In the fourth and penultimate film of director Tomu Uchida’s landmark series, Japanese swordsman Miyamoto Musashi (Kinnosuke Nakamura) discovers that his defeat of a prominent sword-fighting teacher has left the man’s many students thirsting for revenge. Now Musashi must face dozens of the armed and angry pupils in a temple courtyard with no ally save his unique two-sword fighting technique and, possibly, one dirty trick up his sleeve.
Born in 1898, Uchida joined a theater troupe in his youth, perfecting a sense of stagecraft and theatrical aesthetics that would become the backbone of his films. He turned to directing in the late 1920s; comedies and police actioners dominated his early production, but Uchida also developed a fledgling realist aesthetic rare in the industry at the time. In 1945, he fled Tokyo and joined the leftist Manchuria Film Association, spending ten years there. His return to Japan heralded a new outburst of creativity, as he applied his talents to everything from social critiques to theater adaptations, samurai movies to gritty noir. His late-fifties output in particular could serve as a sampling of nearly every genre and pleasure that Japanese cinema can offer, and also as a snapshot of the country’s postwar aesthetics, concerns, and imaginings. “Uchida crystallized the social, political and artistic passions of an epoch crucial to modern Japan,” critic Max Tessier wrote, “and did so with a… read more