Hiroyuki Nakano – SF: Episode One AKA Samurai Fiction (1998)

Three centuries ago, a precious sword has been stolen by Kazamatsuri — the sword, which historic and symbolic value is priceless for the clan (Shogun Tokugawa donated it to clan 80 years before that, at the same time that he established them as the local rulers). Lord’s counselor’s young son Heishiro goes to retrieve the sword himself to protect the clan from the shame or possible demise. He is accompanied with two friends, Shintaro and Tadasuke, and followed by the ninjas of the clan. After Kazamatsuri wounds Heishiro and kills one of his friends, the young aristocrat still wants revenge more than sword itself, but meanwhile have to recover from his wounds, in the small forest house of a lonely samurai and his daughter. At the same time, Kamazatsuri stays in nearby town in the entertainment center run by Okatsu and falls into her. The older samurai tries to dissuade Heishiro from fighting with Kamazatsuri, but is himself gradually drawn into the conflict.
Charming, funky, homage to old-school samurai films – from the director of RED SHADOW
Impressive for its wealth of memorable characters, Samurai Fiction is an ideal companion to Takeshi Kitano’s Zatoichi remake, with its fresh and humorous approach. While it’s essentially a traditional tale of samurai honour, SF appeals with its progressive ideals, modern soundtrack, and young cast.
This film shows the director’s enthusiasm for the samurai movie genre. He based his Stereo Future (2001) around the making of a fictional samurai movie. In the same year, he made the big budget, techno-scored, remake of Red Shadow (or Akakage), which is in the same vein of comedy, action and drama – highly recommended.
Story-wise, SF tells of a headstrong but inexperienced samurai, Heishiro, trying to retrieve his clans’ ceremonial sword from a renegade swordsman, Kazamatsuri. When Heishiro is injured in a duel, Hanbei, a local retired swordsman, tries to persuade him to take a different approach from revenge.
While the story is essentially a drama, the cast is made up of expert comedians who make the most of their characters. Heishiro is a fairly good swordsman, but completely inexperienced with women. His long-suffering father, trying to cover up the sword’s disappearence, relies on an ageing ninja bodyguard, who refuses to use doors through force of habit (the wobbly ninja is a gag that the director will use again in Red Shadow). Cocky renegade Kazamatsuri disrespects one gang of attacking samurai turning his back on them and taking a leak, a long leak.
Heishiro is impressively played by Mitsuru Fukikoshi, who later played other samurai roles in Red Shadow, and the deadly serious Twilight Samurai. He also played the geeky boyfriend in the superb kaiju movie Gamera 2 – Attack of Legion.
The baddie, Kazamatsuri, is famously played by Tomoyasu Hotei, who also composed the soundtrack. Later, the storming track “Battle Without Honor or Humanity” would make his music internationally famous when it was used in Tarantino’s Kill Bill: Vol 1. He briefly reprised his samurai character in Red Shadow.
Morio Kazama deserves a special mention as the level-headed Hanbei, and also Tamaki Ogawa as his radiantly cute daughter.
As a homage to old samurai films, SF stays mostly in black and white, but the little flashes of colour gives away the fact that this must have been shot in colour, then desaturated. This means that some scenes lack the contrast of actual black-and-white film stock. Also, the glimpses of colour make you wonder what the film could have looked like.
Samurai.Fiction.1998.NTSC.x264-toho.mkv
General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1h 51mn
Size: 1.27 GiB
DXVA: Compatible
Minimum settings: Not met
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 660x452
Aspect ratio: 16:9
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Bit rate: 1 415 Kbps
Audio
Japanese 2.0ch AC-3 @ 192 Kbps
https://nitro.download/view/A0AF77CFC0DDCE9/Samurai.Fiction-toho-DVDRip.x264.AAC.SRT.Rus.Jpn.mkv
Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles.English, Bulgarian, Russian
Many thanks to @Evan for this copy







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