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the last samurai
Full of Eastern promise or a cross-cultural catastrophe? The Last
Samurai, Tom Cruise's latest superstar vehicle, attempts to
merge two heavily romanticised cultures, The American West and Feudal
Japan, into the template of a rousing period epic.
Cruise steps into the role of Nathan Algren, a damaged and decorated
veteran of the Wild West who finds himself largely redundant in
late nineteenth century America. With the Native American nations
subdued permanently, the dirty work Algren carried out as a captain
in the cavalry is complete but its bitter legacy haunts him daily.
A heavy drinker, Algren makes a buck entertaining tourists as
a sharpshooter in San Francisco, until an old colleague and sparring
partner approaches him with an offer to help turn the antiquated
Japanese army into a modern fighting force. Suddenly Algren finds
himself the archetypal fish out of water in an alien land, saddled
with the task of training a peasant army that is ill equipped
and unprepared. Assisted in disciplinary matters by his cavalry
buddy Zebulon Gant (Billy Connolly inexplicably trying to do an
Irish accent and failing) and in cultural adjustments by British
ex-pat Simon Graham (a beetroot cheeked Timothy Spall), Algren
busies himself with the task at hand; displaying all the interest
of a burnt out soldier who's in it for all the Yen he can
ship back stateside.
Once Algren is forced to rush his troops into pursuing and engaging
the rebellious Katsumoto (Ken Watanabe) and his Samurai the real
ideological conflict begins. The Samurai, whilst still loyal to
the Emperor, are the enemy of Japanese progress and must be removed
for the country to move forward. With battle imminent, Algren
is sober enough to spot the similarities between his current enemies
and those he disposed of for Uncle Sam. The Samurai, like the
Native Americans, embody a deeply mysterious and romanticised
way of life, which they do not intend to rescind lightly. This
realisation hits Algren when he is left alone on the battlefield
surrounded by the corpses of his new, less-than-model army and
a host of Samurai intent on killing him. Spared death by Katsumoto's
curiosity, Algren is taken prisoner and forced to observe the
ancient Japanese rituals that the Samurai uphold. Required to
come to terms with his pastoral captivity deep in the mountains,
Algren discovers something of his self in his supposed enemy and
a mutual respect develops.
It is easy to be swept away with the alluring package that is
The Last Samurai. The production is faultless; the scale and authenticity
are neatly judged and director Edward Zwick handles the material
passionately. Drawn again to this particular timeframe, namely
the second half of the nineteenth century, Zwick adapts a loose
revisionist western format to Japan. It is this easy to spot mould
that severely restricts The Last Samurai, and curtails any serious
attempt to explore the Japanese culture that the film purports
to celebrate. The plot feels far too familiar and convenient,
moving in an orderly fashion to an obvious resolution and Algren's
assimilation into the small Samurai community is charted with
the inevitable period of self-loathing and contempt that then
leads to mutual respect and trust. Within weeks he proves himself
worthy by subjecting himself to Katsumoto's philosophical
ramblings, taking his shoes off before entering the house, eating
dinner cross-legged and saving Katsumoto's life. Cruise
buys into the lifestyle wholeheartedly, short of picking his plot
of land in the mountains, and sets about becoming another thorn
in modernisation's side.
The culture clash that is generated at the heart of the plot
is overused and too easily resolved, despite seemingly irreconcilable
differences at the outset, thanks to the redeeming power of courage,
loyalty and tradition; values that naturally transcend the superficial
trappings of culture. These might appear to be worthy flagstones
upon which to base an epic narrative such this, but it leads to
The Last Samurai doing the classic Hollywood disservice to the
culture it sets out to glamourise, primarily because it feels
like Tom Cruise, is converting the Samurai to his code not the
other way around. Too often Cruise, never forced to push himself,
appears the enlightened one in the midst of a rabble of Samurai
who do little more than grunt and look fierce. The intoxicating
obscurity of ancient Japanese culture is shown to be irrational
and confusing. Such a ham-fisted portrayal sadly limits the effectiveness
of The Last Samurai as a weighty drama (oddly enough there have
been Oscar whispers) despite this fact the film still operates
very well as a spectacle.
To say that the action scenes are worth the entrance fee alone,
especially in the face of such remarkable recent opposition, would
be an exaggeration but The Last Samurai is as well executed as
a lightening slice to the neck from a warrior's blade and
proves to be a watchable venture east. The plot may be reductive
and unwilling to take risks but the action sequences are quite
the opposite; paraphrasing Akira Kurosawa's giant battle
scale in their style and composition. Sadly, obvious associations
with a colossal American genre ensure that The Last Samurai always
feels a little bit too close to home. The boat hasn't been
pushed out far enough in the story to match the films' ambitions
in other areas. What remains is a tried, tested and terminally
dull American formula dressed up to appear Japanese.
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