Re: [scifinoir2] Dororo

2010-04-15 Thread Martin Baxter
I long for them as well, rave. Saw it the other night on IFC, but I nodded
before the end. Hoping it'll cycle back soon.

On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 11:16 PM, Kelwyn ravena...@yahoo.com wrote:



 http://www.nipponcinema.com/trailers/dororo/

 I just saw the movie Dororo based on the manga comics of the same name.
 The movie is an epic, odd and moving mishmash of Frankenstein, Pinocchio,
 Edward Scissorhands, the Karate Kid, and the story of Moses, if all those
 stories had taken place in feudal Japan during the age of Samurais.

 At the heart of Dororo is an incredibly silly and wondrously irresistible
 premise: the warlord Kagemitsu Daigo has made a pact with demons - in
 exchange for giving him the wherewithal to rule the world, he will allow the
 demons to take 48 body parts from his unborn son (the demons need the human
 body parts so they can deceive men and wreck mayhem).

 Daigo knows his deal has been sealed when his son is born without arms,
 legs, mouth, nose, eyes, ears, liver, heart and forty other undisclosed body
 parts. Daigo wants to kill his newborn son who, sans heart and other vital
 organs, still lives and breathes (or a facimile thereof since he doesn't
 have a mouth or lungs). Daigo's wife intervenes, places the baby in a woven
 basket and sets it adrift on the river.

 The baby is found by Jukai, an alchemist-healer who proceeds to turn our
 hero into a real boy via miraculous prosthetic limbs and organs. The death,
 dumb, blind kid (who will wield a mean set of demon-slaying swords/hands) is
 also given a clockwork heart that allows him to see and hear (How does he
 see? With his heart!).

 When Jukai dies, Hyakkimaru sets out in the world to kill demons and
 retrieve his body parts. Every time he discovers and dispatches a demon his
 prosthetic parts are replaced by his real parts.

 Hyakkimaru is joined on his quest by the feral girl-thief, Dororo, who is
 masquerading as a boy. Dororo's father is killed by Daigo's dark army and
 she has vowed to stay a boy until she has avenged her dead parents.

 Satoshi Tsumabuki as Hyakkimaru and Ko Shibasaki as Dororo, an alleged
 couple in real life, are fetching and compelling as the stars of this movie.
 Filmed in New Zealand by director Akihiko Shiota (with the beautifully
 acrobatic sword fights choreographed by Hong Kong master Siu-Tung Ching),
 Dororo rises above its hokey and unconvincing demons, a mishmash of bad
 special effects and worse CGI, to wring actual emotion out its outlandish
 premise. Improbably, it make you care and long for parts two and three, the
 promised sequels.

 ~rave!

  



[scifinoir2] Dororo

2010-04-14 Thread Kelwyn
http://www.nipponcinema.com/trailers/dororo/

I just saw the movie Dororo based on the manga comics of the same name.  The 
movie is an epic, odd and moving mishmash of Frankenstein, Pinocchio, Edward 
Scissorhands, the Karate Kid, and the story of Moses, if all those stories had 
taken place in feudal Japan during the age of Samurais.

At the heart of Dororo is an incredibly silly and wondrously irresistible 
premise: the warlord Kagemitsu Daigo has made a pact with demons - in exchange 
for giving him the wherewithal to rule the world, he will allow the demons to 
take 48 body parts from his unborn son (the demons need the human body parts so 
they can deceive men and wreck mayhem).  

Daigo knows his deal has been sealed when his son is born without arms, legs, 
mouth, nose, eyes, ears, liver, heart and forty other undisclosed body parts.  
Daigo wants to kill his newborn son who, sans heart and other vital organs, 
still lives and breathes (or a facimile thereof since he doesn't have a mouth 
or lungs).  Daigo's wife intervenes, places the baby in a woven basket and sets 
it adrift on the river.

The baby is found by Jukai, an alchemist-healer who proceeds to turn our hero 
into a real boy via miraculous prosthetic limbs and organs.  The death, dumb, 
blind kid (who will wield a mean set of demon-slaying swords/hands) is also 
given a clockwork heart that allows him to see and hear (How does he see? With 
his heart!).  

When Jukai dies, Hyakkimaru sets out in the world to kill demons and retrieve 
his body parts.  Every time he discovers and dispatches a demon his prosthetic 
parts are replaced by his real parts.  

Hyakkimaru is joined on his quest by the feral girl-thief, Dororo, who is 
masquerading as a boy. Dororo's father is killed by Daigo's dark army and she 
has vowed to stay a boy until she has avenged her dead parents.

Satoshi Tsumabuki as Hyakkimaru and Ko Shibasaki as Dororo, an alleged couple 
in real life, are fetching and compelling as the stars of this movie.  Filmed 
in New Zealand by director Akihiko Shiota (with the beautifully acrobatic sword 
fights choreographed by Hong Kong master Siu-Tung Ching), Dororo rises above 
its hokey and unconvincing demons, a mishmash of bad special effects and worse 
CGI, to wring actual emotion out its outlandish premise.  Improbably, it make 
you care and long for parts two and three, the promised sequels.

~rave!   



Re: [scifinoir2] Dororo

2010-04-14 Thread Amy Harlib

ahar...@earthlink.net
 I just adored this film.  Saw it at the NYAFF a couple of years ago.
Cheers!
Amy

Subject: [scifinoir2] Dororo


 http://www.nipponcinema.com/trailers/dororo/

 I just saw the movie Dororo based on the manga comics of the same name. 
 The movie is an epic, odd and moving mishmash of Frankenstein, Pinocchio, 
 Edward Scissorhands, the Karate Kid, and the story of Moses, if all those 
 stories had taken place in feudal Japan during the age of Samurais.

 At the heart of Dororo is an incredibly silly and wondrously 
 irresistible premise: the warlord Kagemitsu Daigo has made a pact with 
 demons - in exchange for giving him the wherewithal to rule the world, he 
 will allow the demons to take 48 body parts from his unborn son (the 
 demons need the human body parts so they can deceive men and wreck 
 mayhem).

 Daigo knows his deal has been sealed when his son is born without arms, 
 legs, mouth, nose, eyes, ears, liver, heart and forty other undisclosed 
 body parts.  Daigo wants to kill his newborn son who, sans heart and other 
 vital organs, still lives and breathes (or a facimile thereof since he 
 doesn't have a mouth or lungs).  Daigo's wife intervenes, places the baby 
 in a woven basket and sets it adrift on the river.

 The baby is found by Jukai, an alchemist-healer who proceeds to turn our 
 hero into a real boy via miraculous prosthetic limbs and organs.  The 
 death, dumb, blind kid (who will wield a mean set of demon-slaying 
 swords/hands) is also given a clockwork heart that allows him to see and 
 hear (How does he see? With his heart!).

 When Jukai dies, Hyakkimaru sets out in the world to kill demons and 
 retrieve his body parts.  Every time he discovers and dispatches a demon 
 his prosthetic parts are replaced by his real parts.

 Hyakkimaru is joined on his quest by the feral girl-thief, Dororo, who is 
 masquerading as a boy. Dororo's father is killed by Daigo's dark army and 
 she has vowed to stay a boy until she has avenged her dead parents.

 Satoshi Tsumabuki as Hyakkimaru and Ko Shibasaki as Dororo, an alleged 
 couple in real life, are fetching and compelling as the stars of this 
 movie.  Filmed in New Zealand by director Akihiko Shiota (with the 
 beautifully acrobatic sword fights choreographed by Hong Kong master 
 Siu-Tung Ching), Dororo rises above its hokey and unconvincing demons, a 
 mishmash of bad special effects and worse CGI, to wring actual emotion out 
 its outlandish premise.  Improbably, it make you care and long for parts 
 two and three, the promised sequels.

 ~rave!



 

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