Samurai III: Duel at Ganryu Island explained

Samurai III: Duel at Ganryu Island
Director:Hiroshi Inagaki
Producer:Kazuo Takimura
Starring:Toshiro Mifune
Kōji Tsuruta
Music:Ikuma Dan
Studio:Toho Studios
Distributor:Toho Studios
Runtime:105 minutes
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese

is a 1956 Japanese film directed by Hiroshi Inagaki and starring Toshirō Mifune. Shot in Eastmancolor, it is the third and final film of Inagaki's Samurai Trilogy.

The film is adapted from Eiji Yoshikawa's novel Musashi, originally released as a serial in the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun, between 1935 and 1939. The novel is loosely based on the life of the famous Japanese swordsman, Miyamoto Musashi. The preceding two parts of the trilogy are (1954) and (1955).

Plot

Miyamoto abandons his life as a knight errant. He's sought as a teacher and vassal by the Shogun, Japan's de facto leader. He is also challenged to fight by the supremely confident and skillful Sasaki Kojiro. Miyamoto agrees to fight Sasaki in a year's time but rejects the Shogun's patronage, choosing instead to live on the edge of a village, raising vegetables. He's followed there by Otsu and later by Akemi, both in love with him. The year ends as Miyamoto assists the villagers against a band of brigands.

In the large city of Edo in Japan, Sasaki kills multiple men in a battle in the street.[1] The commotion resulting from the battle in the street garners the attention of Miyamoto who is nearby in the city. Miyamoto leaves his room to see what has occurred and notices the dead men in the street as well as a note from Sasaki claiming responsibility for the killing.

Sasaki and Miyamoto eventually meet one another and agree to a fight. However, on the day the fight is planned, Miyamoto decides to delay the fight for a year. During this year before the fight, Sasaki becomes acquainted with the upper class, while Miyamoto begins farming near a small village. Miyamoto seeks Otsu's forgiveness and accepts her love, then sets off across the water to Ganryu Island for his final contest. Sasaki also travels to Ganryu Island for their fight.

During this fight, Miyamoto kills Sasaki and is victorious. Miyamoto is unhappy about killing Sasaki, calling him "the greatest swordsman" he ever encountered, and silently mourns for him.

Production

The film Samurai III: Duel at Ganryu Island, made in 1956, came after the end of the Allied occupation of Japan following World War II.[2] Following World War II "the Allied occupation initially restricted films promoting feudal values, putting the kibosh on this most Japanese of action genres".

This attitude relaxed somewhat in 1949, as the Occupation became more concerned with the threat of international communism and less with jidaigeki and chanbara. Inagaki himself had directed Kanketsu Sasaki Kojirô: Ganryû-jima kettô, an earlier black and white film about Sasaki that climaxes with the fatal duel between Miyamoto and Sasaki, in 1951. That film also featured Mifune in a brief appearance as Miyamoto that nonetheless won him a share of top billing, but starred Tomoemon Otani, a Kabuki actor who specialized in women's roles on stage, as Sasaki.[3]

After the Allies left Japan in 1952, "the way was clear for the golden age of the samurai film", allowing Inagaki to specialize in the genre he had been most closely associated with before the war. World War II, the Allied occupation of Japan and then the Allies leaving certainly influenced Japanese film. Additionally, the film's character Musashi Miyamoto was an actual person who lived from 1584-1645 and was "famed for his two-handed fighting technique and his delicate touch with the Zen ink brush". The film also relates to Miyamoto’s actual battle with Sasaki, which took place on April 13, 1612 on Ganryu Island, located off the coast of the Bizen Province.[4]

Cast

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Appreciation: Samurai III: Duel at Ganryu Island . 17 February 2007 . The House Next Door . Slant Magazine . 6 July 2015 . Hill, J. . Wagstaff .
  2. Web site: Sharp, J. . 10 Great Summer Samurai Films . BFI Film Forever . 25 June 2014 . 15 July 2015 .
  3. Web site: Kojiro Sasaki / Sohen Sasaki Kojiro (1950 -51) . JAPANONFILM . 11 October 2018 . August 19, 2022.
  4. Book: Wilson. William Scott. The Lone Samurai: The Life of Miyamoto Musashi. 2004. Kodansha International. Tokyo. 978-4770029423. 19.