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Sword of Doom, The
Modern DVD enthusiasts awash in the copious bloodletting of samurai and yakuza movies may need to be reminded that back before video, the only access to most Japanese fare was in art film theaters and neighborhood Japanese theaters in major cities. Like most Americans, the only Japanese films I'd seen before college were Toho's giant monster movies, and at UCLA there was only the occasional screening of a Kurosawa film. Thus when books by Paul Schrader and Alain Silver appeared that charted the entire history and genre-specific lore of samurai and yakuza cinema, they described a cinema that couldn't really be seen. With European horror films we at least had the censored and dubbed American versions to ponder.
But we did hear of a few. Right about the time my eyes were being opened by my first visits to LA's Kokusai theater (part four of Sword of Vengeance being my advent into a new world of razor dismemberment aesthetics), I heard people talking about possible precursors. The title Sword of Doom frequently came up.
Criterion's Sword of Doom turns out to be the character study of a master swordsman who is also a murdering maniac, hiding behind courtly manners but secretly relishing every opportunity to express his core obsession.
According to Geoffrey O'Brien's indispensible liner notes, Daibosatsu Toge was a newspaper serial that continued for thirty years and forty-three volumes, and charted the progress of a "demonic swordsman" embodying the way of karmic law. Kihachi Okamoto's 1965 film version tells only a tiny fraction of the story of Ryunosuke Tsukue. It picks up at a conventional starting point (a pointless murder, a problematic tournament) but leaps ahead more than once between "incidents," leaving out a lot of detail in between. The effect is almost as if we were seeing episodes 1, 4, 7 and 8 in a serial with dozens of adventures to follow; the film's frenzied freeze-frame ending ignores a number of loose ends to concentrate on Ryunosuke Tsukue's ecstatic heights of mayhem.
There is plenty of detail to follow. Tsukue does not honor his dirty bargain with Yuzo - her honor for his throwing of the contest - but he maliciously turns the blame back on her anyway. In tournament combat with supposedly non-deadly wooden substitutes for swords, Yuzo's jealous husband Bunnojo Utsuki (Ichiro Nakaya) launches an illegal move and receives a deadly blow to the head.
Okamoto's tournament fights are splendid. The key moves are so swift we barely see them, convincing us that Ryunosuke Tsukue is a master who lives, eats and sleeps his craft. We know he's a bad apple through the presence of Toshiro Mifune as Toranosuke Shimada, a respected sensei of a certain sword style. We see Shimada dice up a dozen of Tsukue's fellow shogunate pirates, yet even he knows that our psycho protagonist has tricks yet unknown. In a nice lead-up to the ultimate battle, a positive sword pupil (a minor character) follows Shimada's advice to use the very same maneuver that Tsukue so easily defeated before.
Besides Yuzo, the fallen woman who eventually lives with Tsukue and nags him about his lack of responsibility for his baby, there is Ohama (Michiyo Aratama) a hopeful bride who has little choice but to become a lowly prostitute-geisha for the opportunistic scum Ryunosuke Tsukue runs with. We wonder how she is going to be rescued - perhaps Tsukue will repent? Not likely, since it was Ohama's grandfather that he slayed just to keep his sword arm in practice. There's also Omatsu (Yoko Naito), a prostitute who tries to be fair with Ohama. Just when we think that these characters (or their memory) are going to take major roles in the conclusion, or that Mifune's disciple is going to catch up with Tuskue, Sword of Doom opts instead for what in 1965 must have seemed the bloodbath to end all bloodbaths.
Ryunosuke Tsukue's talents are underestimated by his thug associates, and he quite happily finds himself square in the middle of a gang war, a battle between him and what must be a hundred opponents. They just keep coming no matter how many he kills, and Tsukue's true self seems to be liberated by the opportunity to dispense such wholesale carnage. The key emotion we've seen Tsukue express after each killing so far has been a gleeful radiance, as if only through murder could he feel alive. Now he has no time for reflection and just becomes a killing automaton.
Once so shocking, the final conflict now seems less of a jolt. Tsukue may know 1001 ways to carve up a man but the battle is still one of those things where his surrounding opponents take turns charging, and inexplicably balk at striking as if they preferred to be struck instead. There are a number of jarring details of wounds received and hands and fingers sliced off. Tsukue earlier equated the soul of a sword as inseparable with the soul of the man who uses it, which makes a lot more sense than trying to fit any concept of honor into this kind of swordplay - all of those splayed-out quivering losers couldn't have deserved their fates, particularly when it has been demonstrated that Tsukue is the worst of all.
The B&W photography is austere and compositionally pleasing, while Tatsuya Nakadai, later of Kurosawa's Kagemusha and Ran is a bafflingly serene psycho swordsman. Masaru Sato's score carries a lot of punch.
Criterion's DVD of Sword of Doom is a crisp enhanced transfer of this Tohoscope film, with the expected digital cleanup job. Once again, Geoffrey O'Brien's liner notes are a godsend of information for reviewers enthusiastic about but unfamiliar with these Japanese genre films.
On a scale of Excellent, Good, Fair, and Poor, The Sword of Doom rates:
Movie: Excellent
Video: Excellent
Sound: Excellent
Supplements: Liner note essay by critic Geoffrey O'Brien
Packaging: Keep case
Reviewed: March 26, 2005
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