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SF: Episode One
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SF: Episode One (1998) More at IMDbPro »

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SF: Episode One (1998) -- Open-ended Trailer from Tokyo Shock

Overview

User Rating:
7.2/10   1,602 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 21% in popularity this week. See rank & trends on IMDbPro.
Director:
Hiroyuki Nakano
Writers:
Hiroyuki Nakano (writer)
Hiroshi Saito (writer)
Contact:
View company contact information for Samurai Fiction on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
1 August 1998 (Japan) more
Plot:
Three centuries ago, a precious sword has been stolen by Kazamatsuri -- the sword, which historic and... more | full synopsis
Plot Keywords:
more
Awards:
4 wins & 2 nominations more
User Comments:
"You have mastered fencing, but not the samurai spirit" more

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)
Morio Kazama ... Hanbei Mizoguchi
Mitsuru Fukikoshi ... Heishiro Inukai
Tomoyasu Hotei ... Rannosuke Kazamatsuri
Tamaki Ogawa ... Koharu Mizoguchi
Mari Natsuki ... Okatsu
Taketoshi Naitô ... Kanzen Inukai (as Taketoshi Naitoh)
Kei Tani ... Kagemaru
Fumiya Fujii ... Ryunosuke Kuzumi
Naoyuki Fujii ... Shintarô Suzuki
Ken Osawa ... Tadasuke Kurosawa
Hiroshi Kanbe ... Gosuke
Ryoichi Yuki ... Ninja Hayabusa
Akiko Monou ... Ninja Akakage
Taro Maruse ... Sakyounosuke Kajii
Yuji Nakamura ... Samejima
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
SF: Episode One - Samurai Fiction (closing credits title)
Samurai Fiction (USA)
more
Runtime:
111 min
Country:
Japan
Language:
Japanese

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
The sword that is stolen in this film was borrowed from the estate of 'Toshiro Mifune'. It was one of his personal swords. more
Quotes:
Okatsu: I'm a woman who's killed all manner of men. Even trumped up little samurai like you! No stray dog is going to give me any cheek!
Rannosuke Kazamatsuri: How did it come to this?
Okatsu: Aaaaaiiiiieeeeee!
more
Movie Connections:
References Pulp Fiction (1994) more
Soundtrack:
Swanee River more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful:-
"You have mastered fencing, but not the samurai spirit", 25 August 2008
8/10
Author: chaos-rampant from Greece

I think the title of this review sums up SAMURAI FICTION. It doesn't approach the heart of samurai cinema (and I doubt that was among its intentions) but it transforms the form in new and interesting ways.

Whether or not the title is a direct reference to PULP FICTION, the fact remains that SAMURAI FICTION tries to be the same hip, cool and stylish update of the classic chambara genre that Tarantino's movie was for the gangster genre. Whether or not it succeeds or that it's SF's intention for that matter is up for debate and down to personal taste I guess, but either way SF is every bit the fresh breath the stagnant genre is in desperate need of for years now.

As a big fan of both chambaras and jidai-gekis I find myself torn between my purist self that wants to dismiss SF as having only a cursory resemblance of the genre and being too cool and slick for its own good, and my escapist self that enjoys kicking back with an unashamedly entertaining movie. The truth of the matter is that chambara has always been a dynamic genre, one that evolves in cycles that begin with movies that venture outside the mold: movies like SF. YOJIMBO in the early 60's made the traditional period dramas of the 50's obsolete overnight. Ditto for Kenji Misumi's LONE WOLF AND CUB in the early 70's. Even if SF didn't have the same power to motivate change in the genre, I applaud it for trying.

SF is very open about what it is and what it's not from the credits sequence alone. Dark silhouettes practicing fencing in front of red-lit screens. I wouldn't be surprised if Tarantino lifted the sequence verbatim for KILL BILL vol. 1, he has that "homage" tendency after all. It is with this heavy stylization that SF opens and our genre expectations are instantly shifted to this conscious capsule where the samurai style meets a western form.

The rest of the movie plays on this same motif. A traditionally eastern genre delivered with a very western approach. Whole sequences and all the swordfights are edited like a music video, from the tight editing to the music to the frequent use of wide angle lenses and effect shots to the actual music that is as far removed from Toru Takemitsu and his scores for Kobayashi and Shinoda as one could imagine.

SF is content to take risks but they don't always pay off. The misuse of music is enough to give Dario Argento's choice of Motorhead for the soundtrack of PHENOMENA (a horror movie) a run for his money. Techno beats, heavy metal guitars and double-bass drumming are all mixed in a hodge podge of western sounds adding to the anachronism SF aims for. It's not out of purism that I didn't like them, they just didn't feel appropriate for the mood and scene although the music video-ish editing did its best to accommodate them. However the black and white photography is solid good work, the acting is nice and the comedic timing spot on. SF balances neatly on both the serious and comic with an emphasis on the latter but it works quite well on both fronts. Add to that the good swordfighting and the fact it manages to pull off the "hip" style relatively well without feeling phony and you've got a quite good neo-chambara that deserves major points for at least trying to push the envelope of a stagnant genre in different ways.

Ever since the late 70's samurai cinema has hit a dead end and various attempts at cross-genre mixes tried to revitalize it to no avail. Maybe the halcyon days of the 60's are over and the chambara genre is a thing of the past as much as the American western, with the only option left being revisionism (which has also been done to death – I guess re-revisionism is due next). Maybe it will take another YOJIMBO to pull it off its legs and usher it in a new direction. SF is not quite the genre messiah and frankly I can see fans of Tarantino and Guy Ritchie enjoying it more than Mizoguchi loyalists but it's perhaps the best entry point to the genre for modern audiences with no prior experience (especially for young people who usually gravitate to the "cool" and "hip") . That's a success in itself.

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