The Seven Samurai [VHS]

The Seven Samurai [VHS]
by Akira Kurosawa

The Seven Samurai [VHS]
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Product details

Actor: Kamatari Fujiwara, Keiko Tsushima, Takashi Shimura, Toshir? Mifune, Yukiko Shimazaki
Director: Akira Kurosawa
Cinematographer: Asakazu Nakai
Editor: Akira Kurosawa
Writer: Akira Kurosawa
Producer: S?jir? Motoki
Writer: Hideo Oguni
Writer: Shinobu Hashimoto
Edition: VHS Tape
Audio: Japanese (Original Language), Analog; English (Subtitled)
Format: PAL
Running Time: 141 minutes
Audience Rating: Unrated

VHS Movie Reviews of The Seven Samurai [VHS]

Movie Review: seven samurai from twitter
Summary: 5 Stars

i received a link from the criterion guys on twitter after mentioning Seven Samurai in a tweet. I tweeted that i was so mad because i realized, during a conversation, that i could no longer find my copy. i received the product with in just a few days. very good price as well

Movie Review: Regularly cited as the greatest Japanese film of all time for a reason
Summary: 5 Stars

In 16th century Japan, protracted feudal wars have created a prevailing sense of lawlessness. Bandits have organized into formidable armies that scavenge the countryside in search of villages to loot. One morning, a band of thieves arrive at the outskirts of a farming community, but is persuaded to delay their attack until the barley has been harvested. A peasant farmer overhears their plan, and summons the villagers for a town meeting. The farmers seek counsel from the village elder (Kuninori Todo) who advises them to hire "hungry samurai" who would protect their village in exchange for meals. But the task of finding formidable samurais who will accept such a meager compensation proves to be a difficult task. One day, the farmers witness a middle-aged ronin (masterless samurai) named Kambei Shimada (Takashi Shimura) single-handedly rescue an abducted child by relying solely on his cunning intelligence and precise technical skill. Kambei has grown weary of fighting, but the plight of the farmers wins his sympathy, and he agrees to take up their seemingly hopeless cause. Kambei's victory also attracts the attention of a young man named Katsushiro Okamoto (Isao Kimura), who asks to become his disciple, and a brash, overconfident drifter (Toshiro Mifune), who is eager to match his skills with the seasoned samurai. Despite the time constraint and lack of reward, Kambei assembles a team of capable, altruistic samurais: a dedicated colleague, Shichiroji (Daisuke Kato), willing to face death for his dear friend; an agile, confident samurai, Gorobei (Yoshio Inaba), touched by Kambei's sincerity and generosity; a cheerful, but average swordsman, Heihachi (Minoru Chiaki), whose experience often involves fleeing from battle; an expert swordsman, Kyuzo (Seiji Miyaguchi), seeking to hone his craft. With the crop harvest imminent, the samurais must fortify the farming village, devise a combat strategy to counter the invasion, and train the peasants for battle.

Seven Samurai is an engaging, precisely crafted story of selfless bravery, perseverance, and fraternity. Using medium shots and seamless, slow motion in order to temper the violence of death, Akira Kurosawa succeeds in creating a delicate juxtaposition between the samurais' graceful art of combat and the barbaric reality of war: Kambei's rescue of the abducted child; the fencing challenge in an open field; the arrival of the bandits on horseback for the decisive battle. But the mastery of the film lies beyond the fluid choreography of the battle sequences. Seven Samurai is an equally compelling tale of poverty and despair, redemption and purpose, community and heroism - a sweeping, epic portrait of individual courage and the tenacity of the human soul.

Movie Review: "The deepest friendship often comes from a chance meeting"
Summary: 4 Stars

This highly influential 1954 film can be interpreted in various different ways - as a straightforward action strategy film, an emotional drama, a period piece, and so on. I myself see it primarily as a film about the conflict between the warrior and peasant classes in medieval Japan.

Put simply, the story concerns a village under threat from bandits, who hire seven freelance Samurai to protect them. The two main themes of the film concern the Samurai strategy to defend the village, and the interactions between the Samurai and the farmers (often fraught with tension).

The villagers, it should be mentioned, lack honour. They are too cowardly to fight the bandits, although they have murdered several lone Samurai in the past.

Once the services of the seven warriors are no longer required, they are the ignored by the villagers, no longer part of the community. "The winners are those farmers...not us," says the Samurai leader Kambei, as the camera pans to a burial mound for the dead warriors.

Something I found intriguing was the number of different camera angles Kurosawa comes up with to view this small peasant village. Every time we see it, it looks different. Another thing I really liked was the observation that "the deepest friendship often comes about through a chance meeting."

Kurosawa was criticised in Japan for being too Western, just as his contemporary Yukio Mishima was - yet both Mishima and Kurosawa were an integral part of the psyche of Japan (the Asian country which most easily assimilates foreign culture, although still maintaining its racial homogeneity).

Some viewers may find the three hour length of the movie off-putting, but can always stop for an interval halfway through. Time restraints are no reason to avoid watching a classic.

Movie Review: A Masterpiece
Summary: 5 Stars

Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai is a wonderful piece of work which has inspired great American films from The Magnificent Seven to A Bug's Life. The new remastered version is a much better copy than previous versions.

Movie Review: One of the greats...
Summary: 5 Stars

A cinematic giant, now on DVD.
Probably the best movie to ever come from the east, and the basis for some of the great American westerns.

Summary of The Seven Samurai [VHS]

Hailed as the greatest film in the history of Japanese cinema, Seven Samurai is director Akira Kurosawa's undisputed masterpiece. Arguably the greatest of all jidai-gecki (or historical swordplay films), Kurosawa's classic 1954 action drama has never been surpassed in terms of sheer power of emotion, kinetic energy, and dynamic character development. The story is set during the civil unrest of 16th-century Japan, as the cowering residents of a small farming village are seeking protection against seasonal attacks by a band of marauding bandits. Offering mere handfuls of rice as payment, they hire seven unemployed "ronin" (masterless samurai), including a boastful swordsman (Toshiro Mifune) who is actually a peasant farmer's son, desperately seeking glory, acceptance, and revenge against those who destroyed his family. Led by the calmly strategic Kambei (Takashi Shimura, star of Kurosawa's previous classic, Ikiru), the samurai form mutual bonds of honor and respect, but remain distant from the villagers, knowing that their assignment may prove to be fatal.

Kurosawa masterfully composed his shots to emphasize these group dynamics, and Seven Samurai is a textbook study of the director's signature techniques, including extensive use of telephoto lenses to compress action, delineate character relationships, and intensify motion. While the climactic battle against raiding thieves remains one of the most breathtaking sequences ever filmed, Seven Samurai is most triumphant as a peerless example of character development, requiring all of its 2-hour, 37-minute running time to illuminate every essential detail of villagers and samurai alike, including an abundance of humor as Kambei's defense plan unfolds. In terms of its overall impact, Seven Samurai spawned dozens of copycat films (notably the American Western remake The Magnificent Seven) and cannot be adequately summarized by even the most comprehensive synopsis; it must be seen to be fully appreciated, and the Criterion Collection's 2006 DVD reissue is an essential addition to any definitive home-video library. --Jeff Shannon

On the DVDs
According to the accompanying booklet, "the picture has been slightly window-boxed (in correct original 1.33:1 aspect ratio) to ensure that the maximum image is visible on all monitors." The two-disc format was necessary "to maintain optimal image quality throughout the compression process," with dual-layered DVD-9's encoded "at the highest possible bit rate for the quantity of material included." The picture and sound quality are simply amazing compared to Criterion's one-disc release from 1998. The all-new, fully restored high-definition digital transfer takes full advantage of HD's clarity and crispness, resulting in picture detail far surpassing the previous DVD. This also applies to the soundtrack, presented in optional Dolby surround in addition to the remastered original mono track. The new transfer "was mastered in 2k resolution from a duplicate negative created with wetgate processing from the original fine-grain master positive" (the film's original negative is no longer available), and "several different digital hardware and software solutions were utilized for flicker, instability, dirt, scratch, and grain management."

The complete 207-minute film is accompanied by two full-length commentary tracks, including a new track combining the critical insights of film scholars David Desser, Joan Mellen, Stephen Price (author of The Warrior's Camera: The Cinema of Akira Kurosawa), Tony Rayns, and the dean of Japanese film experts, Donald Richie (author of The Films of Akira Kurosawa). Each scholar is given approximately 40 minutes of film-time, and their commentaries represent a unique opportunity to appreciate Seven Samurai from distinct yet complementary critical perspectives. The commentary by Japanese film expert Michael Jeck (from Criterion's original 1988 laserdisc release) remains useful as a thorough analysis of Seven Samurai, primarily in terms of visual composition.

The 50-minute "making of" documentary, from Japan's 2002 Toho Masterworks TV series Akira Kurosawa: It Is Wonderful to Create emphasizes Kurosawa's collaboration with co-screenwriters Shinobu Hashimoto and Hideo Oguni, including production footage, crewmember interviews, and a reverent visit to the rural inn where Seven Samurai was written over a six-week period of intense seclusion. The two-hour "My Life in Cinema" interview with Kurosawa was recorded in 1993, with fellow filmmaker Nagisa Oshima serving as a gentle admirer, colleague, and well-informed historian of Kurosawa's career. "Seven Samurai: Origins and Influences" is a richly informative documentary that places Kurosawa's classic in both historical and cinematic context, examining its place in the jidai-gecki (swordplay) genre, its accurate depiction of samurai codes and traditions, and its stature as the prototype for many films that followed. The lavishly illustrated 58-page booklet includes eight brief essays on various aspects of Seven Samurai, each written by noted film scholars or film directors (including Arthur Penn and Sidney Lumet). Also included is a reminiscence by the great actor Toshiro Mifune, excerpted from a conversation recorded in 1993. Taken as a whole, the remastered three-disc Seven Samurai ranks as one of the finest DVD sets ever released. --Jeff Shannon


Stills from Seven Samurai - 3 Disc Remastered Edition (Click for larger image)


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