Seven Samurai
By (Author) Joan Mellen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
BFI Publishing
19th May 2022
2nd edition
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Film guides and reviews
Film history, theory or criticism
791.4372
Paperback
112
Width 135mm, Height 190mm
178g
In Seven Samurai (1954) a whole society is on the verge of irrevocable change. Akira Kurosawas celebrated film, regarded by many to be the major achievement of Japanese cinema, is an epic that evokes the cultural upheaval brought on by the collapse of Japanese militarism in the 16th century, but at the same time echoes also the sweeping cultural changes occurring in the aftermath of the American Occupation that followed Japan's defeat in the Second World War. The plot is deceptively simple. A village of farmers is beleaguered by a horde of bandits. In desperation, the farmers decide to hire itinerant samurai to protect their crops and people and defeat the bandits. There had never been a Japanese film in which peasants hired samurai, or an evocation of the social transformation that made such an idea credible. There are six samurai and one who is accepted as such. Together they reflect the ideals and values of a noble class near the point of extinction. Seven Samurai may be the greatest action film, a technical masterpiece unmatched in its depiction of movement and violence, but running beneath the sound and fury is a lament for a lost nobility, a dirge for the spirit of Japan, writes Joan Mellen, which will never again be so strong. Mellen's study contextualises Seven Samurai, marking its place in Japanese cinema and in Kurosawas film-making career. She explores the films roots in medieval history and, above all, the astonishing visual language in which Kurosawa created his elegiac epic.
Joan Mellen is Professor of English and Creative Writing at Temple University, Philadelphia, USA. Among her books are Marilyn Monroe (1973), Voices from the Japanese Cinema (1975), The Waves at Genji's Door: Japan Through Its Cinema (1976), the dual biography Hellman and Hammett: The Legendary Passion of Lilian Hellman and Dashiell Hammett (1996), and, more recently, Faustian Bargains: Lyndon Johnson and Mac Wallace in the Robber Baron Culture of Texas (Bloomsbury 2016) and Blood in the Water: How the US and Israel Conspired to Ambush the USS Liberty (2018). She is the author of In the Realm of the Senses (2004) and Modern Times (2006), also in the BFI Film Classics series.