La Servante et le samouraï

  • anglais The Hidden Blade (plus)
Bande-annonce 2

Résumés(1)

A l'aube de la Restauration de l'empereur Meiji, un samouraï de basse caste, Munezo Katagiri, secrètement amoureux de la servante Kie, se trouve pris dans les luttes politiques entre clans. On lui ordonne de tuer son ancien ami Hazama, condamné à la suite d'un complot qui a ébranlé le clan. Il est écartelé entre son devoir, son amour impossible pour Kie, d'une caste inférieure, et la fidélité à son compagnon de sabre... (texte officiel du distributeur)

(plus)

Vidéo (2)

Bande-annonce 2

Critiques (1)

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A slower and artistically crafted look at the vanishing samurai community during the reforms and modernization in the second half of the 19th century in the Japanese empire. Yamada avoids the usual mythology surrounding samurais and their art of wielding a sword. Thus, viewers expecting fierce battles and dozens of villains slain by the hero's weapon will be disappointed, as the director instead offers a tragically resonant duel, portrayed realistically. It is more of an ideological conflict between characters that characterize Japanese society of their time. Firearms are clearly infiltrating the weaponry of Japanese units, and despite the conservative resistance of feudal elites, it is clear that the era of samurais is coming to an end. I was slightly bothered by the nature of the main protagonist, who, with his naivety and honesty, somewhat resembled Lemonade Joe. His conversation with the province administrator revealed the boundary where principles turn into impractical foolishness. Overall impression: 65%. With a faster pace and "more European" acting, it would have gotten a stronger 4 stars. ()

Photos (21)