VALUTAZIONE IMDb
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LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaZatoichi promises to deliver a maiden safely home but finds two dangerous gangs have a mysterious interest in the young girl.Zatoichi promises to deliver a maiden safely home but finds two dangerous gangs have a mysterious interest in the young girl.Zatoichi promises to deliver a maiden safely home but finds two dangerous gangs have a mysterious interest in the young girl.
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Recensioni in evidenza
A Perfectly Entertaining Chapter, if Not a Very Consequential One
Further episodic adventures through the dark corners and seedy streets of feudal Japan with the jolly, opportunistic blind samurai. In this installment, Zatoichi runs afoul of a conniving widow, escorts a wealthy heiress home from danger and, once again, gets caught up in the middle of a large-scale conflict between bickering gangs. Just another day at the office for Ichi, who's perfectly willing to go with the flow so long as he finishes the day with a full belly and a roof over his head.
After five adventures, I've begun to recognize the character's favorite, and most reliable, tricks. Joking and groveling, downplaying his own capabilities to remain incognito and catch future opponents unaware. Leaning on his expertise as a masseuse (a job which was forbidden to sighted people at the time) to access private rooms and important people, skirting the muscle of an organization to slash directly at its head. Wolfing down his food and constantly talking with his mouth full... actually, I haven't quite worked out why he does that yet. He's also prone to falling in love with the women under his protection, as is the case with this episode's distressed damsel. Or maybe that's just another of his manipulations, meant to inspire loyalty and obedience when necessary. If so, it serves to save both parties' lives when they're caught in a surprise attack and the slightest hesitation could have been lethal.
In the big picture, On the Road isn't the most meaningful of our hero's adventures. He re-treads some familiar thematic terrain, continues his transition from smaller-scale duels to big group battles, slices up the most deserving bad guys and satisfies his moral code before wandering out of town, unscathed, to darken new horizons. It's an entertaining entry, though, nicely paced and exciting, with a number of well-conceived scenes and overlapped subplots competing for his/our attention. As these Zatoichi pictures go, such attributes can't always be taken for granted.
After five adventures, I've begun to recognize the character's favorite, and most reliable, tricks. Joking and groveling, downplaying his own capabilities to remain incognito and catch future opponents unaware. Leaning on his expertise as a masseuse (a job which was forbidden to sighted people at the time) to access private rooms and important people, skirting the muscle of an organization to slash directly at its head. Wolfing down his food and constantly talking with his mouth full... actually, I haven't quite worked out why he does that yet. He's also prone to falling in love with the women under his protection, as is the case with this episode's distressed damsel. Or maybe that's just another of his manipulations, meant to inspire loyalty and obedience when necessary. If so, it serves to save both parties' lives when they're caught in a surprise attack and the slightest hesitation could have been lethal.
In the big picture, On the Road isn't the most meaningful of our hero's adventures. He re-treads some familiar thematic terrain, continues his transition from smaller-scale duels to big group battles, slices up the most deserving bad guys and satisfies his moral code before wandering out of town, unscathed, to darken new horizons. It's an entertaining entry, though, nicely paced and exciting, with a number of well-conceived scenes and overlapped subplots competing for his/our attention. As these Zatoichi pictures go, such attributes can't always be taken for granted.
Chivalry is tested
When Zatoichi accidentally met an unknown dying man, who asked him to save an unknown maiden, he felt obligated. He didn't even have to promise. Time and again, he did everything in his power to save the maiden in several occassions. But when he took side on a feudal quarrel, he found himself choosing between which one to honor better: The request of a dying man or the contract he made with one of the gang leaders. You've guessed what he opted. Modern gangsters may have a different code of ethics.
Zatoichi on the Road delivers everything you want in a Zatoichi film
I recently rewatched Zatoichi on the Road (1963) on a random streaming site. The storyline follows Zatoichi as he helps a woman return home while constantly fending off rival gangs. But why do these gangs want her so badly?
This picture is directed by Yasuda Kimiyoshi (Zatoichi and the One-Armed Swordsman) and stars Shintarô Katsu (Hanzo the Razor), Shiho Fujimura (The Snow Woman), and Yoshio Yoshida (Gamera: The Giant Monster).
This is prime Shintarô Katsu-classic Zatoichi filled with romance, rich cultural detail, and elite action choreography, all delivered with the unique twist of a blind clumsy swordsman at the center of it. The action feels smooth without ever actually being smooth.
The acting is outstanding. While you show up for Katsu's action scenes, his charm, mannerisms, and comedic timing are on a level comparable to Toshiro Mifune. There's a massage scene that had me laughing out loud, along with the line: "He has something to show this blind man, he said. I'd like to see that." 😂
The finale is classic Zatoichi-a full town showdown reminiscent of the Westerns of the era, with the heroes and villains facing off from opposite ends of the street. The large-scale fight is incredible: Zatoichi even delivers his classic pause to drink a glass of water mid-battle while fighting what feels like an entire village. It's huge, over-the-top, a bit unbelievable-and absolutely fantastic.
In conclusion, Zatoichi on the Road delivers everything you want in a Zatoichi film. He's practically the samurai version of James Bond at times. I'd give this a 7/10 and recommend it to any fan of the series or genre.
This picture is directed by Yasuda Kimiyoshi (Zatoichi and the One-Armed Swordsman) and stars Shintarô Katsu (Hanzo the Razor), Shiho Fujimura (The Snow Woman), and Yoshio Yoshida (Gamera: The Giant Monster).
This is prime Shintarô Katsu-classic Zatoichi filled with romance, rich cultural detail, and elite action choreography, all delivered with the unique twist of a blind clumsy swordsman at the center of it. The action feels smooth without ever actually being smooth.
The acting is outstanding. While you show up for Katsu's action scenes, his charm, mannerisms, and comedic timing are on a level comparable to Toshiro Mifune. There's a massage scene that had me laughing out loud, along with the line: "He has something to show this blind man, he said. I'd like to see that." 😂
The finale is classic Zatoichi-a full town showdown reminiscent of the Westerns of the era, with the heroes and villains facing off from opposite ends of the street. The large-scale fight is incredible: Zatoichi even delivers his classic pause to drink a glass of water mid-battle while fighting what feels like an entire village. It's huge, over-the-top, a bit unbelievable-and absolutely fantastic.
In conclusion, Zatoichi on the Road delivers everything you want in a Zatoichi film. He's practically the samurai version of James Bond at times. I'd give this a 7/10 and recommend it to any fan of the series or genre.
Darkness is the ally of the blind swordman
The following review is an extract from the book "Shintaro Katsu´s Zatoichi: Complete guide to all movies", which is now available on Amazon.
"At the beginning of this film, as a filmic preface, we see how Ichi plays a game of dice (or something similar) with a small group of dishonest opponents. The latter, despite having lost, are not willing to accept defeat, but before they can react, Zatoichi makes them reluctant to even try any hostility against him. With a lightning fast movement of his shikomizue, he cuts a candle that illuminated the room vertically, leaving his opponents astonished, and leaving the room shortly afterwards in the dark (and therefore in relative equality of conditions with others who are able to see). "Darkness is my ally..." says Zatoichi again sheathing his sword in the reed.
The massive duel between the two groups of yakuza recalls by its atmosphere and stylistic characteristics the great Italo-westerns, where a solitary gunman (like Clint Eastwood in Sergio Leone's "Dollar trilogy") must face several enemies at the same time. Leone and other western masters were profusely inspired by the Japanese chambara. The equivalence and parallels between samurais or ronins and solitary cowboys or outlaws are undeniable."
"At the beginning of this film, as a filmic preface, we see how Ichi plays a game of dice (or something similar) with a small group of dishonest opponents. The latter, despite having lost, are not willing to accept defeat, but before they can react, Zatoichi makes them reluctant to even try any hostility against him. With a lightning fast movement of his shikomizue, he cuts a candle that illuminated the room vertically, leaving his opponents astonished, and leaving the room shortly afterwards in the dark (and therefore in relative equality of conditions with others who are able to see). "Darkness is my ally..." says Zatoichi again sheathing his sword in the reed.
The massive duel between the two groups of yakuza recalls by its atmosphere and stylistic characteristics the great Italo-westerns, where a solitary gunman (like Clint Eastwood in Sergio Leone's "Dollar trilogy") must face several enemies at the same time. Leone and other western masters were profusely inspired by the Japanese chambara. The equivalence and parallels between samurais or ronins and solitary cowboys or outlaws are undeniable."
Masterful samurai among the masterless (those hapless choppers who should have remained so)
Fierce fighter, but humble, deferential to a fault, carefully rewards goodness only when he cannot be thanked, protective of innocents --- much like our finest cowboy heroes (Shane, Coop in Noon, Clint).
My wife likes The Shield for the same reasons she likes Hollywood's version of Cosa Nostra: protect the innocent, swiftly and without recourse punish the guilty.
If Michael Corleone ran the justice system, would O.J. be playing golf? Would the beaten, threatened common-law wife be turned away from the police station with "until he actually kills you, the ACLU won't allow us to do anything?"
Just saw the first sequel episode, #2. The print I found appears to be a crude chop job by Janus Films, that marketer having rudely hacked off the correct ending.
My wife likes The Shield for the same reasons she likes Hollywood's version of Cosa Nostra: protect the innocent, swiftly and without recourse punish the guilty.
If Michael Corleone ran the justice system, would O.J. be playing golf? Would the beaten, threatened common-law wife be turned away from the police station with "until he actually kills you, the ACLU won't allow us to do anything?"
Just saw the first sequel episode, #2. The print I found appears to be a crude chop job by Janus Films, that marketer having rudely hacked off the correct ending.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizZatoichi's katana is a shikomizue. This is a sword which is concealed within a wooden cane, thus the cane itself is both handle and scabbard.
- BlooperThe string attached to the dragonfly is visible as it lands on a bush next to Zatoichi and Mitsu, who are being attacked, and also when it returns after the fight.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Best in Action: 1963 (2019)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Zatoichi on the Road
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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