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Azumi
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Country
: |
Japan |
| Year: |
2003 |
| Genre: |
Swordsplay |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
2h22 |
| Distributor: |
Toshiba
Entertainment / Urban Vision |
| Date
reviewed: |
11/27/2003 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
Mataichiro
Yamamoto |
| Director: |
Ryuhei
Kitamura |
Cast: Aya Ueto, Yoshio Harada,
Masato Ibu, Aya Okamoto, Joe Odagiri, Naoto Takenaka,
Tak Sakaguchi, Hideo Sakaki |
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Story:
A warrior, who's son was slain during a pointless battle,
is assigned a private mission by a high priest.
It is up to him to try and stop the madness of wars
that wreak havoc upon feudal Japan. To compose a team
of assassins, he goes and recruits young children who's
parents were murdered. Retreating into a secret location
in the mountains, he trains these children to become
skilled and deadly assassins.
When the children became young adults, their master
announces that they are ready to engage in their "mission."
For the first time ever, these assassins, who knew nothing
but the way of the sword, are let out into the real
world. Together, they must assassinate three warlords
who threaten the land of Japan with the agenda of war.
With numerous obstacles standing between them and their
mission's success, it is up to their instincts and dexterity
to complete what could very well be the peace-bringing
mission to mend together a nation on the brink of war.
Review:
Have
you ever had that feeling of sheer giddiness when
you watched a film? You know, that tingling sensation
located somewhere between your lower abdomen and upper
pelvic that tickles you in a delightful manner? It's
a tremendous feeling that could rival the orgasm!
Well, maybe not, but it gets damn close. I've felt
this sensation in only a handful of films. The first
being my adolescent viewing of MORTAL KOMBAT. I couldn't
sit still when the fire roared behind the logo of
the dragon. Other memorable moments were the first
twenty minutes BATTLE ROYALE, the last minutes of
EQUILIBRIUM, the opening of FIGHT CLUB, and no doubt,
the whole film of VERSUS. Leave it to Ryuhei Kitamura
to make yet another film that hits my film pleasure
zone over and over again.
AZUMI is based on the manga with the same name. Having
never read the manga (except for the exert from the
Deluxe Edition DVD), I really can't tell you all that
much about how the film stacks to the manga. What
I CAN tell you is how utterly amazing this film is.
Ryuhei doesn't waste time with the opening. As soon
as the quick introduction is over, you're blasted
into the middle of our group of protagonists' training
session. As with VERSUS, AZUMI contains some of the
flashiest camera work to date. Some of the shots in
this film that seemed to be effortlessly brought to
life by Ryuhei, are the same shots directors like
Quentin Tarrtino can only dream about. Each character
gets their own glorious moments of "coolness."
Practically every character in this film ooze the
"bad ass factor." Aya Ueto as the kick-ass
Azumi can probably be called the epiphany of "woman
that can kick-ass." When you take a stunningly
attractive female lead and give her jaw-dropping sword
skills, you get an equation that is guaranteed to
please and entertain. Add a superb supporting cast
of seasoned veterans and Kitamura regulars (meaning,
the VERSUS cast), you've got yourself quite an eccentric
troupe of actors.
The gem of VERSUS was its adrenaline-fueled action
scenes. The best part about it all was that VERSUS
was made on a shoe-string budget! Imagine what would
happen if you gave the director more money to play
with! The action is definitely the main drawing point
of the film. Unlike the cross of melee and ranged
weapons of VERSUS, AZUMI is primarily a melee fighting
film. You won't be seeing two guys shooting each other
at point-blank distances, but you will see arrows
getting slashed. Although the hacking and slashing
can be criticized for being a tad bit repetitive at
times, in the bigger picture of things, AZUMI's action
pars up well with VERSUS. There are enough imaginative
and creative elements allocated to each scene to keep
the viewer feeling like something new is served to
them. Also, at certain times, Ryuhei's big-budget
Hollywood-ish visions are marred by the painfully
apparent lack of funds. I don't need to mention these
moments specifically, because they scream "NOT
ENOUGH MONEY WAS PUT IN THIS SCENE," but it happens
so few and far between that it's a forgiveable factor.
For every shot that looks shabby, Ryuhei makes it
up with thirty other shots that'll grab you by the
balls and rock you. Honestly, in the last thirty minutes
of the movie, there'll be so many moments when you
go "Holy...........that was sweet," you'll
forget those shabby shots. I don't want to ruin anything,
but the finale involves enough people that if you
stacked them on top of each other, they could probably
touch the tip of Mt. Everest. Through its short-comings
(which are very rare), the action in AZUMI is still
an A+ ordeal with it's mind-blowing choreography.
This
isn't your normal period Japanese flick. The soundtrack
is filled with catchy tunes that's a cross between
traditional Japanese music, techno beats of clubs,
and rocking guitar riffs. Even the costumes are more
anime in nature. From Azumi's bright and colorful
attire to the Sajiki Brothers' crazy armor, this film
reaches out for more colorful than more traditional.
But I mean come on, if you wanted to watch a traditional
period piece, go watch ZATOICHI or something by Akira
Kurosawa. Ryuhei's purpose here is to serve the same
old generic formula we have all seen, but serve it
in a way that can still manage to impress the pants
right off of us.
AZUMI marks Ryuhei's bow to bigger budget films. This
is a man who knows how to use his cast and crew to
show us a vision that can make us cream our pants.
There's no doubt about it, Ryuhei is on his way to
claim the spot of Japan's most renowned international
director. AZUMI cross-breeds action, humor, and emotion
into one big triumph of film-making. Although on the
outside, the sets are more ambitious and the fights
are more grand in scale, at it's heart, AZUMI is still
just like VERSUS: it's all about sitting down and
having fun. Ryuhei Kitamura once again provides us
with 2 hours of pure entertainment!
|








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AsiaVision
& Urban Vision DVD [
NTSC, Region 1
] :
At last! AsiaVision & Urban Vision deliver a two-disc
set of Kitamura’s best film so far (IMHO, of course).
The first disc contains the movie (128' version) with
three audio options (Japanese 5.1 and English dub in both
5.1 and 2.0 surround). The English dub is slightly better
than usual, but it's still too cheezy and viewers are
advised to watch the film in Japanese, with English subtitles.
The image is perfect and there's nothing in the way of
enjoying this eye-candy.
The second disc boasts some fine extras: "Azumi in
America: The U.S. Production" is a three-part featurette
which shows: 1) a rarely seen process of dubbing a Japanese
movie into English (12 minutes); 2) shots from press conference
(3 minutes) from the US promotion during Anime Expo 2006,
with always joking Kitamura livening the proceedings and
eagerly signing posters and taking photos with fans; and
3) interviews with Kitamura and his producer (10 minutes).
Then you have "Fighting on the Edge", an above-average
behind-the-scenes documentary (approx 41 minutes) which
provides a lot of insight into the production and the
amount of care that went into it (dealing with stunts,
costumes, pyrotechnics etc.): it is way above the usual
by-the-numbers promotional thingees, and involves brief
interviews on the set and such entertaining details like
Kitamura asking for 'more blood' (and giving a convincing
explanation for why he needs more!) or the delectable
Aya Ueto being accidentally hit on the head by a 'sword',
but coming back for the shoot the next day.
There is also 'About actors' (12 minutes), a nice collection
of brief but telling and funny interviews with the young
cast and their stories about the audition and their director
(who also comments on their casting).
'Azumi photo gallery' is lenghtier than usual and has
some fine shots, while the 'Production art gallery' has
fewer sketches, but they're interesting to be compared
to the final result.
Cast and crew profiles are decent, not too inclusive,
but the bulk of these actors have very few films to their
credit anyway.
There are trailers for AZUMI and other AsiaVision releases
(none too mouth watering, but their KILL DEVIL will be
reviewed very soon on KFCC anyway).
If you're a die hard fan, youmay be happy to find a hidden
music video of the theme song by Mina Ganaha ("Negai"),
although it's nothing special.
To sum up: this is a glorious version of a highly entertaining
film, loaded with equally entertaining extras, so run
for it, it's a must have!
DVD
Reviewed by Dejan Ognjanovic
Toshiba Entertainment
DVD [ NTSC,
Region 2 ] :
Holy
freakin' wow. The video transfer of this film is awesome.
Although in the beginning, some shots seem a bit too
dark, the rest of the film is practically perfect! The
sound is something to drool about too. You get 5.1,
2.0, and 5.1 DTS. The sound is damn near PERFECT. As
for the extras, it's pretty mediocre. You have a lot
of TV spots and TV specials. Hooray....But you also
have 2 making-of's. Sorry, no English subs here! But
it's still worth a look. Where else are you going to
see Aya Ueto get smacked in the forehead during a scene
and cry? That's right, NO WHERE. The package for this
DVD is also superb. Aw man, this is every DVD collector's
dream set. Yes, it's hefty at 60 bucks, but I'll be
damned if it wasn't worth it!
Reviewed
by JoE Shieh
You
can purchase this DVD at :
|
| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 3.5 |
4 |
5 |
4.5 |
4.5 |


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