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Sword of the Stranger
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Genre | Anime & Manga |
Format | AC-3, Animated, Dolby, Subtitled, Dubbed, Color |
Contributor | Fumihiko Takayama, Naoto Takenaka, Masahiro And, Yki Chinen, Tomoya Nagase, Kyle Rideout, Kichi Yamadera, Akio tsuka See more |
Language | English, Japanese |
Runtime | 1 hour and 43 minutes |
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Product Description
The film follows Kotaro, a young boy who is hunted by a group of swordsmen from Ming Dynasty China for mysterious reasons. Among the group is a fearsome Western fighter named Luo-Lang, whose only desire is to find a worthy opponent. Due to circumstances, Kotaro and his dog meet Nanashi, a nameless ronin who is haunted by memories of his past which have led him to avoid drawing his sword ever again. When the Ming clash with a Sengoku-era feudal lord, a proud general, and monks torn between faith and survival, the reason behind the Ming group's pursuit tests the bond between Kotaro and Nanashi.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.78:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned)
- Product Dimensions : 7 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches; 3.2 ounces
- Director : Masahiro And
- Media Format : AC-3, Animated, Dolby, Subtitled, Dubbed, Color
- Run time : 1 hour and 43 minutes
- Release date : June 16, 2009
- Actors : Yki Chinen, Tomoya Nagase, Akio tsuka, Kyle Rideout, Naoto Takenaka
- Dubbed: : English
- Subtitles: : English
- Studio : Bandai
- ASIN : B001W79MB8
- Writers : Fumihiko Takayama
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #25,278 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #639 in Kids & Family Blu-ray Discs
- #687 in Anime (Movies & TV)
- #2,494 in Action & Adventure Blu-ray Discs
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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Basically the story is that a mysterious ronin samurai teams up with a grouchy little boy and his dog. For reasons that aren't clear until closer to the end, the boy is being pursued by a team of hardcore warriors. As is to be expected, the samurai ends up having to come to the boy's rescue. What is NOT expected is the emotional gravitas that the film exhibits at that point in the film. The combination of the slow-trickle of character development, the final show-down that's been established, the way the action is animated and staged, and ... THE MUSIC. Oh baby Jesus, THE MUSIC!! At times it feels like it might be trying a bit too hard, with both the music and just the way everything is trying to tear down whatever emotional wall you've built up about caring for fictional characters, but this movie will break you down and leave you reeling from anticipation and emotional turmoil. I hate to oversell it but the climax of this film is pure cinematic poetry and really pulls the whole of the movie together.
One of the things that many "not-a-fan-of-anime" people might appreciate is that the physics and movements of the characters are reasonably life-like. Our characters aren't super-humans who can jump fifty feet in the blink of an eye and land on a dragonfly's wings while all the opponents burst from the sword strike. Also, the animation is drawn in such a way that there's a camera that puts you in the middle of the action. Almost like a subtle shakey-cam, where it barely notice it but it adds to the events on the screen. The fighting, the action, and the animation in general are all very well done.
I mentioned the music earlier, which is like How to Train Your Dragon good, but also like HTTYD: if you have a good surround sound system--GET THIS FILM! It's not overly bombastic or anything but it is exceptional clean and dynamic but it has an extremely engaging surround mix. I don't know if it was my imagination but I felt like the dubbed version might have been a tad bit better in this department. While I prefer subs, my roommate prefers dubs and as I switched over to the dubbed version to test it out, it seemed like the atmosphere of the sound mix opened up to another level. The dub is decent enough--the main characters are well-done but supporting characters often had me laughing with their horrendous line readings.
The original story is by "Bones" and the movie director by Masahiro Ando and scripted by Fumihiko Takayama. The plot is early 1800's in Japan where a small Chinese mercenaries (The Ming) agree with Japanese to search and capture a small boy named Kotaro for a ritual of immortality. During Kotaro's flee with his loyal dog, they come across a nameless ronin called No-name. No-name is a man who is haunted by his past ordered to assassinate two small children air to dynasty. He later meets Kotaro and his dog while finding shelter. During their stay; they are attacked by Elite group of swordsmen while still no match for No-name and the aid of the dog. Kotaro finds value in the ronin and seeks to past the man for his protection also to get medical attention for his poisoned dog. Now, the challenge is to travel low key through villages and open land to get Kotaro to his destination a Buddhist temple with awaiting monks.
Kotaro is quickly betrayed and hand him over to begin the sacrifice ritual. No-name shortly after learns of the betrayal and go after to rescue the boy.
The Japanse has declared an all out battle with the Chinese Elite Army and the most electrifying fights happen. Dynamic sword play and an epic battle between the hero No-name and Ming's blonde hair warrior Luo-Ling! I think we know who come out victorious here. But, I will admit there were times to expect No-name was in over his head.
Overall great entertainment and spectacular performance. Well worth the money; that is if you truly appreciate timeless art and plan on watching it over and over. The actions were so smooth and natural its hard to believe it hand drawn. Some day, I would love to work on a project as such and perhaps I shall! Now, if you were to excuse me I'm going to watch the movie once again!
The main tension is built on a macabre premise that is neither very convincing or even fascinating in its weirdness, though it is weird and could have brought more to the story. The main bad guy was just a one-note nemesis with no motivation beyond that. All of the other characters are flat. I didn't understand why a lot of them were doing what they were doing. On the other hand, things keep moving, so I didn't have to wonder long.
The anime is sound, restrained, sober, nothing striking or particularly stylish. The scenes are cut like live action. There are a couple of scenes set up well, building tension before the action. The score gets cloying, channeling the Hallelujah hymn chords over and over.
Note: We streamed the "Original Japanese Version" which actually has the Japanese soundtrack, despite the fact it is labeled as having only an English soundtrack. The track is even encoded as English in the movie interface (where you pick your audio track and subtitles) We were ready to quit watching because for us there's little worse than watching anime dubbed in English, but SURPRISE, we got all Japanese (and some Mandarin). If you want the supposedly fantastic dubbing other reviewers have mentioned, pick the other streaming version. I guess releasing it as a different version means they can make you buy the movie twice if you want both. Or you can get the Blu-ray, which I assume has all tracks and subtitle options.
Top reviews from other countries
Seit Versus gibs na klar auch ein anime
That said; this film is stacked with standard anime and manga tropes. If I was to summarize the plot there is a better than good chance that most would shrug it off and chalk it up as being just another lone swordsman type film and move on. That would be a shame, as Sword of the Stranger is one of very few films that I have come across that actually made such a formulaic approach to a genre seem almost refreshed and exciting.
I have seen other reviews that compare the film to Ninja Scroll, and the are not far off in regards to impact. A considerably simpler plot, and none of the mature content of Ninja Scroll outside of a bit of coarse language and the violence. In my opinion the quality of the animation, the fluid movements and choreography/art direction in the action sequences along with an interesting cast of characters and their respective voice actors, give it enough to make this a film worth having in any library.