CheerupSilver
Very Cool!!!
Majorthebys
Charming and brutal
Huievest
Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.
Sharkflei
Your blood may run cold, but you now find yourself pinioned to the story.
mj.Jernigan
This film is like some strange mashup between a Sonny Chiba film and a Jackie Chan film. The martial arts choreography is of the highest quality and the actors engaged in the fights are convincing and entertaining............. and the food!............ and then the climax and ending is lame enough to steal a star or two.
Clare Din
As an homage film, this tongue-in-cheek action comedy totally works. I looooove the ode to Zatoichi. I thought the fight with the blind swordsman was the best in the film. My second favorite fight was the yakuza battle. It started out as something kind of silly and then took on a whole new direction for me. I loved it! I love the surprise ending, too. Absolutely fantastic. You have to see it. The master totally channels Dan Inosanto in one scene.What lost points for me was the ridiculousness of the gunfighter and Millie, the girl with the guns. I would've loved to see something like a Shaolin priest with a three-sectioned staff instead. An ode to Master Killer, perhaps.
pal05052003
This is the movie that got me hooked into Japanese action flicks, and cemented my interest in Japanese movies. It features quick, and graceful movements found in Chinese action, combined with humor. The movie effortlessly combines great choreographed fights, with mouth-watering scenes of food, and absurd (spoiler alert: the fight with a nunchunku torn from a minor character's arm for example). One of the most interesting scenario is the fist vs gunfight. In fact, every fight is brilliant in its own right, and has a lesson attached to it. Whatever its weaknesses, it is not necessarily a glamorization of violence, but a true martial arts movie (with its quirks).
intelearts
I watched Bushido Man with low expectations and boy, was I pleasantly surprised. This is an original film - particularly in its use of camera - it explores the action through low shot-high shot, avoids camera shake, close ups, and jump cuts, and instead actually compliments and augments what are excellent fights really well.The plot, a pupil returns to his master to tell of his his 8 fights to master all fighting styles, is set firmly in modern Japan - each fight takes place near a city and each fight is preceded by a meal that helps our hero understand his enemy.There are strong comedy aspects throughout in common with many martial arts, but the fights are well choreographed.All in all if you are a fan of martial arts films this is a treat - it is not an expensive historical drama it is rather a simple tale, very well made, with surprises, laughs, and ironic twists, this is one that is a rare beast: a low budget martial arts' art film.