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Although the writer’s intent was probably not to make Katsumoto, a devout Buddhist, into a Christ figure, there are certainly enough interesting parallels to warrant discussion. In a very real way, Katsumoto’s relationships with the Emperor and the people of Japan reflect Christ’s relationships with God and the people on Earth.  

(2003) Film Review by Melinda Ledman
With Point of View by Darrel Manson

This page was created on December 16, 2003
This page was last updated on December 28, 2004


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CREDITS

Click to enlargeDirected by Edward Zwick
Story by John Logan
Screenplay by John Logan, Edward Zwick & Marshall Herskovitz

Producers
Tom Cruise ... producer
Michael Doven ... associate producer
Tom Engelman ... producer
Ted Field ... executive producer
Marshall Herskovitz ... producer
Scott Kroopf ... producer
Graham Larson ... associate producer
Charles Mulvehill ... executive producer
Yôko Narahashi ... associate producer
Richard Solomon ... executive producer
Paula Wagner ... producer
Vincent Ward ... executive producer
Edward Zwick ... producer

Cast - in credits order
Ken Watanabe ... Katsumoto
Click to enlarge Tom Cruise ... Nathan Algren
William Atherton ... Winchester Rep
Chad Lindberg ... Winchester Rep Assistant
Ray Godshall Sr. ... Convention Hall Attendee
Billy Connolly ... Zebulon Gant
Tony Goldwyn ... Colonel Bagley
Masato Harada ... Omura
Masashi Odate ... Omura's Companion
John Koyama ... Omura's Bodyguard
Timothy Spall ... Simon Graham
Shichinosuke Nakamura ... Emperor Meiji
Togo Igawa ... General Hasegawa
Satoshi Nikaido ... N.C.O.
Shintaro Wada ... Young Recruit
Shin Koyamada ... Nobutada
Hiroyuki Sanada ... Ujio
Shun Sugata ... Nakao
Koyuki ... Taka
Sosuke Ikematsu ... Higen
Aoi Minato ... Magojiro
Seizo Fukumoto ... Silent Samurai
Shoji Yoshihara ... Sword Master

Original Music by Hans Zimmer, with Blake Neely and Geoff Zanelli for additional music
Cinematography by John Toll
Edited by Victor Du Bois and Steven Rosenblum


Rated
For rating reasons, go to FILMRATINGS.COM, and MPAA.ORG.
Parents, please refer to PARENTALGUIDE.ORG

TRAILERS AND CLIPS
a ton of Clips and Trailers
CD
Click to enlargeLast Samurai (Score)
Hans Zimmer

1. A Way Of Life
2. Spectres In The Fog
3. Taken
4. A Hard Teacher
5. To Know My Enemy
6. Idyll's End
7. Safe Passage
8. Ronin
9. Red Warrior
10. The Way Of The Sword
11. A Small Measure Of Peace
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SYNOPSIS

Click to enlargeCaptain Nathan Algren (TOM CRUISE) is a man adrift. The battles he once fought now seem distant and futile. Once he risked his life for honor and country, but, in the years since the Civil War, the world has changed. Pragmatism has replaced courage, self-interest has taken the place of sacrifice and honor is nowhere to be found - especially out West where his role in the Indian Campaigns ended in disillusionment and sorrow.

Somewhere on the unforgiving plains near the banks of the Washita River, Algren lost his soul.

A universe away, another soldier sees his way of life about to disintegrate. He is Katsumoto (KEN WATANABE), the last leader of an ancient line of warriors, the venerated Samurai, who dedicated their lives to serving emperor and country. Just as the modern way encroached upon the American West, cornering and condemning the Native American, it also engulfed traditional Japan. The telegraph lines and railroads that brought progress now threaten those values and codes by which the Samurai have lived and died for centuries.

Click to enlargeBut Katsumoto will not go without a fight.

The paths of these two warriors converge when the young Emperor of Japan, wooed by American interests who covet the growing Japanese market, hires Algren to train Japan's first modern, conscript army. But as the Emperor's advisors attempt to eradicate the Samurai in preparation for a more Westernized and trade-friendly government, Algren finds himself unexpectedly impressed and influenced by his encounters with the Samurai. Their powerful convictions remind him of the man he once was.

Thrust now into harsh and unfamiliar territory, with his life and perhaps more important, his soul, in the balance, the troubled American soldier finds himself at the center of a violent and epic struggle between two eras and two worlds, with only his sense of honor to guide him.

Click to go to BlogReview by
MELINDA LEDMAN BLOG
HJMLedman@yahoo.com.
Melinda Ledman is a graduate of Baylor University with a Bachelor’s degree in English. During college, she worked on the film Letter From Waco (director Don Howard), which won the award for best documentary feature in the 1997 South by Southwest Film Festival. After she and her husband Rob had their first child in September 2002, she began free-lance writing full time. In addition to writing reviews, she most enjoys writing original screenplays. She gratefully serves God after 12 years of alcoholism, and appreciates grace and freedom on a whole new level.
Although the writer’s intent was probably not to make Katsumoto, a devout Buddhist, into a Christ figure, there are certainly enough interesting parallels to warrant discussion. In a very real way, Katsumoto’s relationships with the Emperor and the people of Japan reflect Christ’s relationships with God and the people on Earth.

The Servant Nature—
Katsumoto was a leader under authority, and he knew it. Even the word Samurai is translated “servant.” While Katsumoto’s service was to the people, he admitted that his highest service was to the throne, the Emperor. As long as he lived, he would serve the Emperor’s wishes. While a leader of the Samurai, Katsumoto did not claim deity or special privilege. He even declined the opportunity to give the Emperor advice when asked. Christ also spoke of his submission to God the Father. He said he was sent here by God (Matt. 10:40) and admitted that authority over heaven and earth was something given to him (Matthew 28:18). Like Katsumoto, his role as a servant was to the people (Matthew 20:28, “…just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many”). And much like the Samurai’s allegiance to the Emperor, Christ’s primary service was unto God. “My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish his work” (John 4:34). In Philippians 2:6-7, Paul shows the irony of this situation, saying that Christ, “who being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking on the very nature of a servant.” In other words, he deliberately limited his power here on Earth in order that the will of his authority (God) could be accomplished. The only difference between Katsumoto and Christ, was that Christ actually was God. And I would imagine Christ’s relinquishment of power was much more difficult than Katsumoto’s.

War and Peace—
Katsumoto represents the natural coexistence of both war and peace. Captain Algren tells the general that his two-week trained troops are unprepared to face the Samurai, whose primary occupation for the last 1,000 years had been war. Yet, when Algren lives with the Samurai, he discovers that they are a peaceful people, practicing war on occasions when necessary. Katsumoto teaches him that the way of the warrior is not only skill in battle, but also discipline, devotion to a set of principles and practicing inner stillness. Christ made similar claims regarding war and peace. Although he claimed to bring peace between mankind and God (John 3:16), he did not believe for a second that peace among men was something to be grasped. In fact, he claimed that his presence on earth would result in war. Christ asks his followers to live in peace with one another as far as it is possible (Mark 9:50), but he also clearly states in Matthew 10:34-39 that sides need to be taken sometimes. Truth is worth fighting for. Christ also modeled discipline (Mark 10:1), taught devotion to principles (Matt.7:24), and practiced inner stillness through prayer on a regular basis (Luke 5:16).

Faithful unto Death—
Katsumoto expressed on several occasions that if the Emperor wanted him dead, he had only to ask his life of him. There would be no fighting, no opposition, and Katsumoto would willingly give up his life if the Emperor thought it best. For the rest of the world, he would only die a warrior’s death. Christ said a similar thing of his life in John 10:18, “No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down and authority to take it up again. This command I received from my Father.” Christ would continue fighting to share the truth of God with people until God asked his life of him. Jesus prayed in the garden of Gethsemane to be spared if there was another way. Still, he conceded, “Yet not my will, but Thy will be done.” God did ask for his life and Christ gave it. The Emperor also asked for Katsumoto’s life, though not as overtly. By choosing not to honor the way of the Samurai at the city council, the Emperor began the chain of events that led to Katsumoto’s demise.

The Message Sent—
Katsumoto deliberately fought to the end in order to send a message to the Emperor and to the people about the reason for the life he lived. While he was alive, no one wanted to hear or respect his message. But upon his death, the people in the army around him stopped shooting and bowed down to honor his legacy. Jesus finally got his message through to the people of Israel in the same way. Many believed that the prophesied Messiah would restore Israel to political world power, so the people were looking for a military leader. Christ had a different message. His refusal to take political or military action and subsequent death on the cross, sent the message that he did not come to conquer the earth for the nation of Israel, but to save the world from sin (John 1:29). Jesus preached to a deaf audience while he lived (Mark 4:12). Even his own disciples failed to understand at times. But in his death, the world began to see the broader picture: Reconciliation with God.

Salvation for the People—
The Emperor faced the difficult decision of whether to embrace the military advancements of the west or to remain faithful to the traditional battle technique of the Samurai. Realistically, lives were at stake. If he did not move forward with the times, his people faced potential slaughter at the hands of adversaries with greater technology. And although the Emperor does not entirely embrace the new technology, his deep concern for the survival of his people suggests that eventually he will. His decisions, Katsumoto’s death, and the defeat of the Samurai mark the decisive end of an era. In a similar way, Jesus’ death marks the end of an old system. Exit the legal system (obedience under the law), enter the grace system (salvation by faith). God desired that his people be able to live a vital, powerful life. He wanted to give them a means to defeat the adversary, rather than allow the continuing oppression of legalism. Paul mentions this principle of “death” caused by the law versus the “life” of the Spirit in 2 Corinthians 3:6. Just like Katsumoto, Christ’s death marked the decisive end of an era. For Christians, it was the end of an era of salvation based on the law. To some degree, each one’s death would mark the beginning of salvation for the people.

Victory over Death—
This is where the two stories diverge. The Last Samurai does not imply that Katsumoto was resurrected or reincarnated. Unlike Christ, his death was final. The movie leaves you with a sense of loss and the admission that there was no real gain on either side. While the Emperor’s decision to reject alliance with the west honored the Samurai, the questions still linger… Yes, but for how long? And will his successors feel the same? The joy of Christ is knowing that a greater hope does not lie in the hands of humanity. Christ died once, for all people, for all time (Rom. 6:10). Romans 5:9-11 is worth opening your Bible to read. It shows that reconciliation with God is available to anyone who believes. And the fact that Christ was raised from the dead gives hope that new life is in every believer’s present (Rom. 8:11) and eternal life is in our future (John 14:2-3).

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