man Standing Elmer Bernsten and Ry Cooder after extensive searching i was unable track them down here in Hong Kong.

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A Fistful of Dollars (1964) https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/a-fistful-of-dollars-1964/ Sun, 24 Jul 2016 03:07:46 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1089 Read more]]> p3571_p_v8_aaA Fistful of Dollars (1964)

Dir: Sergio Leone

Cast: Clint Eastward, Marianne Koch, Gian Maria Volonte, Wolfgang Lukschy

 

Summary

An unnamed drifter/gunslinger arrives in a small Mexican town, within the middle of a battle between two rival families. He sees this as an opportunity to make a fist full of dollars and play both sides off against each other.

 

 

Synopsis.

A stranger arrives in a small Mexican town, where the innkeeper informs him that the town is in the middle of a rivalry between the family of the local sheriff, John Baxter and the Rojo brothers. He decides this an opportunity to make money.

When Mexican soldiers are transporting gold past the village to America troops near the border, the Stranger follows and witnesses their murders by members of the Rojo Family.

The stranger moves 2 of the bodies and sells information to both families that two soldier survived. To set up a conflict between the two sides as one try to silence the survivors and others to have the testify against the Rojo’s. In the ensuing fight, the Rojo’s believe they have killed the survives and capture the Baxters’s son Antonio.

The stranger in the meantime is searching the Rojo house where he finds the one of the Rojo’s prisoners and unwilling mistress Marisol, who he takes to the Baxters to use in a prisoner exchange.

The stranger finds out from the innkeeper on the day of the trade that Marisol was taken from her husband because he was falsely accused of cheating at cards. The stranger then rides to rescue Marisol helping the, killing the guards and making it look as if it was an attack by a large gang. On reuniting Marisol with her family, he gives then money to leave – explaining why he is helping by saying “Why? Because I knew someone like you once. There was no one there to help. Now get moving.”

The stranger is captured and beaten by the Rojo’s because of the betrayal, but he escapes with the help of the town’s coffin maker. The Rojo’s in the meantime thinking the stranger is in the pay of the Baxters sets fire the Baxters house massacring them all; leaving the Rojo’s the only gang left in town.

While recovering from his beating the stranger finds out the Rojo have captured the innkeeper, and he, therefore, return to town to face off against the Rojo’s. With a steel plate under his poncho, the stranger taunts one of the Rojo’s to “aim for the heart” as the bullet fly off he challenges them to reload faster that he can. The stranger shoots the Rojos and with his final shot releases the innkeeper and rides off out of town.

Review

I have seen this movie on many occasions and to my shame, I was not aware that it was a remake of Yojimbo. However, it was interesting to watch the film again with fresh eyes and also almost back to back with Yojimbo.

The story is virtually identical to Yojimbo and the performance of Clint Eastwood as the Man with no name, is equal as enigmatic as that of Toshiro Mifune.

In general, there is not much to choose between the film both they are almost equal; however, what sets Fist full of dollars apart from its predecessor is the score. Enrico Morricone score is so atmospheric it drives the film along. I fit perfectly with the setting of the movie, more so than in my opinion than the score of Yojimbo – which I found a little overly dramatic and too western for the setting of the film.

Spaghetti westerns brought a look to the western that I feel was missing in the earlier days in that you can see dirty and despair. The American old west was not a bright and shiny place as depicted in the classic westerns of the 50’s – was a simple place, full of desperate and frankly not very nice people.

I would recommend this film to anyone and is a great stepping stone to towards the modern western.

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IFC Part One: Exercise 1.3 https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/1085/ Thu, 14 Jul 2016 05:05:34 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1085 Read more]]> Exercise 1.3

Watching three films back to back, which essentially are the same story has been an interesting exercise I have written a full analysis on the films in separate posts which can be accessed by clicking on the movie title. However, the exercise asked me to summarise each film in around three sentences.

Yojimbo (1961)

A Ronin arrives in a town controlled by rival gangs. He decided that the town would be better off with either gang. What follows is the Ronin playing the gangs against each other to achieve his goal.

A Fist Full of Dollars (1964)

A stranger arrives in a town controlled by rival gangs. He decides that this can work to advantage to make money. In his attempts to play them off against each other for money brings down one gang and wipes out the other to avenge the friend he made in the village.

 Last Man Standing (1996)

A drifter/gunslinger arrives in a town divided by gangs. For his purposes, he plays both gangs against each other to bring them down.

The two remakes are remarkably faithfully to the original screenplay of Yojimbo – so much so that Kurosawa successfully sued for breach of copyright over A Fist Full of Dollars. However, there are subtle differences in them all. I believe Fist full of Dollars is closest, weighted towards money making especially at first, by the stranger; morality is coming later in the film when we see him rescue Marisol. Yojimbo I feel the destruction of the gangs the Ronin’s moral crusade.

Last Man Standing although an official remake I found the narrative much more confusing – there is no moral standpoint. Yes, he helps the two female characters but is that out moral decency or guilt as in the in especially in the case of Lucy is probably is the cause of her being attacked. He is seen telling the Texas Ranger he intends to bring the gangs down, but why? To step in, there place?

Of the films the most pleasing to why eye regarding cinematography is “A Fist Full of Dollars”. There is that open expansiveness found in the traditional westerns, with deep depth of field used, with expansive wide shots; however, there is a good use of close-ups – extreme close-ups in places e.g. the final face off with the man with no name and Ramon. The film stock used is not too vivid its colours, there a some muted effect give a more feel to how the old west would be compared to traditional westerns.

Yojimbo is not as expansive in its shots; there are more close-up to characters the, camera is often at right angles to the scene. On the whole, there are more medium shots and there is an overall dark feel and look to the lighting.

Last Man Standing the cinematography lots of combination of long, medium and close-ups there no consistency. The colours are all muted by a layer of dust, and while I have said, I don’t mind this, it does on further reflection give an overall drab feeling to a lacklustre film.

Of the three film in would say the most skilful cinematography is in A Fist Full of Dollars because the have successfully mixed the Japanese and traditional western styles together to give unique dramatic effect. I like the way that the film has a look on the surface of the classic western, but as you are drawn in, there are more close scenes giving the feel of a not western genre drama.

Culturally is there a big difference to the Japanese audience between the sword and the pistol about the western and the chanbara? I feel that probably there isn’t. Chanbara is escapism for the masses in Japan in the same way that the “cowboy” (western) was escapism to American audiences.

However, the use of a pistol in Yojimbo is a different it is used to show the character of (or should I say lack of?) Unosuke. Unosuke has no honour or skill he is the quintessential bully and bringing the pistol is giving himself a power that he could not have otherwise.

Perhaps really where the cultural feeling towards the pistol will e would be a metaphor for the bulldozing nature of the American culture intruding in other cultures and overriding them. Which can also be seen metaphorically in the famous knife to a gunfight scene in “Raiders of the Lost Ark.”

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Yojimbo (1961) https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/yojimbo-1961/ Thu, 14 Jul 2016 01:33:16 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1081 Read more]]> 220px-Yojimbo_(movie_poster)Yojimbo (1961)
Dir: Akira Kurosawa
Cast: Toshiro Mifune, Tatsuya Nakadai, Yoko Tsukasa, Isuzu Yamada

Summary

A Ronin arrives in a small town in the grip of warring crime lords. Despite a warning to move on, he uses the fact that both sides seek his skills as a swordsman to his advantage, as he believes the town would be better without either side.

Synopsis

After hearing an elderly farming couple lamenting the fact their son has joined local bandits; a ronin arrives in a town which the divided by a gang war. In the town, he meets the owner of the local izakaya (pub /bar) who advises him to keep travel after explaining how the town is divided by local gangs headed by Ushitora and Seibei. The ronin decides to stay as he feels the town would be better with both sides dead.

Initially siding with Seibei for a hefty fee, the ronin leads Seibai to a showdown with Ushitora. However, the Ronin has become aware of the plan to have him killed to avoid having to pay. He resigns from Seibei in front of Ushitora leaving them to face their fate. The showdown is avoided with the unexpected arrival of a government official.

The government official called away to another village, due the murder of another official, the Ronin becomes aware that it was Ushitora who organised the murder to get the official to leave. The Ronin captures the assassins and sell the to Seibei, but tells Ushitora that it was Seibei men that caught them earning a reward from Ushitora.

Ushitora then orders the kidnapping of Seibei’s son who he offers in exchange for the two prisoners. However, Ushitora double crosses Seibei at the swap when his brother, Unosuke, shoots the assassins with a pistol. But Seibei anticipated this so he kidnapped Ushitora’s woman. The next morning she is swapped with Seibei’s son.

The Ronin finds out that the woman was the wife of a local farmer, who he lost over a gambling debt. The Ronin tells Ushitora that Seibei is coming to take her back. Using the cover of Ushitora gathering his men, the Ronin kills Ushitora’s guards and reunites the woman with her family as encourages them to he flee. However, Unosoke is suspicious and see’s through the Ronin’s doublecross; the ronin is then severely beaten.

Despite the beating the ronin escapes with the assistance of the izakaya owner Ushitora is the destroying Seibei. However, while is recuperating in a graveyard, he finds out the izakaya owner has been captured by Ushitora so he returns to the town and kills Ushitora and all his men, despite Unosoke’s use of a pistol.

His work completed the Ronin leaves town and moves on.

Review

While I know that this film inspired a spaghetti western, I was surprised by the overall western feel of the movie, the Ronin and the warring gangs are far more interchangeable with the old west than the theme and styles of the other famous Kurosawa film remade as western the “The Seven Samurai”.

The performance of the lead Toshiro Mifune is fantastic; there is much subtlety in his facial expression which great depth to the dramatic and comic moments – have heard his film called a comedy, I think that doing it a disservice, it is satirical, and it is not taking itself too seriously. The comic moments lighten what essentially is, a dark story; although not a dark as the Seven Samurai.

The visual styling of the film pleases, an almost graphical nature to the shots, e.g., the long shots and how the camera is a right angle to the action. I’m less convinced about the score – it is very western and overly dramatic, I would have preferred a little more subtlety.

Overall though the best film I have watched so far in connection with this course.

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Last Man Standing (1996) https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/1076/ Wed, 13 Jul 2016 06:06:33 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1076 Read more]]> Last_man_standing_ver2Last Man Standing (1996)

Dir: Walter Hill

Cast: Bruce Willis, Christopher Walken, Bruce Dern

 

Summary

Prohibition era gunslinger finds himself in the middle of a gang war between Italian and Irish mafia, in a deserted On a West Texas town. Where he can play both sides off against each other, to his benefit.

Synopsis

Arriving in a deserted West Texas town loner gunslinger John Smith immediately creates trouble with a careless glance at the girlfriend of Doyle, the local Mafia boss. After reporting the incident to the cowardly local sheriff, Smith finds out about the town from the local saloon keeper and does to confront Doyle’s men about damages to his car. In an ensuing gunfight, Smith kills one of Doyle’s men.

Smith then starts working for Strozzi of the rival gang, the organisation where to assist with the stealing one Doyle liquor shipments and start an affair with Strozzi girlfriend, Lucy and meets a visiting high profile Chicago mobster.

Smith the defects to the Doyles where he lets them know of Strozzi’s plans and deceptions, causing the Doyle gang to attack and kill some of Strozzi’s men and kidnap the Chicago gangster. Strozzi’s gang responds by kidnapping Doyle’s girlfriend, Felina. A fair exchange is arranged.

Smith meanwhile is summoned by the sheriff to meet Capt Picket of the Texas Rangers who is intending to wipe out one of the gangs as he can tolerate just one. Smith explains he means to play both groups against each other so that the wipe each other out. Capt. Picket informs him in ten days he will attack and if Smith found he would be killed too.

Lucy visits Smith to tell him she been attacked by Strozzi, so he gives her money to leave town. Smith then start more rumours that Strozzi is intending to kidnap Felina again and is sent by Doyle to where she been hidden. Smith kills Doyles means guarding Felina, and after finding she was won by Doyle in guard game from her husband, he helps her escape back to her husband in Mexico.

Some of Doyle men are suspicious of Smith, and Smith double cross is eventually uncovered, and Smith is tortured for the whereabout of Felina. Smith does not reveal her whereabouts and manages to escapes with the assistance of the tavern owner and sheriff; witnessing Doyle men wiping out Strozzi gang in the process.

A few days later while Smith is recovering in an old church is finds out that the Saloon owner has been captured for helping Smith. Smith return to town to seek revenge on Doyle’s gang and free the tavern owner.

Doyle and his right hand are absent from the final shoot as they are trying to find Felina. However, they face Smith in the final scene where they try to convince him to join them again. However, the Saloon owner kills Doyle for ruining his town, and Smith shoots the others.

Smith then leaves town commenting that he is just as broke as when he arrived as he had given all his funds to Lucy and Felina but at least the town was better off without the gangs.

Review

While this is almost a carbon copy of Yojimbo, I found this film a hard watch. The running time was only 101min however, it much longer. The pace was slow; there was no energy to the movie. I did, however, enjoy the look of the film, the cinematography gave drab muted, dust covered colours which I would associate with the period particular in a Texas ghost town.

The character of Smith is just a little dull; Bruce Willis performance seems to mumble lines and doesn’t give off the aura of a hired gun. Walken is strong as Hickey but is hat down to the script and direction or just the actors natural ability to portray that style of character – I think the latter. And perhaps in not even worth going into the technical inaccuracies like over 40 shots from 2 guns that would hold about 16 to 18 shots between them.

While I disagree with him on cinematography, I think the great Roger Ebert hit the nail on the head with his opening paragraph:

““Last Man Standing” is such a desperately cheerless film, so dry and laconic and wrung out, that you wonder if the filmmakers ever thought that in any way it could be … fun. It contains elements that are often found in entertainments–things like guns, gangs and spectacular displays of death–but here they crouch on the screen and growl at the audience. Even the movie’s hero is bad company.”

Bibliography

Ebert, Roger (1996-09-20). “Last Man Standing review”. RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 2016-07-13.

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IFC Part One: Exercise 1.2 https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/exercise-1-2/ Mon, 11 Jul 2016 05:35:31 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1071 Read more]]> “The Seven Samurai” vs. “The Magnificent Seven.”

While almost identical on a superficial basis “The Seven Samurai” and “The Magnificent Seven” are very different films. These differences mainly come I feel from the cultural context of each movie.

“The Seven Samurai” is a story of Ronin, masterless Samurai, in feudal Japan. Japan at that distinct class structure and it was not possible to move within the classes or even for the classes to mix on a social level. Therefore, this brings into the story the issues that these Ronin are forever trapped as a Samurai. They have to survive in any way they can. Many Ronin did fall by the wayside and become bandits as they only way to survive, here we have seven men still fighting to keep their honour even if payment was just three bowls of rice.

“The Magnificent Seven” in contrast has the same plot line gunmen working defending a poor village for little pay, but the context is not the same. America is a classless society; there is freedom to move between classes and job – Steve McQueen’s character is, in fact, offered a job in a store which would pay far that being a gun for hire. The fact the seven men in “The Magnificent Seven” are choosing their own destiny – they are adventures or what we would call today adrenaline junkies.

The main leads in the film are very similar, other than the shaved head; both were portrayed as strong but kind principled men. For example Kambei shaves of his “top knot” a badge of great honour for samurai to rescue a child, Chris in “The Magnificent Seven” steps up to drive the hearse for a deceased Native American, who the is being prevented from being buried by the town’s prejudice. Both also reflect that they are never the winners in the fights they choose to have.

The of the remaining characters from “The Seven Samurai” John Sturges has done an excellent job in transferring them to the Western genre. He has combined Kikuchiyo and Katsushiro to form the Chico Character; a young want to be a gunslinger, who in reality is just running away from being a farmboy. This amalgamation was a wise choice as the role was an apprentice to a gunslinger did not exist therefore the combination of trainee and fool fit together nicely.

Kyuzo was directly translated into James Coburn’s Britt, the style the mannerisms were excellently transposed between the two films. Similarly, with Heihachi & Shichiroji, we ae introduced to O’Rielly (Charles Bronson) chopping wood for his breakfast and Harry is the loyal old friend of Chris. However, both characters are given a like western twist with the addition for O’Rielly, a love of children and Harry’s fortune seeking nature.

The final two characters in The Magnificent Seven are not transposed from the original but there more for their Western context; the gunmen with lost nerve, Robert Vaughan’s Lee and the drifter Vin played by Steve McQueen – although McQueen’s character does have some traits of Shichiroji.

Is one film better than the other is one director better than the other that is hard to tell because as they are the same story, they are apples and oranges by comparison.

“The Seven Samurai” is a stand out film; the whole the mise en scene is incredible, every tone, every shape, there is a sense not a second of screen time is wasted. That is considerable considering it 3 hours plus running time and as discussed contextually it fit fell with it historical background.

“The Magnificent Seven” is a visually beautifully film, filmed in technicolour, it employs that great US West /Mexican scenery to significant effect, it hard to look away from the characters because they portrayed by such stars and John Sturges as done pretty good job of translating the story to the American west. However, in comparison to its predecessor is baggy, overlong recruitment segment, and all the action in the last act – little build up. And contextually it is not the parable on the class system that the Japanese original was.

The best way can describe the overall mais en scene compares to each other is The Seven Samurai looks much more real than the shiny fantasy of the American west that The Magnificent Seven shows. However, should I criticise the John Sturges for the depiction? I think not: he was making the film for a particular audience – wasn’t until later with the advent of the spaghetti western did American audiences start to come to terms with the fact that the old west was dusty and dirty.

It’s a bit like comparing two models of Ferrari, are both films great just built for a different purpose..

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The Seven Samurai (1954) https://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/the-seven-samurai-1954/ Sun, 10 Jul 2016 05:09:25 +0000 http://petewalker-ocalearninglog.com/?p=1067 Read more]]> p5588_p_v8_auThe Seven Samurai (1954)
Dir: Akira Kurosawa
Cast: Toshiro Mifune, Takashi Shimura, Keiko Tsushima

Summary

For only a meagre three meals a day, 7 Ronin (masterless samurai) are hired by villages to protect them from bandits.

Synopsis

When villages overhear that bandits are planning to return to steal their crops and harvest time the village elder suggests that they must hire samurai to protect them, although all they have to offer in payment is food.

The villagers ask ageing ronin Kambei for help after an initial hesitation Kambei set about recruiting six more Ronin to defend the village. Including an inexperienced apprentice Katsushirō and Kikuchiyo, who carries with him a family scroll to prove he a samurai but reality is from a village just like the one to be defended. Kikuchiyo is initially rejected follows the group until he is accepted.

After an initially cold reception in the village, there are there help trust begins to grow as the community and samurai work to together to train, and the samurai comes to terms the shame of how other samurai have brought torment to such villages.

The villagers and samurai stand together to face a final series of battles with the bandits.
Review.

As the world know this is the film that inspired the classic western “The Magnificent Seven”, and while the story we love and scenes that are indelibly marked into are memories from the “The Magnificent Seven” are lifted very faithfully from its predecessor – make no mistake these are two very different films. The “The Seven Samurai” is a much darker piece of work dealing with the culture and social hierarchy of feudal Japan.

I’m not sure it an advantage or a disadvantage that I have come to the film after loving the “The Magnificent Seven” for most of my life, therefore, it hard to write a straight review as opposed to a comparison. As I watch it looking for the similar scenes, for example, the sword duel paralleling James Coburn’s knife fight. However, I notice differences too.

“The Seven Samurai” is harder watch the “The Magnificent Seven”; the characterisation of the main characters and their places in society, play a much more important role. There is considerable development in the script, exploring the motivation of the samurai. The acting is faultless; the cinematography is beautiful the black & white renders the Japanese countryside in wonderful tones.

“The Seven Samurai” makes you think, it is not a romp about seven adventurers looking for excitement in the changing life – it is more about pride and redemption. Ronin are lonely figures outcast from society many did fall into the ways of the bandit as a way to make ends meet – the men although masterless still honour their bushido code by defending those who can not defend themselves for just a salary of 3 bowls of rice a day.

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