A full appreciation of the article that follows rests on one's familiarity with Bill's review of Sword of Vengeance.
The
rebuttals from my end have, at this stage of the Comica Obscura
marathon, felt inspired by the pictures upon which the discussions
have been based. For The Rocketeer,
who was a character that took his battles to the sky, the response
article was characterized by some high and mighty pseudo
intellectualism related to nationality and how one's attachment to
country their of origin results in particular viewpoints on a film,
an attempt to 'elevate' the discussion to another level just as the
protagonist 'rose' to the occasion in his adventure. For Kenji
Misumi's Sword of Vengeance,
or, as you obsess in writing it, Kozure
Ôkami: Ko Wo Kashi Ude Kashi Tsukamatsuru, the
battle falls back to earth. In truth, I have re-read your review a
couple of times and on each occasion its briskness has posed some
problems for a rebuttal, which forces me to get into the nitty gritty
of your analysis. Like the samurai, I shall approach your points
delicately, with precision, and strike with a fury when the
opportunity arises.
What
seems to have impressed you most (at least based on your review) lies
in the picture's technical merits, whereas the aspects which you shun
were born out of some narrative-specific aspects. I wrestle with that
reality while writing this article for I myself was not entirely
enamoured with the narrative, although my issues related far more to
its overarching structure as opposed to the details you explicitly
reference. I wonder, in fact, what you thought of the overall
structure, especially its needless reliance on going back and forth
in time to reveal more and more background information. In any case,
the main point of contention which irked you was the exploitative
nature of film's sexuality. Well, all in all it can argued that Sword
of Vengeance
is specifically an exploitation film. Maybe it is because I have seen
a decent amount of samurai films from a variety of directors, maybe
it is just a hunch guiding me in my thought process, I don't know,
but I feel as though I can recognize the difference between a samurai
film which is aiming for something a little bit more artistically, a
samurai film which aims to entertain in more mainstream fashion
(Kurosawa made a lot of these) and an exploitation film that features
samurai. It is true that we are not exposed to breast and sex very
often samurai movies, but that just hit home to point all the further
that this is indeed an exploitation film (just in case anyone hadn't
clued in yet after seeing cartoony squirts of blood and bizarro
score). The rape scene does seemingly emerge out of left field, I
will agree with you that much. The more I think of it however, the
more that scene actually makes sense however. How ironic is it that a
whore, for all intents and purposes, is in a position where she is
uncomfortable, sexually speaking. On the other hand there is Ogami
Ito, a recently married man, who is forced upon a woman he would
rather not bed. The scene exudes discomfort and it is purposeful.
Titillation is not what I got out of that scene nor is it, I believe,
what the filmmakers were hoping for either. One would have to be
pretty weird to get excited by a scene like that. The bare breasts in
the hot spa...I had almost forgotten about that, which speaks to how
little that affected me. It's a bath, people get undressed before
walking into the water, and one of the characters happened to be a
woman. Moving on now.
The
rest of the review concerned primarily Sword of Vengeance's technical
aspects, most notably its playfulness with sound and the colour red
whenever blood gushed. The first element, sound, is where I will
disagree with you a bit more. Where you felt ill at ease (which seems
to have heightened the sense of danger and tension in the fights for
you), to me that is what came across as gratuitous (and not the
breasts). Once again, maybe this is my background in samurai films
speaking, but a samurai fight is typically very quiet, except when a
character goes for the strike and yells, or the clanging of swords.
Other aural stimuli might be careful foot shifting performed by the
combatants as they find a suitable position that will give them,
presumably, the advantage. Other than that, I have not seen a lot of
samurai fights that popped with a lot of sound, unless it was a large
scale battle, as in Ran
or 13 Assassins.
Taking away all the sound felt like overkill therefore. I certainly
noticed, and it certainly made me feel something was afoot like you,
but more because I wondered if there was something wrong with the
sound in the film than any sense of increased danger. As for the
blood, well, I assume that all depends on one's background with
action and exploitation cinema, in particular from the Far East. As a
comparison, I can refer you to a lot of Shaw Brothers films in which
the deaths are pretty bloody and make use of what looks like red
paint. A favourite of yours (I believe), Takashi Miike, makes
exquisite use of beautiful blood in some of his movies, such as
Ichi the Killer.
Italians Lucio Fulci and Dario Argento are also famous, in part, for
the exploitative violence in their respective films, in which death
often sounds the alarm for the blood to gush. I am not making the
case that the red in Sword of
Vengeance
was not cool. It was, I enjoyed just as you did, but it did not
strike as vividly as you. It was another film that used it like came
out of a water hose and it looked awesome, but it is far from the
only movie to do that and there are plenty of films that do it
better.
Another
review, another rebuttal. It is interesting that we have not seen eye
to eye as much this time around as we did in some of our previous
joint marathons. I wonder if these divergences will continue.
2 comments:
At this stage there's really not much else to say besides, I respectfully disagree. I think we have both finely stated our points and have explored the contentious issues of the rather thoroughly. We still don't see eye to eye, and that's perfectly okay by me. :)
I also have the sneaking suspicion we won't be finding common ground on some basic elements. I'm really curious to find out how our views compare with next week's film...
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