Three Outlaw Samurai – The Criterion Collection #596 (a J!-ENT Blu-ray Disc Review)
February 24, 2012 by Dennis Amith · Leave a Comment

The filmmaking debut of legendary director Hideo Gosha and a fantastic samurai film with plenty of swordfighting action and an enjoyable storyline that makes this Criterion Collection Blu-ray worth watching and also worth owning! Definitely recommended!
Image courtesy of ©1964 Shochiku Co., Ltd. 2012 The Criterion Collection. All Rights Reserved.

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TITLE: Three Outlaw Samurai – The Criterion Collection #596
MOVIE RELEASE: 1964
DURATION: 93 Minutes
DVD INFORMATION: B&W, 2:35:1 Aspect Ratio, Monaural Japanese with English subtitles
COMPANY: Janus Films/The Criterion Collection
RELEASE DATE: February 14, 2012

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Directed by Hideo Gosha
Written by Keiichi Abe, Hideo Gosha, Eizaburo Shiba
Associate Producer: Gin’ichi Kishimoto, Tetsuro Tanba
Music by Toshiaki Tsushima
Cinematography by Tadashi Sakai
Art Direction by Junichi Ozumi

Starring:
Tetsuro Tanba as Sakon Shiba
Isamu Nagato as Kyojuro Sakura
Mikijiro Hira as Einosuke Kikyo
Miyuki Kuwano as Aya
Yoshiko Kayama as Oyasu
Kyoko Aoi as Omitsu
Kamatari Fujiwara as Jinbe
Tatsuya Ishiguro as Uzaemon Matsushita
Jun Tatara as Yasugoro
Toshie Kimura as Oine
Yoko Mihara as Omaki

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This first feature by the legendary Hideo Gosha is among the most beloved chanbara (sword-fighting) films. An origin-story offshoot of a Japanese television phenomenon of the same name, Three Outlaw Samurai is a classic in its own right. A wandering, seen-it-all ronin (Tetsuro Tamba) becomes entangled in the dangerous business of two other samurai (Isamu Nagato and Mikijiro Hira), hired to execute a band of peasants who have kidnapped the daughter of a corrupt magistrate. With remarkable storytelling economy and thrilling action scenes, this is an expertly mounted tale of revenge and loyalty.


When it comes to Japanese cinema during the ’50s and ’60s, there were many samurai films produced but with “Sambiki no Samurai” (Three Outlaw Samurai), it was a national sensation on television.
Airing on Japan’s Fuji TV from 1963 through 1969, the drama series achieved a high rating of 42%. In Japan, anything over 25% is fantastic and not only did the studio Shochiku have a hot series, the three actors Tetsuro Tanba, Isamu Nagato and Mikijiro Hira became the most popular actors because of the TV series.
And with the success of the first season, Shochiku decided to create a jidaigeki film based on the characters of the TV series and “Sambiki no Samurai” (Three Outlaw Samurai) and give Hideo Gosha the opportunity to direct his first film.
And in 1964, “Three Outlaw Samurai” was released in theaters and would become a classic samurai film in Japan which would later inspire a manga series and TV sequels that would air on TV Asahi last from 1987 through 1995 (featuring newer characters) and a final “goodbye” drama series which aired from Oct.-Dec. 1999 which would feature the return of original actor, Tetsuro Tanba.
And now, “Three Outlaw Samurai” makes its first Blu-ray and DVD appearance in North America courtesy of the Criterion Collection.
The film is the second Gosha film to be released by the Criterion Collection, the first release on DVD was Gosha’s second film (and his most popular film in the west), “Sword of the Beast” (1965).
“Three Outlaw Samurai” begins with a wandering ronin (samurai without a master) named Sakon Shiba (played by Tetsuro Tamba) who is looking for a place to sleep. He sees someone running from the mill, which he discovers a golden hair pin on the ground. When he goes into the mill, he finds three peasants tying up a young woman and look as if they are going to kill him.
Sakon is not afraid of these three peasants with swords (especially since he knows they can not fight) but finds out that the woman they have captive is the daughter of the magistrate.
The peasant farmers have been pleading with the magistrate to listen to them as they are suffering. They want to be heard but no one is listening. So, they feel their only resort is to kidnap his daughter in hopes that he will listen.
Feeling bad for the farmers, Sakon decides to help them out.
Meanwhile, as word gets to the magistrate (played by Hisashi Igawa) that his daughter has been kidnapped, he and a few of his soldiers head towards the mill to rescue her. While the magistrate has an excellent samurai swordsman named Einosuke Kikyo (played by Mikijiro Hira) that probably could do the job, Kikyo has no intention of wasting his talents on killing peasants.
So, the magistrate and his soldiers try to rescue his daughter but is embarrassed by the ronin Sakon who manhandles the soldiers. And the magistrate who refuses to listen to the peasants decides that he needs to fight them by using other means, so higher-ups do not find out that he and his men have failed in rescuing his daughter from a band of peasants.
The magistrate resorts to releasing ronin that are being held captive in a jail cell, three criminals and a nonchalant swordsman named Kyojuro Sakura (played by Isamu Nagato). All are given releases only if they kill the samurai named Sakon who is aiding the peasants, and to ensure that happens, the magistrate has Kikyo lead them to the mill.
While walking towards the mill, a peasant farmer tries to run behind Sakura and in self-defense, Sakura slashes the man. He finds out that the man he killed was not a samurai but a peasant farmer and this begins to stay within Sakura’s conscience.
Sakon sees samurai coming towards the mill and immediately shows off his excellent swordsmanship by killing one of them. Sakura then prepares to fight him, but Sakon asks him why he would try to kill poor peasants who just want to be heard. When Sakura as Kinkyo if what Sakon is saying is true, Kinkyo confirms it.
Immediately, Sakura stops fighting and tells everyone that he is joining Sakon to help the peasants. And once again, the magistrate loses.
With the poor peasants now having two ronin’s defending them, the magistrate is beginning to worry, especially since his lord will be arriving in several days. The embarrassment of not being able to stop the peasants and their revolt, let alone two ronin’s is too much to bear.
So, the magistrate escalates things by hiring a dozen poor ronin’s who will do anything for money. Because the peasants have his daughter, they will fight back by kidnapping and threatening to kill a peasant’s daughter.
Meanwhile, one of the female workers of the magistrate asks Kikyo to defend the peasants from the corrupted magistrate. But will he?
As the Magistrate will do anything to get his daughter back, what punishment does he have in store for the peasants and the ronin’s that are assisting them?

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VIDEO:
“Three Outlaw Samurai” is presented in black and white (2:35:1 aspect ratio). This 1964 film looks absolutely fantastic on Blu-ray. Not only is there a good amount of grain, there is also a good amount of detail. May it be the dirty floors of the mill or its wooden surroundings.
Closeups of the character show the sweat, grime and dirt on their faces, contrast is excellent, black levels are deep and white and gray levels are also very good. I don’t think I’ve seen any sort of video problems or damage while watching this film, maybe a few instances of softness but other than that, this film looks fantastic. No banding, no artifacts, no problems that stuck out.
According to the Criterion Collection, the new high-definition transfer was created on a Spirit Datacine from a 35 mm print struck from the original negative. Thousands of instances of dirt, debris, scratches, splices, warps, jitter and flicker were manually removed using MTI’s DRS and Pixel Farm’s PFClean, while Omage Systems DVNR was used for a small dirt, grain and noise reduction.
AUDIO & SUBTITLES:
“Three Outlaw Samurai” is presented in Japanese monaural LPCM 1.0. The dialogue is clear and I heard no hissing, crackles or any audio problems during my viewing.
According to the Criterion Collection, the monaural soundtrack was remastered at 24-bit from a 35 mm optical soundtrack print. Clicks, thumps, hiss and hum were manually removed using Pro Tools HD. Crackle was attenuated using AudioCube’s integrated workstation.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
“Three Outlaw Samurai – The Criterion Collection #596″ on Blu-ray comes with a trailer.
EXTRAS:
“Three Outlaw Samurai – The Criterion Collection #596″ comes with an 18-page booklet with the essay “The Disloyal Bunch” by New York Magazine writer Bilge Ebiri.
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Having watched many jidageki/chambara films and dramas from Japan, this was my first time watching Hideo Gosha’s “Three Outlaw Samurai”. And I absolutely loved it!
Sure, there is a banality when it comes to ronin who come into help the poor from evil bandits or warlords, but what I enjoyed about this film was its enjoyable story, its characters and also its swordfighting action!
For one, you have your calm, cool and collected samurai Sakon Shiba (starring legendary actor Tetsuro Tanba) and then you have someone different with Isamu Nagato’s Kyojuro Sakura, a man who can fight but also a man with a conscience. A man who helps bring humor to the film because of his demeanor. And then you have the playboy swordsman Einosuke Kikyo (played by Mikijiro Hira), doesn’t want to sully his sword with the blood with peasants but yet has no qualms about having sexual encounters with a local prostitute.
While the film is quite simple when compared to Akira Kurosawa’s jidaigeki films, bare in mind that “Three Outlaw Samurai” is Hideo Gosha’s filmmaking debut. He obviously had magnificent company with three amazing actors who were extremely popular from the TV show, the benefit of having good writers, cinematographer and a crew. May it be the swordfight choreography, the actors performances to its sociopolitical storyline, it’s a fantastic debut for Hideo Gosha and an important film that would help ignite a career with many fantastic films in his oeuvre.
As for the Blu-ray release, “Three Outlaw Samurai” looks fantastic on Blu! Wonderful contrast, picture quality looked amazing with no blemishes or problematic scenes. If anything, I wish there were more special features outside of the included trailer. I suppose that I have been spoiled by Criterion Collection releases that I tend to expect a lot in terms of special feature content but it does explain why the price is cheaper compared to other Criterion Blu-ray and DVD’s.
Overall, if you are in the mood for a wonderful samurai film that isn’t too deep, easily accessible and has a lot of swordfighting action, definitely give “Three Outlaw Samurai” a a chance. Definitely recommended!

Seven Samurai (Shichinin no Samurai) – THE CRITERION COLLECTION #2 (a J!-ENT Blu-ray Disc Review)
October 8, 2010 by Dennis Amith · Leave a Comment

“Seven Samurai” is Akira Kurosawa’s ultimate masterpiece that has been one of the highlights of the Criterion Collection for more than a decade. This Blu-ray release of “Seven Samurai” looks fantastic and is the definitive version to watch and to own. Overall, with the film, commentary and lengthy special features, “Seven Samurai” on Blu-ray is a 5-star release! Highly recommended!
Image courtesy of © 1954. 2006 Toho Co. Ltd./2010 The Criterion Collection. All Rights Reserved.

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TITLE: The Seven Samurai (Shichinin no Samurai)
YEAR OF FILM: 1954
DURATION: 207 Minutes
BLU-RAY DISC INFORMATION: 1080p High Definition (1:33:1 Aspect Ratio), Black and White, Monaural Japanese with English Subtitles
COMPANY: Janus Films/Toho/THE CRITERION COLLECTION
RELEASE DATE: October 19, 2010

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Directed by Akira Kurosawa
Written by Akira Kurosawa, Shinobu Hashimoto, Hideo Oguni
Produced by Sojiro Motoki
Music by Fumio Hayasaka
Cinematography by Asakazu Nakai
Edited by Akira Kurosawa
Production Design by Takashi Matsuyama
Costume Design by Kohei Ezaki, Mieko Yamaguchi

Starring:
Toshiro Mifune as Kikuchiyo
Takashi Shimura as Kanbe Shimada
Keiko Tsushima as Shino
Yukiko Shimazaki as Rikichi’s Wife
Kamatari Fujiwara as Manzo – Father of Shino
Daisuke Kato as Shichiroji
Isao Kimura as Katsushiro Okamoto
Minoru Chiaki as Heihachi Hayashida
Seiji Miyaguchi as Kyuzo
Yoshio Kosugi as Mosuke
Bokuzen Hidari as Yohei
Yoshio Inaba as Gorobe Katayama
Yoshio Tsuchiya as Rikichi
Kokuten Kodo as Gisaku, the Old Man

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One of the most thrilling movie epics of all time, Seven Samurai (Shichinin no samurai) tells the story of a sixteenth-century village whose desperate inhabitants hire the eponymous warriors to protect them from invading bandits. This three-hour ride from Akira Kurosawa—featuring legendary actors Toshiro Mifune and Takashi Shimura—seamlessly weaves philosophy and entertainment, delicate human emotions and relentless action, into a rich, evocative, and unforgettable tale of courage and hope.


If there is one title in which many fans of the Criterion Collection have always considered as must-have, must-own, it would be Akira Kurosawa’s 1954 film “Seven Samurai”.
The second film of The Criterion Collection, originally released back in 1999 and then re-released in 2006, the third time is indeed a charm as Kurosawa’s masterpiece will now be released on Blu-ray. And the “Seven Samurai” is a wonderful highlight in the oeuvre of Kurosawa, as it was a film in which the filmmaker wanted to make a real jidai-geki (period film).
Having success with his last film “Ikiru” and previous films such as “Rashomon”, “Stray Dog”, “Drunken Angel” to name a few, “Seven Samurai”stands out amongst his films because not only is it a samurai film, but it’s a film which captures the period of ronin who have no master and are trying to survive, some who have become bandits and pray on the weak villages and for all its 207-minutes of thrilling and compelling cinema, this is a film in which Kurosawa is deeply focused and a film in which he expected nothing less from his crew and his talent, this film demanded pure dedication, talent and staff working in frigid, cold conditions and wanting to make viewers feel that it was just a rainy day and it’s as simple as that.
But this film was anything but simple. This is a film that demanded one’s respect, one’s dedication in watching this film in its entirety and just be in awe of how thorough, how multi-layered and most of all, how awesome this film would be no matter which generation you came from. This film is truly a masterpiece.
“Seven Samurai” takes place after the civil wars, a time when samurai who have lost their master are now roaming from village to village just to find a job or ways to survive, meanwhile bandits (former samurai) have went from village to village to kill, cheat and steal young women from the village as their sexual objects.
For one farming village, one of the villagers who is hiding and listening to the bandits hear that they were going to return to the village that they just pillaged, after their crops have grown and are to be harvested. The village farmers and their families survive off their rice crops and it’s so bad that they hardly have anything left as it is.
The villagers know they are at a breaking point and things are getting worse. Some want to fight back, but others feel they don’t have what it takes to fight back. They are scared, they are weak and they don’t know what else they can do. That is until the village elder recommends them to find and hire samurai’s who would fight for them. Something the elder has seen once before a long time ago. Samurai who will come because they are hungry and at the village, they can definitely provide the rice that is needed.
So, the first story arc features the farmers going to a larger village in search of samurai but the problem is, not one of them is interested until they meet Kanbei (played by Takashi Shimura), a strong and respectable samurai who is willing to help. Alongside with him is a young ronin named Katsushiro (played by Ko Kimura) who wants to learn from Kanbei. And from there, Kanbei is joined by an old friend, Shichiroji (played by Daisuke Kato) who finds another samurai named Gorobei (played by Yoshio Inaba) and Gorobei ends up finding Heihachi (played by Minoru Chiaki).
With five samurai, we then see Kanbei trying to recruit a master swordsman named Kyuzo (played by Seiji Miyaguchi) and all they need is one and that one is the unusual, wannabe samurai which the group has named Kikuchiyo (played by Toshio Mifune).
The second arc deals with Kanbei and fellow samurai as they plan out their strategy of defense against the bandits and also training the farmers on how to protect their land and the final third arc which deals with the bandits who now have arrived near the farming village to make their attack and pillage and the samurai and farmers ready to defend their home.



VIDEO:
“Seven Samurai” is presented in its original aspect ratio of 1:331. According to the Criterion Collection”, the original negative of the film is no longer available, so a duplicate negative was created from the original fine-grain master positive using wetgate processing. This high-definition digital transfer was then created in 2K resolution on a Spirit Datacine from the dupe negative. For the extensive restoration of “Seven Samurai”, several different digital hardware and software solutions were utilized to address flicker, instability, dirty, scratches and grain management. Including da Vinci’s Revival, Discreet’s Fire, Digital vision’s ASCII Advanced Scratch and Dirty Concealer, MTI’s DRS and Pixel Farm’s PFClean.
I’ve done quite a bit of comparing between this blu-ray version and the previous two Criterion Collection DVD releases and all I can say is that the “Seven Samurai” on Blu-ray is simply fantastic. This is a remarkable restoration of the original film. I was noticing detail, for example, the flag that Kikuchiyo hung up on top of the house, you can see the threading quite clearly. You can see detail and patterns on the clothing much more clearly as well as detail of the surrounding area (the farming village) from the buildings to the fields as well as the closeups of the character’s faces. You can actually see the strands of hair instead of just one big black and gray mesh, you can see strands of hair which was not as visible on the DVD version.
Blacks are nice and deep, whites and gray contrasts are just right. I didn’t see any artifacting, massive flickering or even edge enhancement. You do spot some scratches but nothing major. There is also a good amount of grain present in the picture. This is clearly the best looking version of “Seven Samurai” right now and fans of the film will be in awe of how beautiful this film looks! Fantastic!
AUDIO & SUBTITLES:
According to the Criterion Collection, the surround mix was created from original optical track recordings, original stereo music masters, and original production sound effects masters. The original monaural soundtrack was mastered at 24-bit from an optical soundtrack print. Clicks, thumps, hiss and hum were manually removed using Pro Tools HD. Crackle was attenuated using AudioCube’s integrated audio workstation.
Audio is presented in Japanese LPCM 1.0 (mono) and Japanese LPCM 2.0. The package does mention a Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio track but this was mistake on the packaging. But for the most part, audio is quite clear and if there is one thing that fans will notice is the clarity of Fumio Hayasaka’s score.
Donald Richie, author of “The Films of Akira Kurosawa” wrote in his book about the differentiation of the music which I noticed much more in this soundtrack. Drums are associated with the bandits, folk-music, flute and percussion with the farmers and a male chorus (low humming) with the samurai. Audio was excellent and I detected no audio problems, hissing or dropouts whatsoever.
Optional English subtitles are included.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
“Seven Samurai – THE CRITERION COLLECTION #2″ on Blu-ray comes with the following special features presented in HD (1080i):
Disc 1:
- Roundtable Audio Commentary - The following audio commentary is by film scholars David Desser, Joan Mellen, Stephen Prince, Tony Rayns and Donald Richie. Originally included on the “Seven Samurai” 2006 DVD re-release, the audio commentary features a different scholar taking on about a half hour or more segment of the film and giving their commentary for the film.
- Audio Commentary – Featuring the original audio commentary from the 1999 Criterion Collection DVD release by Japanese film expert Michael Jeck.
DISC 2:
- Akira Kurosawa: It is Wonderful to Create - (49:10) The making of “Seven Samurai” as part of the Toho Masterworks series “Akira Kurosawa: It is Wonderful to Create” featuring interviews with Kurosawa’s key collaborators, writer Shinobu Hashimoto, set decorator Koichi Hamamura, script supervisor Teruyo Nogami, actors Seiji Miyaguchi and Yoshio Tsuchiya and more. This is a wonderful documentary for anyone who wants to know how this masterpiece was made. This feature was originally included in the 2006 DVD release but is now presented in 1080i.
- My Life in Cinema: Akira Kurosawa – (1:55:59) Filmed for the Directors Guild of Japan in 1993, this featurette showcases director Akira Kurosawa talking with filmmaker Nagisa Oshima. Two two talk about Kurosawa’s life and career. This conversation between the two is very cool, especially if you have followed the careers for both filmmakers! This feature was originally included in the 2006 DVD release but is now presented in 1080i.
- Seven Samurai: Origins and Influences - (55:12) A documentary exclusive for the Criterion Collection, this documentary takes a close look at the history of samurai in Japanese life and art and the influence of the samurai figure in film leading up to Kurosawa’s masterpiece. Another awesome documentary featuring Tony Rayns, Donald Richie and David Desser discussing samurai in Japanese films. This feature was originally included in the 2006 DVD release but is now presented in 1080i.
- Trailers and Teaser – Featuring three trailers (3-5 minutes each) and a teaser (:42).
- Galleries - Using your remote, you can view galleries via behind-the-scenes and the film’s movie posters.
EXTRAS:
“Seven Samurai” comes with a slipcase and a 60-page booklet. The booklet features essays by Kenneth Turan (The Hours and Times), Peter Cowie (Seven Rode Together), Philip Kemp (A Time of Honor), Peggy Chiao (Kurosawa’s Early Influences), Alain Silver (The Rains Came), Stuart Galbraith (A Magnificent Year), A Tribute from Arthur Penn, A Tribute from Sidney Lumet and an interview with Toshiro Mifune (In His Own Words).
Also, the “Seven Samurai” is presented in a digipack case in which both the case and the booklet fits into a slipcase.
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Like many fans of the Criterion Collection, I purchased the original “Seven Samurai” when it was released, followed by the DVD re-release and then here I am once again reviewing another magnificent release of the film but this time on Blu-ray.
“Seven Samurai” on Blu-ray has much more detail and clarity than any previous release of the film and for those who are passionate about the film, this is the definitive version to own.
There is no doubt that the Criterion Collection is passionate about Akira Kurosawa and his work. From the various Criterion Collection releases to the eclipse series releases and the AK100 set released earlier this year, Akira Kurosawa is a filmmaker that many people all over the world respect and with the announcement of the Blu-ray release of “Seven Samurai”, needless to say, many fans have been waiting patiently and it was definitely worth the wait.
The film exemplifies the magnificence of Kurosawa and here we are with a beautiful release of this film, with the intermissions and not hacked and cut like when it first was released in the US. In Japan, it was uncut. In the US, in 1954, this 207 minute film was reduced to 160 minutes and further cuts were made. And I can’t even fathom this film being shortened, as nearly every minutes, every hour of this 207-minute film was important to the story.
But there is so much to love about “Seven Samurai”, it’s storytelling is well-paced, the characters especially the samurai were well-planned and their scenes were well written, the discussion of strategy was well-thought and planned and the action is well-executed.
Both actors that have worked with Akira Kurosawa in his previous movies, Takashi Shimura and Toshiro Mifune were fantastic! Shimura as Kanbei, the disciplined leader who is aware, always thinking and is very astute when it comes to the samurai way and always practicing caution with his knowledge of strategy and how the farmers can use their surroundings to their advantage. It’s one thing for Shimura to shine two-years earlier as Kanji Watanabe in the 1952 film “Ikiru” but in “Seven Samurai”, Shimura fit the part as a samurai leader. Convincing and a leader onscreen that wins your respect and you want this man to truly succeed.
Actor Toshiro Mifune as Kikuchiyo is phenomenal. A popular actor in Kurosawa films such as “Drunken Angel”, “Stray Dog”, “Rashomon”, in “Seven Samurai”, Mifune masterfully plays the wannabe samurai Kikuchiyo who tries to convince everyone he is a samurai but his public display, awkward, weird, unusual, abrasive and crude at times, shows that he is a man with a kind heart and a man who wants to be with men like Kanbei and earn his respect as one of them. But no matter how unusual Kikuchiyo is….whether he is impulsive, talks a lot, laughs a lot and downright mouthy, this is a character who rises to the occasion. He is a man who does all he can to defend the farmers from the bandits, he is also a man that will earn the respect of his comrades.
Awesome performances by both men but also everyone in this film. The main characters to the supporting characters are well thought of, are well-utilized…and each talent and even the crew braved through cold weather, cold water and gave the best performance onscreen as Kurosawa demanded and expected the best and got the best performance out of them.
As mentioned, the film is 207 minutes long but by no means does the film make you want to look at the clock. I’ve seen long films before but with “Seven Samurai”, I was glued to my seat.
Film critic Roger Ebert wrote in his review of the film, “Akira Kurosawa’s ‘The Seven Samurai’ (1954) is not only a great film in its own right but the source of a genre that flowed through the rest of the century.” (from Roger Ebert, “The Great Movies”, pg. 400)
“Seven Samurai” is a wonderful triumph in cinema. Kurosawa’s wanting to create a jidaigeki samurai film but wanting to make it real, making it entertaining for the viewer that no matter how long the film is, the viewer is captivated. We know this war with the bandits is not going to go perfectly, some will live and some will die. We watch to see how well the plans of Kanbei are executed, how well prepared the farmers are in defending their home and we see how ruthless and cunning the bandits are and how they also have other weapons such as muskets and bows and arrows to their disposal.
Film critic Pauline Kael wrote about “Seven Samurai” (in her , “It is the Western form carried to apotheosis – a vast celebration of the joys and torments of fighting, seen in a new depth and scale, a brutal imaginative ballet on the nature of strength and weakness.” (from Pauline Kael, “For Keeps”, pg. 61)
“Seven Samurai” is a battle of underdogs vs. a large group of samurai-turned-bandits and we find ourselves supporting the seven samurai and the farmers in hoping they can become victorious? But with victory comes a price. But it’s not about just the battle, it’s about the relationships of each characters. The samurai who follow the Bushido way, the farmers who hire the samurai for protection but at the same time, have their own set secrets of what they have done to samurai in the past. The farmer who lives with revenge for the wife that was taken from him, the man who wants to be a samurai but sympathizes with the farmers for a reason. There is so many layers within this film, masterfully pieced together, amazing shots that Kurosawa is known for and like a maestro, manages to make the 207 minutes an incredible cinema experience. The word “masterpiece” can be a bit misused and even overused but there is no doubt, “Seven Samurai” is a Kurosawa masterpiece and a truly a magnificent film.
As for this Criterion Collection Blu-ray release of “Seven Samurai”, there will be some who may want to know if it’s worth it, especially after purchasing the magnificent 2006 DVD release. While not having any newer special features, you do get the best presentation of the film (and special features) in HD, as well as the two audio commentaries, the three lengthy special features that with special re-release and the booklet as well. This is truly the definitive version of “Seven Samurai”, a wonderful HD version of the film and if that matters to you, then “Seven Samurai” on Blu-ray is absolutely worth it.
“Seven Samurai” is Akira Kurosawa’s ultimate masterpiece that has been one of the highlight release for the Criterion Collection for more than a decade. It’s a film that many cinema fans have in their collection and if you are a cineaste is practically essential to have in your film collection. This Blu-ray release of “Seven Samurai” looks fantastic and is the definitive version to watch and own. Overall, with the film, commentary and lengthy special features, “Seven Samurai” on Blu-ray is a 5-star release and it receives our highest recommendation!

Seven Samurai – THE CRITERION COLLECTION #2: First Release (a J!-ENT DVD Review)
May 15, 1999 by Dennis Amith · Leave a Comment

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TITLE: Seven Samurai – THE CRITERION COLLECTION #2
MOVIE COMPANY: TOHO
CAST: Toshiro Mifune, Takashi Shimura, Keiko Tsushima, Yukiko Shimazaki, Kamatari Fujiwara, Daisuke Kato, Isao Kimura, Minoru Chiaki, Seiji Miyaguchi, Yoshio Kosugi, Bokuzen Hidari and Yoshio Inaba.
DIRECTED BY: Akira Kurosawa
PRODUCED BY: Sojiro Motoki
TYPE OF MOVIE: Drama, Action
DURATION: 207 minutes
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A desperate village hires seven samurai to protect it from marauders in this crown jewel of Japanese cinema. No other film so seamlessly weaves philosophy and entertainment, delicate human emotions and relentless action. Featuring Japan’s legendary star, the great Toshiro Mifune, Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai is an inspired epic, a triumph of art, and an unforgettable three-hour ride.
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DVD EXTRAS:
• Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
• Black & White
• Commentary by Japanese film expert Michael Jeck
• Original U.S. Theatrical Trailer
KNOWN DVD SECRET(S): None at this time
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NOTE: This review is for the first “Seven Samurai” DVD release from THE CRITERION COLLECTION from 1999. The company released a superior version featuring better picture quality back in 2006.
Seldom do I give a DVD or a movie a perfect rating but I’ve never felt so intense for a movie that just really hooked my attention as “Seven Samurai” did for me.
The legendary director from Japan, Akira Kurosawa really created a milestone in film history with “Seven Samurai” and even though it was released in 1954, it’s definitely a great film to keep your eyes on.
If you can just open your mind to a foreign film, a classic film made in the 50′s, a film that is not Widescreen (Akira Kurosawa went towards widescreen in the later 1950′s), you will love this movie.
It has love, action, intrigue…so much in three wonderful hours that will keep you hooked.
The video is black and white and Criterion did their best to make this in optimal image quality. The audio is mono but the sound and picture has been restored. For special features, the DVD comes with it’s original theatrical trailer and an interesting audio commentary by Japanese film expert Michael Jeck who seems to know a lot about the filming/lighting styles of Kurosawa.
This is one DVD that is a definite must buy in any movie watcher’s collection!
THE MOVIE: A+
THE DVD EXTRAS: A+
THE DVD OVERALL: A+




