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Legend of the Eight Samurai (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3

Yakushimaru Hiroko (Actor) | Chiba Shinichi (Actor) | Sanada Hiroyuki (Actor) | Kyomoto Masaki (Actor)
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Legend of the Eight Samurai (Hong Kong Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

The legendary director of Battle Royale and countless yakuza classics, Fukasaku Kinji reinvented the period genre in 1983 with Legend of the Eight Samurai. Both fabulously epic and colorfully campy, this sweeping period fantasy was very popular in Japan and has long been a cult hit in the West. Adapted from the 19th-century anthology Satomi Hakken-Den, the film stars 80s idol Yakushimaru Hiroko (Sailor Suit and Machine Gun), a young and agile Sanada Hiroyuki (The Twilight Samurai), and the iconic Sonny Chiba. The sprawling action, over-the-top story, dazzling sets, and cheesy special effects make the film an instant 80s classic. Not to mention giant centipedes, evil flying snakes, eyeball-eating witches, and murderous vixens bathing in blood.

Cursed by vengeful spirits, the Satomi clan is brutally wiped out by evil demons, leaving only young Princess Shizu (Yakushimaru Hiroko) to fight the curse. She is saved by monk Inumura Dosetsu (Sonny Chiba), who tells her about the legend of eight warriors destined to protect the last Satomi clan member. To defeat the evil forces that hunt her day and night, Shizu sets out to find the eight warriors, and she soon meets her first protector in the unlikely form of reckless would-be samurai Shinbei (Sanada Hiroyuki). Shizu and Shinbei journey together to seek out the other warriors, growing rather close in the process, but they have plenty of demon company.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Legend of the Eight Samurai (Hong Kong Version) 里見八犬傳 (香港版) 里见八犬传 (香港版) 里見八犬伝 (香港版) Legend of the Eight Samurai (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Yakushimaru Hiroko (Actor) | Chiba Shinichi (Actor) | Sanada Hiroyuki (Actor) | Kyomoto Masaki (Actor) 藥師丸博子 (Actor) | 千葉真一 (Actor) | 真田廣之 (Actor) | 京本政樹 (Actor) 药师丸博子 (Actor) | 千叶真一 (Actor) | 真田广之 (Actor) | 京本政树 (Actor) 薬師丸ひろ子 (Actor) | 千葉真一 (Actor) | 真田広之 (Actor) | 京本政樹 (Actor) Yakushimaru Hiroko (Actor) | Chiba Shinichi (Actor) | Sanada Hiroyuki (Actor) | Kyomoto Masaki (Actor)
Director: Fukada Kinji 深田欣二 深田欣二 Fukada Kinji Fukada Kinji
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Release Date: 2007-03-27
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 3 - South East Asia (including Hong Kong, S. Korea and Taiwan) What is it?
Duration: 136 (mins)
Publisher: Intercontinental Video (HK)
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004691357

Product Information

* Screen Format: 16:9 Anamorphic Widescreen
* Special Features:
- 原裝電影預告片

導演︰深田欣二
Director : Fukada Kinji

*創日本票房賣座23.1億日圓佳績!
*已故大導演深田欣二名利雙收鉅作!
*英文版百萬主題曲暢銷百萬,歷久彌新!

  使用惡靈成為不死之身的妖怪玉梓,因抱著懷恨曾經里見家征伐的心,攻入了館山城。里見一族全都被虐殺,只剩下靜公主一人殘活下來,在公主身上擁有八個靈蛋,而靈蛋上分別刻有仁、忠、義、禮、孝、信、智、梯等名字,拿著靈蛋集合八犬勇士,一起朝妖怪軍團的巢穴進攻。在激烈的戰鬥中,一個一個地喪命的八犬,最後只剩下八犬中的親兵衛和靜公主用最後的力量跟玉梓對抗。

原作︰鎌田敏夫
腳本︰鎌田敏夫、深田欣二

In Japan's mythical past, Princess Shizu (Hiroko Yakushimaru), whose clan is cursed by evil, is hunted by demons and the samurai armies they command, leaving a trail of death behind them. With two warriors destined to aid her, she begins a search for six more so that together they may destroy the curse and free the land of evil.
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Professional Review of "Legend of the Eight Samurai (Hong Kong Version)"

April 30, 2007

Kadokawa Films was the Japanese equivalent of Jerry Bruckheimer Films during the late seventies and eighties. With a successful formula that teamed talented filmmakers with pretty young idols, Kadokawa Film ruled the Japanese box office and popular culture throughout the period. One of the most successful "Kadokawa Idols" was Hiroko Yakushimaru, who found fame with the 1981 classic Sailor Suit and Machine Gun and has remained active in the film industry since then. The 1983 fantasy extravaganza The Legend of Eight Samurai was not only made at the height of Yakushimaru's popularity, but was also one of the biggest productions of the Kadokawa era. Is this 24-year-old film equally spectacular today, or has it shown its age in the modern era of CGI?

Based on a novel by Toshio Kamata that retells a well-known classic tale, the film stars Yakushimaru as Princess Shizu, whose family has just been killed by a vengeful rival clan. On the run from their killers, led by evil monster/human-hybrid Tamazusa (a young Mari Natsuki), Princess Shizu is helped by two warriors. One of them, Dosetsu (Sonny Chiba), tells Shizu that they are two of eight warriors dictated by an ancient legend involving a dog to help her defeat the evil clan. United by eight pearls, the warriors come from different walks of life, from sworn enemies to assassins to even children. In the midst of it all is Shinbei (Hiroyuki Sanada before international stardom), a wanderer who initially captures Shizu to cash in on the reward, but ends up becoming her protector against the evil samurais. Meanwhile, Tamazusa uses all kinds of way to stop Shizu from finding all eight pearls, from flying centipedes to humanoids with poisonous breath. No kidding.

The man responsible for all this craziness is none other than legendary director Kinji Fukasaku, known for his Yakuza Papers series and the controversial Battle Royale. Fully intending to make a commercial blockbuster, Fukasaku pulls out all the stops, including elaborate special affects and expensive, giant sets that shot the budget to 1 billion yen - a number that's considered fairly high, even by today's standards. For 1983, the amount of special effects involved was probably considered groundbreaking. Unfortunately, thanks to the rapid advances in cinema technology, a giant flying snake made with rubber probably no longer carries the same appeal it once did. The amount of imagination that went into this film is certainly something to appreciate, but watching it today means having to overlook a lot of effects that could understandably be dismissed as cheesy.

Of course, overlooking the cheesy effects would be easy if The Legend of Eight Samurai still succeeds as an entertaining escapist fantasy. In many ways, it does; despite running a long 138 minutes, the film entertains thanks to the sheer amount of absurd plot elements and fun fight scenes. However, the whole thing never coheres into a complete story. Written by Fukasaku and Kamata, the film opens after everything that should have set up the story has already happened. Tamazusa has already taken over the castle, and Shizu is already on the run. Despite retelling a familiar ancient tale (and considering that one of the warriors carries a gun-like weapon, it's obviously a pretty loose retelling), Fukasaku fails to set up a story, making the absurdities even harder to swallow. Another problem lies in the setup itself: since the characters spend most of the film searching for the owners of the other six pearls, Fukasaku literally runs out of time to develop these characters through anything beyond coincidental circumstance. For instance, when Shizu is reunited with her team of protectors after being captured by Shinbei, two new warriors have already joined them from out of nowhere. By the time the climactic battle happens, the team lacks the bond that the audience needs to connect with the good guys. We end up rooting for the eight warriors only because the bad guys dispatch scary rubber snakes. As a result, the battle plays out more like the final stage of a video game without nearly enough emotions invested into the warriors.

The problem of telling a classic tale without properly setting up the plot is that it immediately loses international appeal because of a lack of context. Yet, The Legend of Eight Samurai seemed designed for an international audience; a cheesy English love theme by John O'Bannon scoured from the "disowned 80s pop" library ("I don't want this night to eeeeend/Don't say goodbyyyeee") has a prominent place throughout the film, the score is mostly synthesizer-keyboard music that's more suited for eighties action flicks than a Japanese period fantasy, and even the cheesy special effects appeal to a certain overseas cult audience. Forget social commentary, The Legend of Eight Samurai knows it's destined for the masses, and qualifies as unapologetic mainstream entertainment. It's not much of an artistic achievement, but it's a ton of campy fun that fans of classic Japanese entertainment and period cult films will relish.

By Kevin Ma

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