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| Management number | 216009886 | Release Date | 2026/04/19 | List Price | US$15.20 | Model Number | 216009886 | ||
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Product Description Samurai 7 is set in a futuristic world that has just seen the end of a massive war, many villages are being terrorized by Nobuseri bandits. The Nobuseri are no normal bandits. They were once men, but during the war they modifed themselves with machines to become living weapons and now apprear as more machine than man. A group of villagers decide to hire samurai to protect their village. These men of valor are as skilled as they are unique. Amazon.com The broadcast series Samurai 7 (2004) borrows the premise of Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai (1954): driven to desperation by bandits who steal their crops, the inhabitants of a small village hire unemployed samurai to defend them. With nothing to offer as wages but their precious rice, the villagers recruit warriors poor enough to accept the dishonor of working for peasants. Samurai 7 moves the story into the future: the bandits and some of the samurai are mecha. The grim ronin Kambei leads the viewers in the defense of their village, then tackles the forces of the orchidaceous emperor Ukyo. Kambei and his mismatched band attack the Capitol, Ukyo's equivalent of the Death Star. The warriors perform gravity-defying leaps, as they slash through steel plating, deflect bullets, and split laser beams with their swords in a climactic battle that occupies most of the last three episodes. The drawn/CG combinations reveal why Samurai 7 cost a reported ¥32,500,000 (nearly $300,000) per episode, an extremely high price by Japanese standards. Widely acclaimed as a masterpiece of world cinema, Kurosawa's Seven Samurai stressed the shared humanity of the peasants, the samurai, and even the bandits; the often grotesque people and mecha in this sci-fi adventure lack that essential bond. Samurai 7 offers plenty of over-the-top battle sequences for viewers who enjoy a mixture of feudal and futuristic daring-do. But its meandering plot, stock heroes, and tin pot villains have very little to do with its supposed model. (Rated TV PG, suitable for ages 12 and older: violence, brief nudity, alcohol and tobacco use) --Charles Solomon (1. The Master, 2. The Pupil, 3. The Entertainer, 4. The Loner, 5. The Drifter, 6. The Fool, 7. The Friend, 8. The Guardians, 9. The Bandits, 10. The Journey, 11. Village, 12. The Truth, 13. The Attack, 14. The Offering, 15. The Gun and the Calm, 16. The Storm, 17. The Remembrance, 18. The Emperor, 19. The Mutiny, 20. The Execution, 21. The Rescue, 23. The Divide, 23. The Lies, 24. The Oaths, 25. The Last Battle, 26. The Era's End)
| Actors | Bill Flynn (II), Inukai Junji, Maria Vu (II), Zarah Little |
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| Dubbed | English, Japanese |
| Studio | Funimation |
| Director | Toshifumi Takizawa |
| Language | English (Dolby TrueHD 5.1), Japanese (Dolby TrueHD 5.1) |
| Run time | 10 hours and 25 minutes |
| Subtitles | English |
| MPAA rating | Unrated (Not Rated) |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 |
| Media Format | Blu-ray, Color, Dolby, Multiple Formats, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen |
| Release date | February 24, 2009 |
| Number of discs | 3 |
| Item model number | 704400058318 |
| Product Dimensions | 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 8.8 ounces |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
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