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Berlin 2003
The Twilight Samurai
directed by Yoji Yamada
by Carlos Augusto Brandao
 Yoji
Yamada is certainly one of the best known filmmakers of Japan: he has
made something like eighty films, almost all features, including the extremely
popular series Tora-san, about a bad luck peddler that could never get
the girl he wanted. But no one would guess that this conservative, rather
self-assured Japanese helmer would he responsible for the most peckinpah-ish
film ever made West of Hollywood.
As we well know, Sam Peckinpah almost always made a point
out of championing the underdog, that guy that couldn't fit in a changing
world, a universe where he had grown and used to survive safely. In so
many ways, Yamada's Samurai is a brother-in-fate of Joel Mc Crea and Randolph
Scott as the aging gunfighters of Ride the High Country and of Bill Holden
and his Wild Bunch.
 Saibei
Iguchi (Hiroyuki Sanada) is a low-ranking samurai at the time those swords-for-rent
were disappearing from the Japanese culture, pressed by the political
and social changes that transformed the ancient clan-structured Japanese
society into a pre-modern state. But Iguchi didn't seem to be bothered
by the surmounting tide: he was a trained fighter whose nature was contrary
to fighting and killing. Much to the the contrary, he was a pacifist and
an early days feminist that used to pass to his two infant daughters the
notion that, as important as learning how to saw and cook — as was
expected of every educated Japanese girl — it was also important
to learn Confucius and poetry. One day, after defending his childhood
love from her abusive ex--husband, a strong and famous samurai, he was
challenged for a duel. Fighting with a wooden stick and using martial
techniques he had learned from an old master, he beated the living manure
out the bully, who never knew what had hit him. His fame spread and soon
he was forced by his clan to fight the most dangerous samurai of the region,
who was challenging the orders of the local warlord. Reluctantly, he obeyed
the superior orders of the clan's council and outlived a final sword battle
with his deadly opponent.
Again, like Peckinpah's heroes, the Twilight Samurai (the
title is, again, an obvious reference to Peckinpah's characters, unfit
to the changing times they lived), Iguchi had a short lived victory: just
like the doomed western gunslingers, Iguchi died soon after his sword
victories, shot in a battle between clans, in the Meijin war that ended
by unifying Japan under one ruler and opened a new era for the country.
Times had definitely changed and there was no place for him anymore.
Masterly edited, with direct and blunt dialogues mixed with
Japanese philosophical sentences and a very sensible performance by charismatic
Hiroyuki Sanada as the doomed samurai, this is a good film that should
be seen.
Mc Crea, Scott, Holden and Borgnine couldn't do any better,
as Sam Peckinpah very well knew. All of them would like this picture,
that's for sure.
Carlos Augusto Brandao
© FIPRESCI 2003
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