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Ichi (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version) DVD Region 2

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Ichi (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Japan's most iconic samurai Zatoichi gets a whole new spin in the action-packed swordplay drama Ichi from award-winning Ping Pong director Sori Fumihiko. The pulp adventures of blind masseur and lethal swordsman Zatoichi were first made famous by Katsu Shintaro in a long-running film and television series from the 1960s to 80s, and Kitano Takeshi later portrayed the fictional samurai in his eponymous 2003 blockbuster. In 2008, the Zatoichi franchise is reimagined again, this time with a heroine in the leading role! Popular actress Ayase Haruka (Cyborg She), who won Best Actress at the 2008 Nikkan Sports Film Awards, stars as the female counterpart of Zatoichi - Ichi - a blind and world-weary loner swordswoman with superior fighting skills. The film co-stars top actors Osawa Takao (Midnight Eagle), Kubozuka Yosuke (Ping Pong), and Nakamura Shido (Letters from Iwo Jima), in a charismatically over-the-top performance as the villain. Though featuring a female in the leading role, Ichi is very much cut in the vein of classic samurai actioners, with archetypal characters, stunning photography, and intense, elegant swordplay action choreographed by Kuze Hiroshi (Ran, Twilight Samurai).

Blind and beautiful traveling singer Ichi (Ayase Haruka) has been wandering the country searching for her teacher, a blind masseur who taught her the way of the sword when she was a child. She reluctantly gains a traveling companion when kind-hearted samurai Toma (Osawa Takao) tries to save her from a group of thugs, and ends up needing to being saved himself. After Ichi dispels the thugs with a flash of the sword hidden in her walking stick, the two roll into a village being terrorized by a gang led by the ruthless Banki (Nakamura Shido). Though Ichi isn't interested in fighting, she soon gets pulled into the lethal battle between good and evil.

© 2009 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Technical Information

Product Title: Ichi (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version) Ichi (DVD) (英國版) Ichi (DVD) (英国版) Ichi (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version) Ichi (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version)
Artist Name(s): Sugimoto Tetta | Takeuchi Riki | Osawa Takao | Kubozuka Yosuke | Emoto Akira | Ayase Haruka (Actor) | Nakamura Shido 杉本哲太 | 竹內力 | 大澤隆夫 | 窪塚洋介 | 柄本明 | 綾瀨遙 (Actor) | 中村獅童 杉本哲太 | 竹内力 | 大泽隆夫 | 洼冢洋介 | 柄本明 | 绫濑遥 (Actor) | Nakamura Shido 杉本哲太 | 竹内力 | 大沢たかお | 窪塚洋介 | 柄本明 | 綾瀬はるか (Actor) | 中村獅童 Sugimoto Tetta | Takeuchi Riki | Osawa Takao | Kubozuka Yosuke | Emoto Akira | Ayase Haruka (Actor) | Nakamura Shido
Director: Sori Fumihiko Sori Fumihiko Sori Fumihiko 曽利文彦 Sori Fumihiko
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Release Date: 2009-08-31
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: PAL What is it?
Aspect Ratio: Widescreen, 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it?
Duration: 116 (mins)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1021223724

Product Information

Director:Fumihiko Sori
Cast: Haruka Ayase
Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Ichi (DVD) (English Subtitled) (UK Version)"

August 24, 2009

This professional review refers to Ichi (Blu-ray) (English Subtitled) (UK Version)
Ichi has an interesting premise, being a reimagining of the enduringly popular Japanese tale of Zatoichi, the blind masseur and master swordsman, who was previously the subject of a long-running film and television series from the 1960s to 80s, and the 2003 blockbuster from Kitano Takeshi. Here, Vexille and Ping Pong director Sori Fumihiko adds a twist by recasting the protagonist as a young woman, played by gorgeous actress Ayase Haruka (recently in Cyborg She). The film boasts an impressive samurai pedigree thanks to the presence of fight choreographer Kuze Hiroshi, who worked on several Akira Kurosawa epics, including Ran as well as Yamada Yoji's masterpiece The Twilight Samurai.

The plot finds Ayase Haruka as the titular blind swordswoman wandering the countryside in search of the blind man who trained her as a child before disappearing, frequently having to cut down rogues who mistakenly assume that her lack of sight will make her an easy target. During an encounter with one such bandit gang, she meets a fellow wanderer called Toma (played by Osawa Takao, also in Sky High and Midnight Eagle), who tries to protect her despite his lack of sword fighting skills. Ichi wipes out the thugs and saves Toma, inadvertently drawing the attention of their leader, the disfigured Banki (Nakamura Shido, recently in Clint Eastwood's Letters from Iwo Jima). As a result, Ichi and Toma are drawn into the struggle between the bandit gang and a local village, made all the more complicated when it emerges that Banki may know the man that she is looking for.

What is most surprising about Ichi is the fact that despite its potentially revisionist premise, the film sticks very closely to the traditional Zatoichi and samurai formula, with the plot being a very basic and predictable, protect the village and hero's journey style affair. Indeed, the fact that the main character is played by a woman is really neither here nor there, and Ichi's femininity never plays a significant part, either narratively or thematically. Strangely, the film is arguably about Toma as much as Ichi, being equally, if not more concerned with his development from a coward comically unable to draw his sword (an odd conceit which results in several scenes of presumably unintentional amusement) into a fully fledged hero. Ichi herself remains a somewhat more distant figure, and although she does develop somewhat on her quest to find the man who may or may not be her father, director Sori seems oddly less interested in her as a character. Thankfully, Ayase Haruka turns in an excellent performance as the blind swordswoman, adding a layer of vulnerability beneath her impressive killing skills, and bringing depth to what might otherwise have been a one-note role, deservedly winning Best Actress at the 2008 Nikkan Sports Film Awards for her efforts. She manages to give the film a solid emotional core, and although Ichi's romance with Toma never really comes off, the film is moving enough in its own wistful way.

Visually, the film is gorgeous, with Sori making the very most out of the beautiful countryside and bleak snowy mountains. The production values were obviously high, and the film has a handsome look and convincing eye for period detail. There is enough action to keep things moving along at a good pace, with the choreography from Kuze Hiroshi being quite breathtaking in places. Certainly, the film is one of the few to make genuinely good use of slow motion, with Kuze managing to add a real sense of grace and beauty to Ichi's movements during combat scenes without over-stylising the action. As a result, the battles are exciting and occasionally stunning, helped by less of a reliance on fake looking CGI blood than in other recent genre efforts.

Certainly, Ichi is one of the better Japanese period set action films of recent years, and is an entertaining and worthy new entry in the Zatoichi series. Although more could perhaps have been done with the protagonist being a woman, it is hard to complain given the quality of Ayase Haruka's performance, and the fact that she looks stunning throughout despite her character being dressed in rags and presumably having no access to modern makeup or hair care products.

by James Mudge -BeyondHollywood.com

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.
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