If you gave up on live-action anime after Ghost in the Shell or Death Note , give this one a chance. Watch it for the fight on the cliffside. Watch it for the moment Kenshin whispers, "Ja, mata" (See you later) instead of "Sayonara." Then immediately queue up Kyoto Inferno (Part 2).
The plot is familiar to any fan: In the 11th year of the Meiji era (1878), Tokyo is crawling with former samurai turned thugs. Enter Himura Kenshin (Takeru Satoh), a wandering swordsman with a reverse-blade sword ( sakabatō ), a cheerful smile, and a death wish disguised as a vow. rurouni kenshin part 1
The secret is the sakabatō . Because Kenshin cannot kill, every fight becomes a puzzle. He has to hit harder, move faster, and strike with the blunt edge of his blade. The film understands that his vow is a disability, not a superpower. Watching him dance through a crowd of sword-wielding thugs, breaking bones but taking no lives, is balletic horror. If you gave up on live-action anime after
Satoh’s casting was initially controversial. Known for playing pretty boys in Kamen Rider , he lacked the hulking physique of the manga’s Kenshin. But within the first ten minutes, he silences every critic. Satoh’s Kenshin is a marvel of physical acting—he switches from goofy, child-like innocence (“Oro?”) to the dead-eyed stare of the Hitokiri Battōsai in a single frame. The plot is familiar to any fan: In
Have you seen the live-action Rurouni Kenshin films? Do you prefer the anime or the live-action choreography? Let me know in the comments below.
There is a curse in Hollywood that doesn’t seem to exist in Japan: the live-action anime adaptation. For every Edge of Tomorrow , there are a dozen Dragonball Evolutions . So, when Rurouni Kenshin: Part 1 (originally titled Rurouni Kenshin: Origins ) dropped in 2012, even die-hard fans of the Meiji-era samurai epic held their breath.