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Lone Wolf and Cub: Sextet Review

post #1 of 6
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Sword of Vengeance

Ogami Itto and his infant son Daigoro are demons. Once a faithful servant of the Shogun, Itto has now abandoned his oath to the Shogun. He had served as executioner to the Shogun, assisting enemies of the Empire in ritual suicide. This prestigious honour was coveted by a rival clan, whom through subterfuge lose Itto his honour, his home and his wife. Serving no master they travel Japan as mercenaries for hire, taking jobs for a fee of 500 gold coins. While the main plot concerns a job to take out a group of bandits who have taken over a spa town, the meat of the film is found in the flashbacks.

Essentially Sword of Vengeance is the origin story for Ogami Itto and Daigoro. Unlike later films in the series the plot is somewhat lacking in momentum, content to focus on establishing a back story at the expense of any real threat to Itto. Certainly it’s easy to see the film as part of a series, the main villains of the piece are left unscathed, the finale staged against a bunch of cipher like bandits. But it’s this methodical set up which allows later films, particularly the two films that immediately follow, to get to the meat of the story. By the end of the movie the primary villain has been introduced, the character dynamics have been set in place, the back-story has been settled, and Ogami Itto has been shown to be an irrefutable badass.

While the film feels incomplete at times it works with the rather rudimentary plot to create a series of nicely designed character moments and set pieces which builds up to a finale which has plenty of gore and grisly effects to make up for a general lack of emotion. The secondary villains of Sword of Vengeance are a bunch of largely generic brigands who seem destined to die from the moment we lay eyes on them.

But some beautiful cinematography, brutal fight scenes, and some interesting characters make up for the lack of forward momentum in the general plot.
post #2 of 6
The series does get better as it goes forward. I'm amazed at the quality of these films considering the speed at wich they must have been shot.
post #3 of 6
i have to disagree, i think the first two or three installements were the best. later in the series it got too focused on the main plot of him vs. the yagyu clan, i enjoyed the more individual samurai stories to the big fight scenes where ogami would kill like seven hundred people or the killing of one yagyu son per installment.
post #4 of 6
Quote:
Originally Posted by innsmouthlook81
i have to disagree, i think the first two or three installements were the best. later in the series it got too focused on the main plot of him vs. the yagyu clan, i enjoyed the more individual samurai stories to the big fight scenes where ogami would kill like seven hundred people or the killing of one yagyu son per installment.
I understand what you mean but the fourth one was my favorite (haven't seen the sixth) with the female assassin and the other samurai. I felt this one focused more on individual battles.
post #5 of 6
i still love all of them, but the sixth one felt like a real letdown. but again i still rate all of them extremely high. theres just something thats impossible to describe about tomisaburo wakayama that is intensely cool, and i hate describing anything as cool.
post #6 of 6
The reason those Lone Wolf's were so good (up until the sixth one which stunk) was because of http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0593014/ Kenji Misumi. He made some of the best Zatoichi's as well.
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