Saturday, April 27, 2013

Seven Samurai: Reality and Heroism


Seven Samurai is a film that certainly receives a lot of praise as one of film’s greatest epics, and after watching, it’s clear why. Beyond the surface of the samurai epic, however, many themes and commentaries can be found, ranging from perceptions and expectations of a hero to the reality of war. In a way, I feel that these themes culminate to make Seven Samurai a sort of anti-epic, in which the audience is still granted a thrilling and powerful story with all the action, but subtly, some of the themes add up to something a bit less straightforward.

PLOT

                Seven Samurai begins with a group of bandits marauding about, who decide to attack a nearby village in the coming months once their crop has been harvested and there is something to steal. As they ride off, one of the villagers comes out from hiding and runs back to the village, where he tells this terrible news. Amid much debate and despair, they finally consult the village elder, who advises them to go to the nearby town to try and recruit samurai to protect them. Though the plan is met with controversy, they agree, and a small group leaves for the town.
                Unable to offer the samurai much more than a bowl of rice initially and three meals a day during the job, they encounter no shortage of difficulty finding samurai, most denying them outright. They are at the point of leaving when they watch a samurai, Kanbei, selflessly intervene to break up a hostage situation. They follow him, eventually getting him to agree to help them. He decides that he can defend the village with a total of seven samurai, so they begin the recruiting process. Eventually, he assembles Katsushiro, a young, idealistic samurai, Gorobei, a man looking for an adventure, Heihachi, a carefree samurai, Shichiroji, an old comrade, Kyuzo, a master swordsman, and Kikuchiyo, a young, drunk buffoon.
                When they return to the village, instead of being celebrated, no one even comes to greet them. Many of the villagers become concerned that the samurai will seduce their daughters, and one villager even forces his daughter to cut her hair in order to avoid this. Kikuchiyo dissolves this situation on his own terms by ringing the alarm bell, causing the villagers to come out screaming in panic for the samurai’s aid. Kikuchiyo berates them for this, asking why they called out for them when danger came, but treated them as pariahs when they arrived. With this uneasy introduction, Kanbei and the others begin making plans to defend the village, from constructing walls to training the men to fight. During this time, Katsushiro begins a relationship with farmer’s daughter, and the samurai show their goodwill by giving some of the food they are paid with back to the less fortunate villagers, especially the children. When Kikuchiyo brings armor and weapons from the villagers that Shichiroji perceives is looted, Kikuchiyo flies off the handle, berating both farmer and samurai alike for their foul ways, and then storming off as Kanbei realizes he is a farmer’s son.
                When bandit scouts appear on the village outskirts, the samurai do their best to hide their presence, but Kikuchiyo ruins their stealth. He and Kyuzo quickly move and dispatch the scouts, and learn of the bandit hideout. These two, Heihachi, and one of the villagers ride to the bandit base and set it ablaze, cutting down the bandits as they come outside. As they escape, the villager runs back to see his wife, who had been in the hut, but when he does so, Heihachi returns for him and is shot dead. Shortly after the funeral, the bandits begin their attack, and Kanbei’s defenses prove to be worth the effort. The bandits make a few precautionary strikes and are driven off by the villagers a few times, with the samurai and farmers killing a few each time. Kyuzo bravely goes out and kills one of the three gunners and returns with his rifle, but when Kukuchiyo tries to do the same, Kanbei berates him for leaving his post (which Kyuzo did not do) and the bandits attack again. One of the elder farmers dies in this attack, as well as Gorobei, both of which Kukuchiyo takes personally, lingering at the graves. Before the final battle, Katsushiro sleeps with the village girl, causing an uproar which Kanbei and the others intervene in. In the final attack, the bandits are driven off, but not before both Kyuzo and Kukuchiyo are both killed. The final scene shows the villagers celebrating their victory, though Kanbei comments that they have won nothing: only the villagers are victorious.

CONSTRUCTING A HERO

Seven Samurai is unique for its sheer number of protagonists. While some are more static than others, everyone has their own personality and goals to meet. Katsushiro, as a young samurai, embodies the audience in a sense- seeking the ideal samurai to pledge himself to in order to learn what it is to truly be a hero. Heihachi is more static, but he shows his compassion when trying to comfort and later save the villager he offended by speaking of his wife. Kyuzo is quiet, modest and skilled- what many expect samurai to be, and Katsushiro praises him for it. Kukuchiyo desperately searches for things to make him more of a samurai instead of a mere farmer (His sword is the longest of any of the seven, he scavenges samurai armor, he steals a scroll to “prove” his birthright, tries to mimic Kyuzo’s brave excursion). Kanbei is perhaps the most complete hero and what the audience expects as a samurai- skilled and brave, but also cunning, wise, and always willing to protect and serve.
                The difference in the characters of these heroes makes a very clear claim that heroes come in all shapes and sizes, and all heroic acts are not full of glory.  When Kukuchiyo leave his post in order to capture another of the enemy’s guns, he mimics Kyuzo, killing the bandits and proudly handing his prize over to Kanbei. However, while his act was brave, it was also brash, leaving a hole in the defenses and leading to the death of the very villager he had assured would be safe. Katsushiro insists he be part of the fight despite the older samurai dismissing him for his youth, and consistently tries to help the villagers in what ways he can, evidenced most obviously when he tosses them coins in light of their stolen rice. While this film has established heroes in samurai such as Kanbei and Shichiroji, it leaves room for these younger heroes to find their place as heroes. The villagers themselves becomes heroes in their own right, as by the end of the film their spears had killed more bandits than the samurai’s swords had.

HEROICS AND REALITIES OF WAR

                One thing that struck me about Seven Samurai were the battle scenes. Many times, in these sort of epics, the audience will see the heroes fighting off hordes of foes with only their skill, shrugging off wounds and putting down foe after foe. That is not necessarily the case in this film. Kyozu gives perhaps one of the few examples of this when he swiftly cuts down the bandits with all the skill and calm one would expect from a samurai warrior, and Kanbei shows this when he takes up the bow amid the battle and shoots down horsemen. Besides these moments of samurai “expectation,” the battles seem to reflect more the chaotic and frantic nature of battle. Unconcerned with the honor or fairness of their actions, Kyozu, Kukuchiyo, and Heihachi burn the bandits’ hut with them still inside it. There are women inside, many of them likely captives, but they make no attempt to heroically save them; they simply spare them from the blade as they run out of the hut. The bandits flee the scene, only to be slaughtered by the samurai waiting outside. There is no honor or glory in this: most of the bandits don’t even have a sword drawn to defend themselves as they flee. This scene best shows that the wars and battles the samurai fought were not always glorious conquests of the righteous hero fighting against the cowardly, evil bandits. In truth, the samurai here, having no other recourse, resort to a technique that, if done by the enemy, the audience would have found underhanded and foul. War is not always righteous: sometimes it’s about who’s left.
                Death is another way this film shows the realities of war well. Heroic deaths in which the hero falls with a smile on his face, knowing he has died well, do not exist. Kyozu, the samurai perhaps most composed and skilled of the seven, when shot, stumbles around, throwing his sword out of blind reaction before falling to the ground, apparently dead. Gorobei dies off screen without so much as a word as to how he died, or any parting words to his comrades or audience. Heihachi and Kukuchiyo, too, die quickly and suddenly, without a word, and without any of the glory that surrounds death. However, the samurai are not the only ones who die deaths more realistic than may be comfortable. Though some of the bandits find themselves quickly slain by the deft blade of a swordsman, more often than not, the samurai leave the wounded bandits to the villagers. Armed with nothing more than sharpened bamboo pikes, the farmers descend upon the wounded bandits like vultures as they desperately flee, eventually catching them and stabbing them to death as a mob. While we are not made to feel sympathy for the bandits, being stabbed to death with a dozen sharpened bamboo rods is, frankly, a horrible way to die. Lacking the sharp edge of a metal blade, strikes from these pikes would often take multiple strikes to pierce armor and skin, and death would be slow and very painful. The film, then, seems to suggest that there is no such thing as a glorious death, and even the most skilled may be slain in the quickest of ways.

BRINGING IT BACK

                This is not the first time Kurosawa Akira has messed with preconceptions in this course. In Ikiru, Watanabe-san, as the protagonist, is as far from a hero as we can imagine in many ways. He is soft spoken, lacks confidence, and has trouble acting on his feelings, far from Kanbei, who is played by the same actor. When Watanabe dies, he does so without a speech to the audience, or resonating final words; his death comes when the audience does not expect it, leaving them questioning. In both films, Kurosawa makes us question what a hero is and our expectations of one, and the reality that surrounds it. A hero may not be quite what we expect, and life may not only be about glory or righteousness. Sometimes, it’s just about making a difference in whatever way one can.

BONUS ROUND: WHY KYOZU AND KUKUCHIYO SHOULD HAVE LIVED

                My blossay is effectively over, but this was bothering me and I did a little research. I know, message and plot have to do their thing, so details have to be ignored a little bit. But, frankly, Kyozu was pretty great, and Kukuchiyo I’m sure is something of what Mizenko-sensei imagines I would be if I were alive 450ish years ago. In the time period of this film (late 1500’s), Japan’s firearms were primitive at best, and were just coming into prominence in the hands of different warlords. Their strength often lay in numbers, best shown when Oda Nobunaga trained his men to fire while another reloaded, in order to essentially create continuous fire. He had to do this because the guns were painfully inaccurate, weak at the tail end of their range, and reloading was a rough process. According to Wikipedia, it was generally said that an archer could loose 15 arrows in the time it took a gunner to load and fire a single shot. Also, the powder was very susceptible to the elements, so even a moderate amount of rain could often render them useless. All this being said, consider the final part of the last battle. Kyozu is shot,  but this alone is problematic. The gunner doubtlessly would have shot a shot earlier (it’s the only weapon he seems to be carrying), so he would have needed to reload. It is raining torrentially during this scene, and as a bonus, he probably fell off his horse, since everyone else did. As such, I find it hard to believe that he had the powder dry enough to carry a charge. Even assuming he did, when Kukuchiyo rushed him, there is no actual way he could have reloaded in that period of time. And this is also assuming this bandit gun was of good make and accurate. Which everyone seems to have perfect accuracy with their weapons in this. Anyway, this ends the bonus Wieczerak rant on 16th century guns in Japan.
                

7 comments:

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  2. Hey Taylor! (Sorry, I forgot to add one thing)
    I'm glad to see that you did a review of the Seven Samurai because it seemed to be an interesting film that I would like to watch in the future. Although your blossay was very thorough with the plot, including spoilers, I forgive you =)
    I really enjoyed reading the section about what a hero is and how heroes come in all shapes and sizes. Also, the discussion on the reality of war and how not all battles were noble and honorable. Your last part, the bonus, was really interesting as well. You could have just ended the blossay there, but I'm glad to see you were willing to make that extra step to appease your curiosity. The only thing that I wish you did was adding screenshots or clips from the movie. I think it would have helped me in understanding certain scenes you were talking about.
    Nonetheless, you did a great job!

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  3. Great job on the blossay, Taylor. I plan to watch more Kurosawa this summer, and Seven Samurai is likely the one I am most excited to watch. I decided to skip the plot summary, as I have a passionate hatred for spoilers (although I completely understand the reasoning in a case like this). I felt like your blossay was still very cogent, even though I left myself unaware of the plot, so props to you on that.

    I particularly enjoyed your discussion on how people would act in battle and its portrayal in the film. The heroes we like to fantasize about in stories tend to be far removed from the heroes of reality. It's good to know that Kurosawa is adept at bridging the gap between heroic fantasy and reality, showing both the lows people stoop to, and the highs potentially reached through talent and will. I really liked the fact that the heroes had character flaws that were portrayed through various domains.

    This is an open ended question, but do you have anything else to say about Kurosawa's portrayal of morality specifically? He seems to be one who likes working within a lot of gray areas.

    (I accidentally made this a response to Stephanie at first, sorry.)

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  4. You went all out on this blossay and it certainly paid off. This is probably one of the most epic films I've ever seen and reading your analytic stance on Seven Samurai made me think of the film in a different and more formalistic manner. Overall, fantastic job. I'm glad that you enjoyed watching this film. I agree with Stephanie that you could have afforded to include more visuals. Regardless, this was a great read! Well done!

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  5. Okay, so I was reading this, and then I decided that I want to watch Seven Samurai, so I stopped in case there was any big spoilers. So, sorry I can't really provide you any real feedback other than the first few paragraphs being incredibly enticing.

    - Rob H.

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  6. Yeah, sorry about the whole spoilers thing. I probably should have anticipated a lot of people wanting to watch this film, so I should have noted spoilers. In any case, I'm glad so many enjoyed it. I could have done more with clips, I admit, but frankly, making clips is difficult. Still, I'm glad everyone appreciated what I thought was a very interesting portrayal of war. Thanks!

    Derek, as for morality, there's a lot to be said there. Everything is a grey area. For example, in the plot, it's discovered that the peasants have scavenged armor from dead samurai, which, while dishonorable, one of the samurai asserts that it's the samurai who forced them to it. There are even some humanizing moments with the bandits; they're evil, but their armor is clearly scavenged, and those who don't want to fight are killed. Also some disconnects between glory and honor and what is right. Definitely a lot to look into.

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