Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yes, making English plurals from other languages is fraught with difficulties. In fact, there are no plurals in Japanese!Lol. In all seriousness both are used as plurals but the formal is "Samurai", because thr original word "Saburai" was plural, meaning "those who serve the nobles".
Why?Hijikata Toshizo, Shinsengumi Vice Commander
Because of his dedication, perseverance courage, and skill. He fought to the end when all was lost, never losing his loyalty to his cause or his lord. The Shinsengumi were a brutal lot, but they also had a strict rule. Those who violated it were expected to commit seppuku. Their reputation was more tarnished by one of their members who was a violent drunk, who raped and murdered repeatedly. Most members I think really just wanted to be samurai, protect the shogun, and be a part of the movement to cast out the barbarians. Hijikata was a true upholder of Bushido, a leader, and actually came from a peasant background.Why?
I once made a little pilgrimage to Takamoriās statue in Ueno Park. Interestingly, he only had a little dogā¦
Ken Watanabe is a Scientologist?
I believe āThe Last Samuraiā is often criticised for being a copy of āDances with Wolvesā.
Nothing says Christmas more than a Samurai film.Depending on whose metrics you go by, thereās anywhere from seven to thirty plus narrative plots for film, and thatās it.
I usually spend a day between Christmas and New Year with a fridge full of good snacks, a fattie and a pot of tea or coffee, and watch a bunch of my favorite movies.
Amongst them are The Last Samurai and Dances With Wolves.
Nothing says Christmas more than a Samurai film.
Fictional?Who is everyone's favorite Samurai both historical and fictional?
I've never seen it but will have to look into it now.Thatās a good reason.
Iām somewhat conflicted by the Shisengumi. They were essentially the equivalent of luddites and many historians viewed them as ācold-blooded assassins who killed anyone who called for the end of the Shogunateā. They wanted to preserve the status quo of the bafuku with all itās inequalities and suppressive attitudes. The world was modernising and Japan would have to do the same. On the other hand, feudal Japan, especially pax Tokugawa, saw the flourishing of the arts to a pinnacle of magnificence unequalled anywhere else in the world and Commodore Perry and his push to open up trade brought the end of the magnificent samurai!
Have you seen the NHK Taiga drama āRyomadenā? It gives an excellent and nuanced version of what happened during the Meiji restoration.
Thereās a new(ish) independent samurai film thatās becoming huge in Japan called, āA Samurai in Timeā.A few of us young guys from the dojo would drive into Hollywood/Downtown area to the Toho La Brea Theater and watch Akira Kurosawa's Samurai movies with Toshiro Mifune and other long, moody, black and white movies with bursts of spurting blood and flying limbs. The drive back to the Valley was different than the way there. We were transformed into teenage Samurai. Even today, Japanese movies (and TV) are different than American. They focus on other things in both story and film technique.
I hate how Yoshikawaās version of Musashi has distorted the real person (as we know him) to the extent that the public donāt really know how amazing the real Musashi was. I refused to read the books or watch the many film adaptations after trying portions of them and tasting vomit in my mouth. Itās like āShakespeare in Loveā compared to the real William! Perhaps Iām being too pompousā¦Fictional?
Inoue and Yoshikawa's "Miyamoto Musashi"
I sometimes think Kurosawaās film ends are weak. Kagemusha is a great example of that. No car chases either.Gintoki Sakata (from Gintama)
Whatever samurai Mifune was, in any of Kurosawa's films
Good choices! I visited to Reigando a few years agoā¦a wonderful and surprisingly moving experience.Real?
Miyamoto Musashi
SaigÅ Takamori
I intend to visit there eventually. Not sure how I'll react, but I imagine it would certainly impact me.I visited to Reigando a few years agoā¦a wonderful and surprisingly moving experience.
We got there early so we had the whole place to ourselves. The sun was shining and the sky was crystal clear. Outside the entrance thereās a large rock with a bottom-sized indentation that I assume Musashi himself sat in to meditate or look over the trees in the distance. I was happy to discover we had similar sized buttocks!I intend to visit there eventually. Not sure how I'll react, but I imagine it would certainly impact me.
Going āoff the beaten trackā in Japan is very rewarding and, in my opinion, better than visiting the various huge metropolesā¦which brings me to my favourite samurai/clanā¦. Yagyu Munenori et al.There are a few places in Kyushu specifically I'd also like to visit, as I've only ever travelled around Honshu and the furthest West I've been is probably Osaka.
Thereās a new(ish) independent samurai film thatās becoming huge in Japan called, āA Samurai in Timeā.
Apparently samurai film viewing is on the decline but āA Samurai in Timeā is hugely popular, not least because itās a bit lighter and has humours done time travel! The old period films were very heavy and sometimes overly sentimental. I bought a few from Samurai DVD and I find them a struggle to get through in one sitting. Kurosawa could done with a little time travel in his epics!
The best stories incorporate time travel and a samurai character is like melted cheese; it improves anything to which itās added!Oh, my lord, I love time travel movies and I love Samurai movies. I have to see this.