Yojimbo | Telescope Film
Yojimbo

Yojimbo (用心棒)

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In 19th century Japan, wandering ronin Sanjuro comes into a small rural town. After learning that the town is divided between two gangs, Sanjuro decides to play them against each other to his advantage, inciting a gang war. When the revolver-toting son of one the gangsters shows up, his plan gets even more complicated.

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What are critics saying?

100

Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington

One of the great samurai pictures, its darkly brilliant premise--the cynical mercenary/master swordsman or yojimbo (bodyguard) who walks into a town feud and plays both evil sides against each other--has been copied frequently, most notably in the Sergio Leone-Clint Eastwood A Fistful of Dollars. But Kurosawa's treatment remains the most savage, thrilling, smart and hideously funny. [26 Jan 2007, p.C2]

100

Slant Magazine by Rob Humanick

Something of a textbook example of the perfect crowd-pleaser, Kurosawa’s tale is sociopolitical wish fulfillment via archetypal samurai drama, albeit with a twist or three.

100

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

Yojimbo does not cause viewers to ponder deep issues in the way Rashomon does, nor does it possess the epic grandness of The Seven Samurai, yet it must still be considered in the top tier of Kurosawa's films. Stylish, compelling, and involving, it became as much a blueprint for future productions as it is an homage to past ones.

100

Empire by David Parkinson

Less visceral than the battle scene in Seven Samurai, this is more of a free-for-all, with brute force leaving no room for skill.

100

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

[Kurosawa] was deliberately combining the samurai story with the Western, so that the wind-swept main street could be in any frontier town, the samurai (Toshiro Mifune) could be a gunslinger, and the local characters could have been lifted from John Ford's gallery of supporting actors.

100

Time by Richard Schickel

The filmmaking is marvelously austere, yet in its sudden bursts of action electrifying, in its stern morality sobering, in the blackness of its comedy often quite delicious.

100

Portland Oregonian by Ted Mahar

This is still the one to see ...for Mifune's inimitable performance and Kurosawa's gorgeous black-and-white photography. [05 Jan 2001]

100

The New Yorker by Pauline Kael

There is so much displacement of the usual movie conventions that we don't have the time or inclination to ask why we are enjoying the action; we respond kinesthetically. One of the rare Japanese films that is both great and funny to American audiences.

90

Total Film

You won't find a more bone-jarring set of fight scenes than the ones on display here, while Mifune's blood-letting drifter offers a masterclass in justice-dispensing cool.

90

Variety

Though this lacks the epic stature of Seven Samurai, Kurosawa here again shows his mastery of the medium.

90

Total Film by George Wales

You won't find a more bone-jarring set of fight scenes than the ones on display here, while Mifune's blood-letting drifter offers a masterclass in justice-dispensing cool.

90

Variety by Staff (Not Credited)

Though this lacks the epic stature of Seven Samurai, Kurosawa here again shows his mastery of the medium.

88

TV Guide Magazine

With Mifune's tongue-in-cheek performance and the wildly stylized battle scenes featuring mallet and pistol-wielding samurai, YOJIMBO may just be the first post-modern samurai film.

80

Time Out

Far from being just another vehicle for Mifune, this belongs in that select group of films noirs which are also comedies.

70

Village Voice

Kurosawa's imagery is alway exciting. [25 Oct 1962, p.16]