![]() I also took some care to make sure the kanji had accurate translations and had fun drawing my drawing my own versions of the characters. The biggest challenge was finding a photo of a rabbit that was sufficiently angry. Is it stop-motion animated? Is it actors in animal costumes? I don't know, but it's fun to imagine. Kurosawa directed his last film in 1993 and Mifune continued acting until 1995, so it's within the real of possibility that this film could have existed. Sakai was partially inspired by the films of Akira Kurosawa and took the name from Kurosawa's film, "Yojimbo." Toshiro Mifune played the title character in that film. ![]() He has often crossed over with TMNT in comics and cartoons. Miyamoto Usagi, aka Usagi Yojimbo (Rabbit Bodyguard) was an indie comic book created by Stan Sakai in 1984, coincidentally the same year that Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles debuted in their own comic. This one may take some explaining, because this isn't a well known character. With cool music, a cool anti-hero, a fun script, and a visually spectacular canvas of an image, painted by the eye of an artist (it is said that Kurosawa storyboarded his movies in full-scale paintings), Yojimbo is one of the coolest movies ever made.I created a poster for a movie that doesn't exist, but I wish it had. But still, both Yojimbo and Fistful are iconic movies, and very cool movies. Despite the massive influence of Fistfull of Dollars, it pales in comparison to both its predecessor Yojimbo, and its sequals, For a Few Dollars More and The Good the Bad and the Ugly. Synopsis: A nameless ronin, or samurai with no master, enters a small village in feudal. In 1964, Sergio Leone transposed the screenplay of Yojimbo (nearly word for word) to the spanish desert, and he brought along a young television actor named Clint Eastwood, and together they revolutionised the western with Fistfull of Dollars, and created an entire genre, the Spaghetti Western, which sported among its attributes a gritty, desolate landscape, and a cynical, postmodern lack-of-values ideology (traditional American westerns had quite plush landscapes and were always black and white (good and evil) in their value system. Gallery of 27 movie poster and cover images for Yojimbo (1961). ![]() In 1961, Akira Kurosawa transposed this story to medieval Japan, after the fall of a dynasty, where a Samurai finds himself with no place to go (at the beginning, we see him throw a branch up in the air and walk the direction it falls), and no master to serve. Dashiell Hammett, an American, wrote a novel with an American private eye as the stranger. Actually, the history of the story of the lone wolf, the wanderer with a weapon, who rides into town to play off two warring factions against each other - is quite a story itself. Yojimbo is one of the latter - inspired by the Dashiell Hammet novel Red Harvest (Hammett's novel The Maltese Falcon was put onscreen moment for moment by John Huston in the movie of the same name which immortalised Humphrey Bogart). He based many of his movies on Western texts, like Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, or American gangster fiction and film. Sure, they are rife with Japanese values (i am told), but Kurosawa had a great appreciation of Western culture. If you have it in your mind that a guy called Kurosawa couldn't make movies that would impress you, that the cultural gap would be too great - be assured that Kurosawa's movies are rife with Western values. Later on, when he's taunted and asked to prove himself, he slices a guy's arm off and plays the petty, money-grabbing rival factions in the town he wanders into off each other. And as he walks, super-cool walking-the-earth music plays. Kurosawa's camera sits behind Toshiro Mifune's man-with-no-name, inviting us to look up at the back of his head as he walks the earth, inviting us to be in awe of this man. If you ever watched Pulp Fiction and thought: movie cool was born here, or maybe you saw any single Sergio Leone movie and thought: this guy invented movie-cool (if you haven't, i thoroughly recommend it - Kill Bill is nothing to his Good, the Bad and the Ugly or Once Upon a Time in the West), then experience Yojimbo, or The Bodyguard.
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