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» » Samurai Headhunters (2013)

Short summary

For over a thousand years, the Samurai have been celebrated as an aristocratic warrior class. Exceptionally skilled and loyal until death, their very name has become a byword for honour and dignity. Now, for the first time on television, we reveal the unknown dark side of the Samurai - a fascinating tale of greed, treachery, extreme cruelty and violent death. Based on newly discovered Samurai war manuals, we reconstruct the life of a young peasant farmer who is press-ganged into a warlord's army. Driven by his love for a village girl of noble birth, young Masa quickly rises through the ranks from simple foot soldier to venerated Samurai commander. But his reward is to be one of betrayal, lies and finally forced suicide by his fellow Samurai. Interwoven with this dramatic story, two British historians track down remarkable new evidence from ancient war manuals that show the true, dark world of the Samurai. The drama documentary also features a living Samurai master and his students, as...

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: hardy
    Actually, when i want to go outside France and stay away from America on TV, i just fall on Japan. This is good because the land is beautiful, full of traditions, ahead of its time and exceptionally neat and clean (the opposite of my country so...).

    Thus, what stroke me first at this fictional documentary was that an half millennium back, Japan had already those traits. While Europe was in Dark Ages, with gloomy castles, Japan appears more colorful.

    But, quickly, this sense of wonder changed into one of revulsion : the value of human, and especially those defeated, seems to be crushed under the pompous rules of the warrior (the Bushido) : bodies are used to test the cutting edge of swords ; head are cut off for trophies ; suicide is rated as honorable exit... I'm not idiot : wars have always been bloody but as i have written in my « World's Busiest Train Station » review, i have the feeling that this culture takes the individual for cheap and all that matters is the « clan ».

    This documentary opens my eyes about this unknown past of cruelty: But unlike the actual trend to bomb as many images as possible, the documentary prefers a slow pace, trough a fictional story and it's good, all the more than the Japanese cast and the production are excellent. I really appreciate also the modern lesson in swords as the Master Tanaka explains exceptionally how to win a duel with the precise movements. Thus, for the first time in my life, i understand that sword fight is technical.
  • comment
    • Author: Cozius
    Decent production values (at least the armour is worn the right way around… not as rare as you might think in these programs…), but the show is completely undermined by the swathes of incorrect information, poorly researched "history", and the use of the totally unqualified but media hungry Antony Cummins (described as a "martial arts historian"… no, he's not) as an expert.

    The program seems to take the (incorrect) view that the samurai can be defined by a single form… including making blanket statements, such as claiming that samurai have to be born to the station (that was only true in later history, after a decree from Toyotomi Hideyoshi). The demonstrations of combat are also not correct in any way (the methods, the weaponry forms, and more), and Antony Cummins over-the-top, almost hysterical delivery method add nothing to the show (witness his attacking a leather do with a knife in a completely pointless demonstration before explaining that the armour wouldn't stand up to a spear… which is what it would actually meet… for a complete waste of time).

    The other experts are Stephen Turnbull, who also enjoys mixed reviews from practitioners and students of such areas, and Tanaka Fumon, a man with a range of claims in terms of his martial lineages, as well as some very questionable books addressing topics that he clearly doesn't know (a recent book on the supposed sword methods of Miyamoto Musashi is a standout in poor understanding of the subject matter).

    Give it a complete miss.
  • Cast overview:
    Demetri Goritsas Demetri Goritsas - Himself - Narrator (voice)
    Stephen Turnbull Stephen Turnbull - Himself - Japanese Historian
    Antony Cummins Antony Cummins - Himself - Martial Arts Historian
    Fumon Tanaka Fumon Tanaka - Himself - Martial Arts Grandmaster
    Tsunehiro Kabaya Tsunehiro Kabaya - Himself - Museum Curator
    Louis Nishio Louis Nishio - Masa (as Luis Nishio)
    Inoue Shigeru Inoue Shigeru - Samurai Araki
    Chika Katou Chika Katou - Okyo
    Kazuya Tsurui Kazuya Tsurui - Tomozo
    Yoshiro Murakami Yoshiro Murakami - Warlord
    Ryo Heitaku Ryo Heitaku - Court Samurai
    Hibi Ryouto Hibi Ryouto - Masa's Son
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