Foreign Girls React | The Last Samurai | First Time Watch

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
  • Check out our Full Movie/TV Shows Reactions on Patreon :)
    ✔ PATREON - / moviemunchies65
    Subscribe to "Asian Angels" for more TV SHOW reactions: / @asian.angels2
    Chi - / tranbichchi1608
    Hella - / hella.vuu
    Tien - / trntien
    Watch reaction to FAMILY GUY out now on new channel! • Family Guy goes TOO FA...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 732

  • @ben_spiller
    @ben_spiller 6 місяців тому +492

    He fought the natives in America. Then was hired to fight the Samurai in Japan.

    • @Movie.Munchies
      @Movie.Munchies  6 місяців тому +108

      Ok thank you 🙏 ☺️

    • @Filmfiend27
      @Filmfiend27 6 місяців тому +103

      It was quite a brutal expansion of the western United States, which is why the Captain feels guilty and stays drunk. A good movie that’s actually similar to this but Native Americans instead of Japanese is “Dances with Wolves.”

    • @corvus8000
      @corvus8000 6 місяців тому +72

      @@Movie.Munchies In particular they mentioned Gettysburg and Little Bighorn, which explains why he would be suffering from PTSD.
      -Gettysburg was a pivotal battle of the American civil war and also one of the bloodiest, tens of thousands of men on both sides died every day of the battle.
      -Little Bighorn was after the Civil War when the US Army turned to suppressing all native tribes. Colonel George Custer and the 7th Cavalry were sent to defeat the Lakota Sioux but the Sioux chiefs Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse successfully united the Sioux, and in a brilliant series of coordinated feints and ambushes slaughtered the 7th Cavalry. Afterwards the US Army cavalry would return in force and take some terrible vengeance upon the Sioux.
      Both terrible and extraordinarily violent battles, our main character having involvement or even just knowledge of them explains why he would be haunted so terribly...

    • @Fred-vy1hm
      @Fred-vy1hm 6 місяців тому +39

      It's a fiction based on the story of a pair of French Imperial guard officers who fought alongside the samurai during the 1877 Satsuma Rebellion.

    • @VolkXue
      @VolkXue 6 місяців тому +19

      @@Movie.Munchies more than fighting the natives. He found beauty in their culture and came to respect them just like he did in Japan.

  • @jjc5871
    @jjc5871 6 місяців тому +202

    This movie is inspired by multiple events that took place over a 100 year period if I remember right.
    Algren, Tom Cruise’s character, is based on a French soldier named Jules Brunet.
    As much as this movie is inspired by true events though, a lot of it is fictionalized as well. The Samurai did actually use firearms for example.
    And the Japanese absolutely love this movie. They actually created “Tom Cruise Day” in Japan partially because of this movie. The Last Samurai even made more money in Japan than it did in the United States.

    • @GrantWaller.-hf6jn
      @GrantWaller.-hf6jn 6 місяців тому +28

      Yea on the DVD the interviews with the Japanese actors how happy a good story of thier history. The bravery honor sprit of the warriors.

    • @jeremygilbert7989
      @jeremygilbert7989 6 місяців тому +32

      It's specifically inspired by the Satsuma rebellion led by a Samurai named Saigo Takamori(Katsumoto). Saigo was one of the Three Great Nobles, leaders of the Boshin War that overthrew the Tokugawa Shogunate and restored the emperor, in theory, back to supreme power but he wasn't happy with the way the new Meiji government, now led by another one of the Three Great Nobles named Okubo Toshimichi(Omura), was eroding the wealth and unrestricted authority the Samurai class had previously held and rebelled. There's a LOT more to it than just that but yeah, it's incredibly interesting stuff and if you're into history I'd strongly recommend looking into it further as there's too much to just cover in a UA-cam post lol.

    • @jediknight73
      @jediknight73 5 місяців тому +8

      Play total war shotgun pc game its good

    • @entropybear5847
      @entropybear5847 5 місяців тому +5

      @@jeremygilbert7989 this. Also the Shogunate before the restoration was also engaging in modernization. Both sides were well aware of the way the world was going and that Japan needed modern technology. The Meiji restoration meanwhile began on the sentiment of REMOVING Western influence, which is quite ironic considering how everything turned out. Saying all that both sides fought with modern ships, modern guns, etc, though the Restorationists ultimately had the better armed and organized Western style army, due to the more effective British support of the Imperial forces while the French support for the Shogunate was a little more lacklustre.

    • @idiotrepubliken
      @idiotrepubliken 5 місяців тому

      100% Portuguese arquebus is the true unifier of Japan

  • @Filmfiend27
    @Filmfiend27 6 місяців тому +200

    “We will show you no quarter.” He’s not talking about money in this context. Showing or giving “quarter” in battle means showing mercy or taking captive. He basically saying we will kill you with the rest of the samurai.

    • @TheRoleplayer40k
      @TheRoleplayer40k 6 місяців тому +18

      I'll look for you on the field

    • @thevanillagorilla1665
      @thevanillagorilla1665 6 місяців тому +1

      @@TheRoleplayer40k😂

    • @GrantWaller.-hf6jn
      @GrantWaller.-hf6jn 6 місяців тому

      Yep or housing of troops. But this case no mercy. To be fair the captain did say I gladly kill you for free first to the Col.

    • @mikeydubbs8565
      @mikeydubbs8565 6 місяців тому

      @@thevanillagorilla1665I friggin hate that emoji, and I hate the internet for giving people a safe haven for talking shit. Why do you have to be smarmy, dude? Internet muscles. Okay, buddy

    • @thevanillagorilla1665
      @thevanillagorilla1665 6 місяців тому +1

      @@mikeydubbs8565 🤫

  • @prollins6443
    @prollins6443 6 місяців тому +308

    "Tell me how he died."
    "I will tell you how he lived!"

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro 6 місяців тому +19

      "Perfect.
      They are all perfect." - Katsumoto.
      To me it means every day is perfect, stop chasing perfection when it's right in front of you.
      Same as Kevin Flynn in Tron: Legacy, but Katsumoto's analogy is beautiful while Kevin is more to the point and says it straight out.

    • @muninraven3327
      @muninraven3327 6 місяців тому +4

      Probably the best encapsulating line. But for me personally, I have always loved...
      "I killed her Husband?"
      "It was a good death"
      ... Considering how much I enjoyed the more intimate and clumsy arc of the story between Taka and Nathan that immediately follows.

    • @domidium
      @domidium 6 місяців тому +4

      When I first saw this, I thought he was going to say "with honor". But I liked what I got so much better.

    • @fjpapp7952
      @fjpapp7952 6 місяців тому +9

      I will miss our...conversations

    • @andyandys5356
      @andyandys5356 6 місяців тому +3

      He was the emperor's teacher so he would have known him longer than Tom, so of course he knew how he lived

  • @evilsponge6911
    @evilsponge6911 6 місяців тому +108

    "I belong to the warrior, in who the old ways have joined the new."

  • @Zero_Maximus
    @Zero_Maximus 6 місяців тому +116

    When he was yelling for sake it's because he's drank so much for so long to forget his past that he's now addicted physically. He was essentially detoxing going sober, and detoxing from alcohol can be fatal if cut off completely.

    • @cyberus1438
      @cyberus1438 6 місяців тому +19

      Am an ex amerivan solder who’s also an alcoholic, not that the first part really matters but excuse a bastard his self projected relevance.
      Going cold Turkey after drinking all the time is painful in a way I cannot describe fully. I can absolutely beleive that one can die from it. I’m fighting it myself best I can, I’m do where I’ll drink several gallons of beer a day. That used to be several liters of whiskey and rum per day. I’ll take progress where I can

    • @schawk8709
      @schawk8709 6 місяців тому

      @@cyberus1438 Slow progress is still progress!

    • @scratchpenny
      @scratchpenny 6 місяців тому +7

      @@cyberus1438 One of my childhood friends died from going cold turkey. He was 40 years old. It's not safe to do if you have drunk your whole life. The best way is in a detox facility with nurses and doctors.

    • @mikeydubbs8565
      @mikeydubbs8565 6 місяців тому +5

      @@scratchpennylast time I detoxed, they had to administer 10mg of Valium via IV every four hours. Unfortunately, I relapsed, and I’m doing a home taper. I’d rather be dopesick, honestly. Alcoholism sucks

    • @kenibnanak5554
      @kenibnanak5554 6 місяців тому +1

      But of course this person is a fictional character, so the real reason he called for Sake is because a script writer wrote it into the fictional script, nothing more.

  • @batbrick3949
    @batbrick3949 6 місяців тому +57

    Oh this movie is great. When it was released in 2003, I was stationed in Japan. My Japanese friends loved it as much as American audiences.

    • @chrisgorman1652
      @chrisgorman1652 6 місяців тому +7

      Also a hit in New Zealand as a lot of was filmed there. Mt Taranaki looks like Mt Fuji (same sort of volcano), with a lot of countryside around it.

    • @cygil1
      @cygil1 5 місяців тому +2

      I'm really surprised about that, it's about as historically accurate as "Star Wars."

    • @andreasstahl8207
      @andreasstahl8207 5 місяців тому +4

      ​​@@cygil1Cause a movie has to be historically accurate to be loved by people... just like Star Wars 🙄
      Just because a movie is based on actual events doesn't mean it has no allowance to add fiction to it.

    • @abc123tiktok
      @abc123tiktok 5 місяців тому +3

      @@cygil1 Movie never presented its self as a historically accurate or true events. In the same way Braveheart and Gladiator don't claim to be historically true. Its about enjoying the story which is why they are so popular. Its when movies claim to be accurate that run into issues, like Woman King, Cleopatra, or newer Viking shows that take liberties of what could have happen but have no proof and claim it true any ways.

  • @boatymcboatface666
    @boatymcboatface666 5 місяців тому +36

    The amazing actor that played Ujio, is Lord Toranaga in Shogun series ❤

    • @jillfromatlanta427
      @jillfromatlanta427 3 місяці тому +2

      Also brilliant in John Wick Chapter 4 and The White Countess.

    • @WilliamPuakahuhua
      @WilliamPuakahuhua 3 місяці тому +6

      Hiroyuki Sanada

    • @RishTheMan
      @RishTheMan 2 місяці тому +1

      And Torunaga is based on Ieyasu Tokugawa himself by James Clavell.

  • @srenjrgensen1468
    @srenjrgensen1468 6 місяців тому +104

    PTSD always goes hand in hand with severe depression and extreme self hate.
    It´s pure hell.

  • @mikedignum1868
    @mikedignum1868 6 місяців тому +87

    The Sargent was played by the famous Sir William (Billy) Connolly CBE, a Scottish actor, retired comedian, artist, writer, musician, and television presenter.

  • @DrD0000M
    @DrD0000M 6 місяців тому +124

    The movie romanticizes things a lot. In real life, the samurai rebels ALSO had guns, they didn't fight with just swords and bows against guns and cannons (they weren't stupid). And their motivation was more to keep their status as an elite aristocratic class with special privileges. Japan's move to a large modern army made up of regular civilians threatened to make the samurai class obsolete and the samurai hated this.

    • @BoaConstrictor126
      @BoaConstrictor126 6 місяців тому +30

      Truth.
      The Patriot was also full of inaccuracies but still a good movie.
      If a British officer committed the atrocities Tavington committed irl he would’ve been court martialed and sentenced to death by hanging or firing squad. Especially burning down a church during the reign of King George III. Under Henry VIII it would’ve been different. And a British officer who killed a minor definitely would’ve been court martialed and hanged. Cornwallis and King George had no tolerance under any circumstance for British officers who practiced brutality or barbarism

    • @markhamstra1083
      @markhamstra1083 6 місяців тому +23

      And the romanticizing of Samurai and the Bushido code (evident throughout this movie, but especially in the words and actions of the emperor at the end) didn’t really happen until after WW1. Up until that time, the Japanese were sincerely trying to emulate the Western Great Powers as closely as they could. They had an expectation that if they proved themselves as sufficiently Westernized, then they must also be accepted as an equal Great Power. When that didn’t happen even after they were allied with the victorious side in WW1, but instead they were still treated as a second rate power and race, disallowed in the post-war naval treaties to build a comparable fleet, etc., then they abandoned the goal of becoming just like the West and started to romanticize the Samurai period and to redefine what it meant to be Japanese as a separate and superior race and culture. In other words, the romanticism in this movie fits right in with the interwar definition and rise of fascist Japan and the motivation of the Pacific War.

    • @sulphuric_glue4468
      @sulphuric_glue4468 6 місяців тому +3

      @@BoaConstrictor126 Merely doing these things is bad enough but especially given that the British position was that the Americans were rightful British subjects protected by the Crown and Bill of Rights, Tavington would have been punished extremely harshly

    • @mikeydubbs8565
      @mikeydubbs8565 6 місяців тому +2

      @@BoaConstrictor126yeah, you’re right, but Tavington was based on Banistare Tavington, who by all rights was extremely cruel to both soldiers and civilians, but not propaganda levels like in the film

    • @kenibnanak5554
      @kenibnanak5554 6 місяців тому +5

      Not to mention the fact the US did not play that large a role once the Great White Fleet convinced Japan they needed a technological catch up, although the French and Europeans did.

  • @Icezapp1
    @Icezapp1 6 місяців тому +100

    31:35 "he teach them Football, yea he teach them Basketball" xD
    ALMOST

  • @nooneofconsequence1251
    @nooneofconsequence1251 6 місяців тому +74

    This takes place during the Meiji Restoration when Japan was trying to force itself to modernize and industrialize in order to remain strong and independent, unlike most of the rest of Asia and the world which had been colonized already by Europeans. They thought the best way to do this was to abandon their old ways and culture and quickly adopt Western styles of dress, industry, military, et cetera. They really did bring in foreign experts from all over the world to advise on pretty much everything, from military training and technology to civil engineering to fashion... so, although Nathan Algren is a made-up character, it's possible someone similar to him found himself in Japan performing a similar function. There were American experts there. Though, at the time, the foremost experts in the world on military training were the Prussians (precursors to the modern German state), and the Japanese relied mostly on them to modernize their military training.

    • @user-mf2pm5sl6z
      @user-mf2pm5sl6z 6 місяців тому

      明治維新当時に植民地化していた? 最初の一文でそれ以降を読む価値が無いのが分かったw 植民地支配を受けた事など一度もないぞ😂 日本人の気質だけ見ても分かるだろw このドラマだけ見てても分かるぐらい簡単な事なのにw

    • @TheRoleplayer40k
      @TheRoleplayer40k 6 місяців тому +18

      I believe he's based loosely on a French officer who helped train the Japanese imperial army

    • @Kensei007
      @Kensei007 6 місяців тому +11

      It's crazy how fast Japan adapts. They were essentially the same cultural and technological country for over 1000 years, but in the last 150 years they've become one of the most advanced countries in the world; transportation, electronics, vehicles, urbanization. They are a people truly driven towards a singular goal. They're a shining example of what a country can do on the world stage when they are united and put the country's prosperity over one's own.

    • @AceMoonshot
      @AceMoonshot 6 місяців тому +5

      @@TheRoleplayer40k Very loosely. This is about as accurate in regards to history as Braveheart. As in, it isn't.

    • @zacharyrollick6169
      @zacharyrollick6169 6 місяців тому +1

      ​@@incoherentturdAnd before that, they destroyed China's navy in the first Sino-Japanese War.

  • @OriginalPuro
    @OriginalPuro 6 місяців тому +70

    There are some things you just missed.
    When the Emperor "if your shame is too unbearable I offer you this sword" he is saying that the way of the Samurai will live.
    He admits he had forgotten what Japan was and to Katsumoto's death made him realise that he needs to lead, he is the emperor after all and people are willing to give their lives for him.
    "If the emperor wishes my death he has but to ask" "Your Higness, if you believe me to be your enemy, command me and I will gladly take my life"
    Also, Algren is a linguist, or at least a self-proclaimed one, so he has an interest in languages to begin with, which enables him to learn languages faster.
    PS: This movie is "up there", absolutely one of the most beautiful movies and both Ken Watanabe and Tom Cruise play excellently off of each other.
    Hiroyuki Sanada is great in everything he's in, so that's a given. He plays Ujio, "the teacher" aka the second guy i charge and the single best warrior.

    • @anyone9689
      @anyone9689 6 місяців тому +9

      i felt when emperor offered the sword he was inviting him to kill himself - thats what japanese did when shame was too unbearable

    • @taktktk5240
      @taktktk5240 4 місяці тому +1

      真田広之が英語を喋りACTIONで目立つのを嫌がったトム・クルーズ。
      毎度の事らしいが。一番いい役。

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro Місяць тому

      @@anyone9689 Yes, which is their culture, to seppukku when shamed to regain honor.
      It's The Emperor's way of saying "we will remember who we are", just like what Algren said about Katsumoto "he had hoped you would remember the Ancestors that held this sword and what they died for".

  • @thecoolunclea.k.a.unclebea1158
    @thecoolunclea.k.a.unclebea1158 6 місяців тому +57

    They cut off his top knot because of the power they suddenly have as former peasants. Most Samurai treated peasants as 2nd class citizens.
    It was a form of revenge. Though it's wrong under any context.

    • @jwoellhof
      @jwoellhof 5 місяців тому +7

      good post. this one good samurai endured embarrassment for the bad behavior of some past samurai, while the soldiers made fools of themselves for believing all samurai were bullies. in our current politics, we must remember that we have more in common than we differ, lest the bullied become the bullies.

    • @brianm744
      @brianm744 4 місяці тому +5

      @@jwoellhof consider the context of this regime/cultural change. There was a similar regime change in Europe, the French Revolution, where "committees" of former peasants gained political control and started executing the French aristocrats via guillotine. The bullied becoming the bullies. I'd say much of these executions were from jealousy rather than true "crimes against the People". There WAS quite a bit of corruption and abuse of the common person BY the aristocracy, no doubt there.

    • @thecoolunclea.k.a.unclebea1158
      @thecoolunclea.k.a.unclebea1158 4 місяці тому +3

      @@jwoellhof exactly right. It's why tyrannical revolution led peasants or a former peasants can be just as cruel and deadly as traditional power structures.

  • @cmendr011
    @cmendr011 5 місяців тому +59

    "But I like to think that he found some small measure of peace; that we all seek and few of us ever find." one of my favorite lines of the movie.

    • @yugimotobutjacked3231
      @yugimotobutjacked3231 5 місяців тому +1

      And may small nations be free

    • @paulfields5309
      @paulfields5309 5 місяців тому

      Pray? No I’ll never have peace until my end.

    • @baltasargamingshow3205
      @baltasargamingshow3205 5 місяців тому +2

      Mine is te full arch of "You could spend your entire life searching for the perfect flower and will not be a wasted life" and then "they are all perfect" .
      The moment he realises that every single imperfection within us and within everything is what makes it all perfect. A great balance between our demons and our enlightment. That is why you should rejoyce of feeling angry and happy. crying and laughing. Loving and hating. Through many cultures the symbolism of duality is what brings peace to our minds. The Ying and Yang is a perfect representation of how not only light and dark are meshed in a whole but the dots within mean that there is a bit of darkness within light and there is a bit of light within the darkness. Baphomet as an ancient pagan crhistian divinity does this as well (no, is not Lucifer. Is just a lie from the Catholics to destroy such beliefs with the Holy Inquisition)
      Is the prefect description of Captian Algren's Journey. A way to find balance within himself to trully find peace. Sometihing we all seek but a few of us ever find.
      Cheers! XD

  • @Grenn1471
    @Grenn1471 6 місяців тому +33

    "Who is gonna clean all of this?" I never thought of that.

    • @kevinmoore2929
      @kevinmoore2929 5 місяців тому +3

      In the modern military, there would be medics and Graves Registration/Mortuary Affairs personnel who would go out and removed the bodies. Back then, it would have just been medics. The Samurai may or may not have had "medics" per se. More than likely, every able bodied man would have helped remove them.

    • @foxvulpes8245
      @foxvulpes8245 5 місяців тому

      No one ever does....

    • @RoyalDog214
      @RoyalDog214 5 місяців тому

      Reminds me of the ending of Thirteen Ghosts where the maid character was complaining and said, "I'm not cleaning any of this shit up."

  • @Terminator484
    @Terminator484 5 місяців тому +8

    23:20 - In Samurai culture, the right to hold a sword is earned. It is considered a great disrespect for a non-Samurai like Algren to hold a sword without permission, even a bokken (wooden training sword), and the other guy is forcibly stripping him of a weapon he has no right to hold. Watch what he does to the bokken each time he defeats Algren: he knocks the bokken from his hand every time. Algren makes it much worse for himself by repeatedly picking it back up, defying the Samurai and bringing even more force down on himself. Eventually, the other guy just takes it away and returns it to its proper owner.

  • @subliminallime4321
    @subliminallime4321 6 місяців тому +38

    If you'd like to learn more about Native Americans like the people that Nathan Algren was having flashbacks about killing, there's a movie called Dances With Wolves that has this same type of story. Actually, The Last Samurai borrowed a lot from that movie. They even speak the Lakota language in a lot of the movie so it may be your only opportunity to hear what the language sounds like.

  • @stephenlai927
    @stephenlai927 6 місяців тому +25

    The word 「侍」at 42:23 is the Kanji of Samurai, and the meaning is 'to serve'.

    • @debelmeis2311
      @debelmeis2311 5 місяців тому +1

      It's a smoke screen to screen their movements and obscure enemy visibility

    • @debelmeis2311
      @debelmeis2311 5 місяців тому

      He's seeing the civil war and it is weighing on him. Parallel to the us civil war

  • @boatymcboatface666
    @boatymcboatface666 5 місяців тому +4

    Loved the heart felt review❤ Great movie filmed here in New Zealand. The actor that played Katsumoto, learnt English for his role 💕

  • @anthonyharmon4561
    @anthonyharmon4561 5 місяців тому +6

    "Tell me how he died"
    "I will tell you how he lived"
    The sheer depth of those words are truly inspiring and have become more powerful to me as time passes.

  • @alexlim864
    @alexlim864 6 місяців тому +13

    Just to let you know: the samurai are a caste in Japan. You need to be born into it to become samurai.
    29:45 Oh, yes, he can. Katsumoto may be Taka's brother, but he is also, technically speaking, her liege lord, and in Samurai society, what the leige lord says, goes. A liege lord, for example, can order a married couple to be divorced, and no matter what that couple's feelings for each other, they will be divorced.
    34:45 All samurai women carried knives. They did so to fight or, more likely, to kill themselves (jigai) if they were in danger of being captured.
    Great reaction!

  • @oldgraybeard3659
    @oldgraybeard3659 6 місяців тому +11

    After the Civil War, 80% of all soldiers lost their jobs. So, the professional soldiers became mercenaries if they had no other job skills. Algren has PTSD, also.

    • @岡洋介-g3g
      @岡洋介-g3g 5 місяців тому +1

      私は一人の日本人男性である。昔の南北戦争の話を細かく知れたことは良い!

  • @_BenJaminCroft_
    @_BenJaminCroft_ 6 місяців тому +11

    The Last Samurai is a motion picture adaption and a blend of two separate but _real_ historical people and events. A Japanese Samurai, Saigo Takamori, who this movie portrays as the character Katsumoto Moritsuga; and a French Soldier, Jules Brunet, who this movie portrays as the character Nathan Algren.
    Great choice.

  • @ericswanson411
    @ericswanson411 6 місяців тому +15

    The rebellion portrayed in this movie was based on real events. Some of the characters were fictionalized for the movie. This is one of my favorite movies. The Last Samurai is one of the very few movies that I get emotional over. I am happy to know that both of you loved the movie.

  • @LilRedWitch
    @LilRedWitch 5 місяців тому +3

    I love the calm chatting during the non fighting parts and the absolute PANIC talking during the fights scenes 🤣

  • @mrrandomdude4291
    @mrrandomdude4291 6 місяців тому +21

    This one really hits close to home, honestly had a similar journey of being miserable, disillusioned and filled with anxiety, and through consumption of Japanese media finding my peace to truly appreciate life.

  • @JamesOBeirne
    @JamesOBeirne 6 місяців тому +9

    I’m half Japanese and there are still samurai families. I am from a samurai family on my mother’s side. I still do train with my sensei in kenjutsu. I try to not let tradition die. In my mind my family are still samurai just not how most people intend it.

  • @vellaropedart9190
    @vellaropedart9190 5 місяців тому +7

    "I will miss our conversations." That line always gets to me when I watch this movie.....

  • @isaacmartinez6904
    @isaacmartinez6904 6 місяців тому +30

    The Last Samurai may not be historically accurate or an Akira Kurosawa style film. But it is an amazing and adventurous movie to watch and enjoy.

    • @TheAlkochef
      @TheAlkochef 6 місяців тому +3

      And which how i understand it, Japanese ppl like it too.

    • @scythianking7315
      @scythianking7315 6 місяців тому +4

      Its not a damn documentary. It's historically accurate ENOUGH.
      Algren was based off an actual Man, who fought in Japan during the civil war. But just because he was French in real life, instead of American, people throw tantrums saying it's not "hISTORIcAllY aCCUrAte"

  • @oncefutureking
    @oncefutureking 6 місяців тому +10

    Hi Movie Munchies!! Love your reactions! Keep watching these great movies. Love your movie choices, keep watching these classic action and drama movies. Have a great day, beautiful ladies!!

  • @Phillip-f8z
    @Phillip-f8z 6 місяців тому +17

    Yes, we do paint our faces before going into war, and we wear Eagle feathers because they hold great power.

    • @tonyharmon8512
      @tonyharmon8512 6 місяців тому +6

      Parts of Cherokee, Osage and Creek here. Heinz 57 Native American mix along with a mix of European. Couldn't blend me much more.

    • @Phillip-f8z
      @Phillip-f8z 6 місяців тому +3

      @@tonyharmon8512 I am Choctaw and Navajo.

    • @schawk8709
      @schawk8709 6 місяців тому +3

      @@Phillip-f8z I'm Celt, Viking, and Cherokee. Talk about a wild mix!

    • @lillia5333
      @lillia5333 6 місяців тому +1

      ​@@schawk8709There has not been vikings for a thousand years. They were destroyed by Christianity. Their gods, their music, their customs are mostly unknown today. There never was the blond haired, blue eyed warriors either, of course, as the vikings was very diverse, some because of mating with people from other countries, a bit by the fact that it was vikings in other countries than Scandinavia too. Viking is just a job description. It's not a people. Be proud of your native ancesters. You are from the Brythonic celts?
      I'm not really proud of my ancesters bloody jobs like waging wars and taking slaves. But I admire them for their arts and bravery. Now we are pussy-cats.

    • @albertmas3752
      @albertmas3752 6 місяців тому +1

      @@lillia5333 Vikings were not destroyed by christianity. They became christians in time not by external brute force, they mainly just converted by themselves.

  • @homanism6438
    @homanism6438 6 місяців тому +7

    40:28 samurai hair/topknot is a symbol of honor. Those soldier thought if they cut his hair, it will bring shame to samurai

  • @happyhedgehog6450
    @happyhedgehog6450 6 місяців тому +8

    "STOP HIM AAAARGH! God, you're so slow."
    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 her reaction to him was hilarious.

  • @schawk8709
    @schawk8709 6 місяців тому +8

    I liked that Capt. Algren brought up the Battle Of Thermopylae. One of the most epic battles in history!

  • @shinrapresident7010
    @shinrapresident7010 6 місяців тому +31

    I competed in HEMA(Historical European Martial Arts) with a Longsword for 10 years. I wish we got a movie like this that made people fall in love with European martial swords and weapons. I own an Italian fencing manual from the 1400s called Fior di Battaglia(The Flower of Battle), it shows all the different stances and guards. I relied heavily on something called The Window Guard. If anyone is interested there are videos about it on yt.

    • @stephenfitzgerald9769
      @stephenfitzgerald9769 6 місяців тому +10

      Those films are out there, though; no doubt about it. I’ve loved the longsword as a weapon ever since LotR debuted, though 2022’s _The Northman_ really ignited an interest in traditional European sword and shield techniques in me. Very different fighting system, but I’ve developed an appreciation for it nonetheless.

    • @RedElm747
      @RedElm747 6 місяців тому +5

      The Mask of the Zorro has destreza. It's probably the most similar movie with western martial arts.

    • @jackmcglion8337
      @jackmcglion8337 6 місяців тому +7

      Those films exist. But there should be more.

    • @Null_Experis
      @Null_Experis 6 місяців тому +1

      One of the problems with HEMA and relying on incredibly vague codexes like Fior di Battaglia is that you have no real idea if your fighting styles are at all representative of the actual fighting style at the time outside of comparing yourself to very poorly drawn pictures with no perspective. There has been no serious culture passed down on old european martial arts outside of fencing.
      With Japanese fighting, they maintained a tradition of martial arts and training in all their techniques by passing them on from students to teachers.

    • @shinrapresident7010
      @shinrapresident7010 6 місяців тому +3

      @@Null_Experis There's more to European martial warfare than one Italian book. Sorry but presenting your opinions as fact is a great way to get yourself blocked and ignored. Goodbye. Katana swordplay was not passed down through every single Japanese generation like some monolith of knowledge. Stop spreading lies. So sickening.

  • @YoureMrLebowski
    @YoureMrLebowski 6 місяців тому +19

    Best Dressed Reactors 🏆
    22 weeks in a row

    • @Movie.Munchies
      @Movie.Munchies  6 місяців тому +2

      You are so nice and support us always 22 weeks in a row! THANK YOU!

    • @YoureMrLebowski
      @YoureMrLebowski 6 місяців тому +3

      @@Movie.Munchies we didn't even _have_ a best dressed reactors catagory until you arrived. 😉

    • @davidperkins6752
      @davidperkins6752 6 місяців тому +1

      @@YoureMrLebowski at which point it became obligatory! for the record, love what you do too.

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro 6 місяців тому +1

      To react is instinctual, it's not something one "can do".
      If a bird flies past you, you react, it's survival.
      Imagine if humans didn't react to new information when presented to us, we wouldn't make it past 1 generation.:D

    • @YoureMrLebowski
      @YoureMrLebowski 6 місяців тому +2

      @@davidperkins6752 thanks david!

  • @tackle47
    @tackle47 6 місяців тому +7

    This beautiful movie was directed by Edward Zwick. He also directed the incredibly powerful movie Glory which is amazing and with an awesome group of actors including Denzel Washington and Morgan Freeman.

    • @gyrene_asea4133
      @gyrene_asea4133 6 місяців тому

      Thanks, I didn't connect the directors. Glory is a stunning presentation.

  • @f0273
    @f0273 6 місяців тому +7

    This movie is an Master piece. thank you for reacting. I can't count how many time I have watched this movie. Everything is perfect the story (even if it's little bit different from the real one), the music, the actor, the speech, landscape❤❤❤❤. I always had tears in this movie. I'm in Love with it.
    Samouraï never died
    Thank you again for your reaction

  • @davidbennett1357
    @davidbennett1357 6 місяців тому +6

    One thing that I love calling reactor's attention to with this film is Seizō Fukumoto, the actor who played the silent samurai Bob. He had a career on more than 50 years of playing samurai on screen. In fact he was what they call a kirareyaku, an actor who specializes in portraying the LOSER of a samurai duel. It is estimated that Fukumoto died 50,000 times on the silver screen.
    I don't know how much you have been about the american wars with the autochthonous tribes, but I would like to give a little context to Algren and Bagley. General George A. Custer was a cavalry officer in the union army during our civil war. What he is most famous for, however, is the event Algren relates to Katsumoto, in which he arrogantly attacked an encampment of Lakota, Cheyanne and Arapaho indians, not realizing how badly outnumbered he really was. Custer became known for his last stand at the little bighorn, on a hilltop, surrounded by opposing forces. None of his men survived the final assault on the hill.
    The US Army was well known during this conflict for taking punitive measures against native americans regardless of whether that particular group was in actual armed conflict WITH them. This is what is depicted on screen when Bagley and his cavalry swoop in and kill a bunch of women and children in retaliation for some unnamed event. Algren disagreed with this act and hated Colonel Bagley ever after.

  • @jonpaulmoore55
    @jonpaulmoore55 6 місяців тому +15

    Love you Ladies, Hella ❤❤❤...

  • @kevinleukhardt9560
    @kevinleukhardt9560 3 місяці тому +1

    Movie Munchies, You have a wonderful channel to watch movies. Even though you don't completely understand the history of Japan or early American history, you have a deep understanding of the human spirit and all of the emotions being conveyed by all the characters. I'm your loyal fan and subscribed to channel. Also, you ladies are kind and sincere and very lovely! 🙂

  • @granadosvm
    @granadosvm 6 місяців тому +5

    This movie is not about actual events, but it is set during an actual stage of Japan's history, called Meiji restoration.
    Japan used to be closed to the world and ruled by local lords called Shogun, where the emperor was a symbolic figure with no power.
    When the US forced Japan to open to the world through the hand (and weapons) of Commodore Perry, Japan realized to survive they needed to present a unified country, so everybody lined up behind Emperor Meiji, who was not as young as they represent him in this movie, but the young age of the actor represents well the inexperience Emperor Meiji actually had in governing.
    At that point they unified a central army and passed laws against tribal samurai, tried to modernize clothes, culture, etc. They really hired foreign experts to train their armies and their students and their worker force. Japan had to enter trade agreements with European countries and with the US, so the details of the story might be just a story, but the actual period in the history of Japan seems to be very well represented. I guess that's why the movie was very well received in Japan.

  • @midnightphoenix389
    @midnightphoenix389 6 місяців тому +4

    Samurai warriors have always been a source of inspiration to me along with Vikings, Spartans, and the Zulu warriors. I will always shield and fight for others who are unable to defend themselves

  • @Coachiggs
    @Coachiggs 5 місяців тому +1

    These girls are awesome...1:00:48 when she hands her the tissue is gold!

  • @teximexi836
    @teximexi836 6 місяців тому +8

    The thing about the scene where he spars with the little boy and then gets beaten by the other samurai that is very sad and unbearable for Taka. Is that she sees him defeated so easily. To her, her husband was a strong and honorable warrior. But to see the man that killed her husband get beaten the way that he did caused her to doubt her late husbands' strength. This is, of course, a horrible thing to doubt. Which is why you see the pain in her eyes. Japanese women in those times believed in honoring their husbands above all else even long after their deaths. But in just that moment, she felt she had dishonored him. Only later, when she realized how strong and honorable the captain actually was did she see that her husband had died a good death and therefore could forgive him for killing her husband. His honor validated her husband's. Hence why in the ended she offered him to wear her husbands armor as an honor to her family.

    • @Fearsome_Gonad
      @Fearsome_Gonad 5 місяців тому +3

      Well said.

    • @rcslyman8929
      @rcslyman8929 5 місяців тому +2

      Ujio was their battlemaster, no one is expected to defeat him in single combat, or even have a chance against him. I mean, later, they even take bets not on who will win between Ujio and Algren, but on just how badly Ujio was going to embarrass Algren. For this fight, that act was way beneath Ujio to fight against someone so completely unskilled and untrained that he's treating the bokken like it's a stick. Ujio was making a statement. "Know your place, prisoner. You should be dead." That's why the reactions from everyone that were looking on. They couldn't understand why Algren continued to stand. He was beaten and should submit, that is their way. He has no chance, yet for reasons beyond their understanding, he continues to fight and Ujio continues to punish him for it. Until even the swordmaster reaches the point of just staring on like, "What the hell, man? Just... lay down. Enough. Please."

    • @dootdoot1867
      @dootdoot1867 5 місяців тому +3

      Actually I think you missed it. Samurai cannot stand defeat. The would rather die. Tom cruises character never admitted defeat and got up regardless of the superior foe until he could not. Even then he had to be disarmed for they knew he would get up and go again. At this point he proved to everyone his Samurai spirit. And they trained him.

    • @teximexi836
      @teximexi836 5 місяців тому +1

      @dootdoot1867 Oh, there is that, too, but that's the obvious message of the scene. The message I'm talking about in this scene "For Taka," is all I was referring to and what "I" think people miss in this scene. Both messages exist in the scene. At least the way I understood it.

    • @teximexi836
      @teximexi836 5 місяців тому +1

      @rcslyman8929 This is all valid, but I'm only speaking on Taka's perspective. I'm sure she is aware that Ujio is their best warrior, and of course, biasly, they don't expect Aldren to win. But for her, the fact that Aldren killed her husband would suggest, again to her, that he had some prowess of fighting skills. Again, only speaking from her perspective.

  • @fgialcgorge7392
    @fgialcgorge7392 5 місяців тому

    These are the things that stay in a warrior's mind, man, woman, or boy on the battlefield you fight for women and children at home. We recall true stories, like Thermopylae and they embolden us. If you truly believe your cause is just you'll keep fighting until you're unable to.
    While this movie is mostly fictional the feeling behind it is something almost volunteer soldier feels. A conviction to fight for all those beside you on the line and all those at home, especially those who you love. Commitment to a cause is a powerful thing, commitment to a cause and fighting for those you love is more powerful than any force. It's a man's and a son's duty and honor to protect his family and home, I know I always will.
    This movie is a pretty good peek into a warrior's mind and why we do what we do.

  • @SatsumaTengu14
    @SatsumaTengu14 5 місяців тому

    The character Katsumoto was really named Saigo Takamori, he was the last samurai. This is history mixed with a lot of Hollywood. They have combined elements of the Boshin Wars from the 1860s with the Satsuma Rebellion of the very late 1870s which was the end of samurai. It maybe interesting to note for some who are interested that the samurai's final battle occured in Kagoshima city at the ruins of the castle at Shiroyama. You may visit there today and witness the shell scared walls of thr castles ruins where the samurai made their final stand. The wives and daughters of the samurai proudly met the modern Imperial Japanese Army at the stone bridge leading into the city and were slaughtered there before the srmy continued on to kill their husbands and sons. You may still see the old stone bridges at a park in Kagoshima. Satsuma has a very interesting history.
    I am so in love with Hella, she is just gorgeous.

  • @UnitedSAReich
    @UnitedSAReich 3 місяці тому +1

    i dont like to say i am a strong man...i don't need to explain... all i know is this movie no matter how old i am always hits me in the soul and cry like a baby the "Men's Titanic"

  • @TheAlkochef
    @TheAlkochef 6 місяців тому +3

    Algren mocked the Japanese for wearing "dresses"... But soon discovered the freedom, not being restricted by tight ass frekkin jeans, by... wearking... a "dress". xD

  • @benhill8454
    @benhill8454 6 місяців тому +4

    “What a mess”
    - Hella
    Hella is the one liner master. 😅😂😊

  • @jackmcglion8337
    @jackmcglion8337 6 місяців тому +9

    That Samurai actually did use guns during this time and before.

    • @adamcollazo8228
      @adamcollazo8228 6 місяців тому +4

      The Japanese had access to firearms as early as the 1580's which they got from the Portuguese. There's a Netflix docu-drama called "Age of Samurai: Battle for Japan" about the Samurai of this time period that covers this. They were so many firearms in Japan that it became illegal for commoners to possess a firearm. The Japanese elites feared the commoners would rise up against them.

    • @jackmcglion8337
      @jackmcglion8337 6 місяців тому

      @@adamcollazo8228 I know that's what I said.

    • @makasete30
      @makasete30 6 місяців тому +2

      @@jackmcglion8337no, they provided more of a historical context with details which was interesting to read and also recommended a docu-drama so that anyone else who was interested in your point could find out more.

  • @jordanmcbride9215
    @jordanmcbride9215 14 днів тому

    “They are all perfect”-that is the end of the poem

  • @bojnebojnebojne
    @bojnebojnebojne 5 місяців тому +1

    The story is based on true events of the Japanese civil war, but all characters, names, locations and timeline are incorrect as are how the events unfolded.
    The movie dramatized all events for the sake of making a good movie, but it also served to honor and respect what was once a rough way of life in Japan.
    The movie is basically an homage to the samurai and Japan.

  • @Mankish08
    @Mankish08 5 місяців тому +1

    You dont see the big picture here, 99% dont do. and thats what makes this sutch a great movie!

  • @ugib8377
    @ugib8377 6 місяців тому +8

    54:36 They mention the "Warriors at Thermopylae" which is portrayed in a separate movie, 300. Granted that movie is not 100% accurate, and is spiced up for the big screen. Still a really cool story, a badass movie, definitely one you should react to!
    I love how Tien always gets brought in for the really sad movies. She winds up sobbing half the time. 😅

    • @gyrene_asea4133
      @gyrene_asea4133 6 місяців тому +2

      Well, at least she shares her box of Kleen-ex!

  • @Paul.H8Cfood
    @Paul.H8Cfood 6 місяців тому +1

    YESSSS!!! Can’t wait to watch later. This is in my top 10 movies ever. Thanks for reading the comments and considering our requests!

  • @aggdga
    @aggdga 5 місяців тому +1

    "You have a gun!!" Yes, a rifle with only one bullet in it, which they have already shot, and now a horse and rider, weighing approximately half a ton, are riding towards them at 30 km/h with their sword drawn. Yes, I would stay there too, what bad could happen? XD Sorry, I found that so funny^^.
    PS: No, the soldiers of the Japanese army were not too self-confident that they stopped wearing armor. Armor simply became useless with the invention of the firearm because no armor of that time could withstand a bullet being fired. That's why it was decided to forego armaments worldwide, which saved costs, which could, for example, be invested in more soldiers, more weapons, more ammunition, more cannons.

  • @TemplarbladeDK
    @TemplarbladeDK 5 місяців тому

    Samurai was feared because they in fact had the right to cut down anyone below their rank in society without getting punished for it as long as they apologize.
    To die in combat serving your lord is the highest honour for a samurai.

  • @slanetroyard92
    @slanetroyard92 6 місяців тому +3

    25:33 if you girls want to know more about general Custer there's a black and white movie called They died with their boots on. It's pretty good.

  • @gibbletronic5139
    @gibbletronic5139 6 місяців тому +6

    In order to get a deeper appreciation of Japanese Samurai culture, you must begin with the masterpiece "The Seven Samurai" directed by the master Akira Kurosawa.

  • @wigzynz
    @wigzynz 6 місяців тому +8

    This was filmed in New Zealand. Not sure why they didn't film in Japan

    • @SgtWicket
      @SgtWicket 6 місяців тому +9

      Apparently Japan is notorious in the film industry for its difficult bureaucracy. There are a lot of restrictions and permissions that have to be hashed out in order to film. That’s why the new Shogun adaptation is not filmed in Japan either unlike the 1980 series.

    • @chrisgorman1652
      @chrisgorman1652 6 місяців тому +1

      ​@SgtWicket it helped that Mt Taranaki looks like Mt Fuji and NZ has a lot of open space that they could build the village and have the battlefield. The first training scene is at the New Plymouth domain's sports field.

  • @Azeyral
    @Azeyral 5 місяців тому +1

    Although the film changes a lot of historical facts, it embellishes an aspect of Japanese culture that the Americans sought to erase after the Second World War.
    The movie also addresses the issue of ethnic cleansing of Native Americans.
    Somehow it is a symbol of the repentance of Western imperialism.
    One point that I could criticize about this masterpiece : the Japanese imperial cult which existed at that time brought very bloody wars to Asia.
    I was in a relationship with a Chinese woman, she remembers her grandparents' stories about the horrors committed by Japanese soldiers.
    I think that imperialism is a scourge no matter where it comes from.

  • @curtism-w6b
    @curtism-w6b 5 місяців тому

    Katsumoto was the Emporor's teacher, he knew him well. But he became the ruler of all Japan as a child. He was used and manipulated until he found his own voice.

  • @brendanmatelan2129
    @brendanmatelan2129 2 місяці тому

    Hella, Tien,
    Just want to clarify, Captain Algren (Tom Cruise) was in the U.S. Army fighting against Native Americans. Expansion out west was a difficult and bloody chapter in American history.

  • @scottallen6160
    @scottallen6160 2 місяці тому

    This world doesn’t understand what honor is anymore. It has been forgotten. If there is no honor, how can there be love? Respect?
    😢💔
    Crying with you has become a habit.
    ✌️😊🌹🌹💕

  • @ChrisDavis-dt6xx
    @ChrisDavis-dt6xx 5 місяців тому +3

    Hans Zimmer music was EPIC in this movie

  • @entropybear5847
    @entropybear5847 5 місяців тому +1

    The last samurai mentioned in the title was Katsumoto.

  • @YoureMrLebowski
    @YoureMrLebowski 6 місяців тому +3

    3:13 "is he gonna shoot?" -hella
    the concern. 😆

  • @sana-cm7oc
    @sana-cm7oc 3 місяці тому

    I love this film. You guys have the best reactions and the best most intelligent commentary. You actually comment on the meaning and the subtleties. Subscribed. 🙂

  • @AmluaNariloo
    @AmluaNariloo 5 місяців тому +1

    Since you're wondering about it, the " real " story isn't about an american captain but a french one. His name was Jules Brunet and he even won a medal from the emperor after figthing against the emperor's regime.

  • @william_santiago
    @william_santiago 6 місяців тому +6

    Samurai WERE respected, but some were feared. Living off of a stipend from the government, some lost purpose and fell to drinking and debauchery. In some instances this lead to the death of the peasantry, which were defenseless both physically and legally. A samurai had the right to kill a peasant who they felt insulted them and the word of a samurai was always held to be true. This lead to resentment and anger toward the samurai. With the industrialization of Japan, many peasants joined the constabulary. This gave them power over the samurai and with Imperial edict going against the samurai, they often took pleasure in "disciplining" the samurai who had once abused them.

    • @MustardSkaven
      @MustardSkaven 5 місяців тому

      Uhm, your average samurai couldn't go around killing peasants cause he felt like it. It would need to be a clear insult and at least 1 other witness was required, even if those were peasants. The samurai would also be detained for a duration while the investigation was conducted. If it was found that the samurai didn't have a good right to slay the peasant (or any lower rank person), he was required to do seppuku.
      Could high ranking samurai get away with it? Probably did. But it's not like most samurai could just kill for the heck of it.

  • @RaderizDorret
    @RaderizDorret 6 місяців тому +2

    Captain Algren fought in one of the darkest and most brutal chapters of American history: the Indian Wars. And it's a thing we should remember: whenever the Indians raided us (mainly settlers traders to the point of inflicting torture of all manner and slaving), we responded with a policy of overwhelming force with no quarter given because they gave no quarter. It was ugly and it is not anything to be proud of but it is the manner of history. Two powers clash and all it comes down to is which is the most powerful. The only silver lining is for every Indian tribe that we brutalized, we had other tribes that chose to assimilate and ally with us. There's a lot of nuance involved in the whole picture but Algren saw the worst of it. This isn't all that far removed from any brutal internal wars that have raged throughout the ages. We profess that we should be above such things, but we humans are apex predators and thus will act as such, even among ourselves on a regular basis.
    Edit: when he described in brutal detail what scalping involves, that was standard practice for all men captured by Indians. The women saw their children murdered and then were taken off as War Wives by the warriors who captured them. The concept is simple: men are a threat and to be eliminated, the children are a burden and should be eliminated unless they can be raised in a new culture. The women are important as they are breeding stock for our side. This is very much the rule of nature and we can look to lions for these kinds of practices. If a male lion leading a pride loses a battle against another male lion, the loser either dies or is driven off while all his cubs are wiped out to the last by the winner so the lionesses will become receptive to breeding in short order. And I do hold out some hope for humanity in that we are horrified when we revert to those mandates.

  • @bobclarke1815
    @bobclarke1815 6 місяців тому +4

    His friend with the grey hair "Zebulon Gant" is the famous british comedian and actor Billy Connoly.

  • @lfyoung
    @lfyoung 5 місяців тому

    great reaction. in my opinion this is one of the best movies he has ever done. sadly he has mostly been in action movies but he is a really good actor and in this movie he shows us just how amazing is acting skills are. this is a great representation of what war can do to even the strongest of minds.

  • @DarthVader-ig6ci
    @DarthVader-ig6ci 6 місяців тому +1

    For one thing the samurai actually adopted guns as soon as it arrived in Japan, not just adopting it,they really mastered its use.
    Also, to give context, the time period in which the movie is set is the Meiji restoration when Emperor Meiji consolidated imperial power after centuries of rule by the Shoguns. During the shogunate period the emperor was just a puppet and Japan followed an isolationist policy. During the 19th century Western nations forced Japan to abandon the isolationist policy. And soon the position of the Tokugawa Shoguns started to crumble with various political issues including increasing foreign intervention, civil strife and such and Emperor Meiji took the opportunity to consolidate his power over the governing of Japan. During the Meiji era Japan introduced western model Armed Forces, the samurais who provided military services to Japan exclusively, found the loss of their elite status to commoners in the army rebelled. But they were defeated. Then Japan went into modernisation in almost all sectors. The Imperial Japanese Armed Forces were a superpower of its time and went on to defeat the Russian Empire,thus becoming the first Asian nation in modern times to defeat a European power.

  • @seanluong2179
    @seanluong2179 5 місяців тому

    They live happily ever, and he change the DNA code of that village forever :))))

  • @4400Superman
    @4400Superman 5 місяців тому

    I enjoyed watching their reactions. They were so cute and funny. And they are very pretty. I loved spending time with these intelligent adorable girls.

  • @Sinewmire
    @Sinewmire 5 місяців тому

    Hiroki Sanada, who played Ujio - the Samurai with the bull horns on his helmet who taught Algren how to fight with a sword - is starring in Shōgun on Disney Plus. It's really good!
    Algren is remembering the brutally one-sided wars against the native Americans - those who lived in America before European settlers came. The Native Americans did not even know how to work iron. A dark time in American history, the United States of America was responsible for many, many, deaths mostly women and children. There was a 58% drop in the population of the native Americans in just 90 years. Algren slept so poorly and drank so much because of the massacres and crimes he took part in as a soldier.

  • @dracusmoon4822
    @dracusmoon4822 5 місяців тому +1

    It was a pleasure to watch the reactions of two beautiful ladies to this great movie! I'm subscribed now, and look forward to following you for future movies.

  • @vicabramov8983
    @vicabramov8983 6 місяців тому +1

    i love Taka role in this film. she's also beautiful and pure of heart . best scene is when Nathan apologized for killing her husband.

  • @LilRedWitch
    @LilRedWitch 5 місяців тому

    I love when , especially during war, you show the humanity on both sides. Not every person wants to kill or hurt other innocent people. Humanity just wants freedom and understanding. No one wins in war, and everyone loses a piece of them. Customs are precious to everyone, and it can change your entire world view to be among people you don’t understand. We are all just people

  • @Sidistic_Atheist
    @Sidistic_Atheist 6 місяців тому +1

    Well that's a WIN WIN for *Capt Nathan Algren* he goes back to a village, full of now *lonely widows.* tee hee!!

  • @Dark__Thoughts
    @Dark__Thoughts 5 місяців тому

    The Last Samurai refers not to a last remaining single Samurai, but the end of the Samurai as a whole.
    I get that not every place, especially Vietnam who obviously has their own bloody history with the US, teaches about US history. But not being able to identify at least native Americans is still kinda weird.
    Captain Aldren as part of the descendants of colonial forces from Europe took part in the genocide against native Americans (also sometimes referred to as Indians as the colonists originally wanted to find a shorter route towards India before discovering the American continents) under the command of Colonel Bagley. The atrocities that he saw and did ended up causing him PTSD, which he then drowned in alcohol, becoming an alcoholic. That's why he continued to let himself get beat up, or even risked getting shot, because he didn't want to live anymore. Bagley then wanted him to come to Japan to train the imperial forces to fight against the Samurai, who refused to give up their ways which would cause them to lose their status (as someone else said already, the movie is heavily romanticized and not historically accurate).
    23:31 No, the opposite. He was saying he is thinking too much and that he should free his mind.
    51:33 "No quarter" in a military context means that they won't take prisoners. He's basically saying if Aldren fights with them, that they're going to kill him.
    54:38 He's saying the Greek lost that battle and all of the men died, despite their efforts. The movie 300 is a (also not very historically accurate) depiction of this battle that they're referencing btw. Great movie & visuals, very artistic & stylized.
    1:00:35 The end of his poem.
    1:03:30 I guess he will be very popular now... x)

  • @AtlasBlizzard
    @AtlasBlizzard 6 місяців тому +1

    This movie moved me so much. Ken Watanabe blew me away.

  • @44JMK
    @44JMK 6 місяців тому +4

    A GREAT story and a classic movie. Ken Watanabe, who played Katsumoto was awesome, within a great cast!
    The movie is based on the exploits of a French soldier, Jules Brunet, who was so impressed with the Samurai culture, he joined them. He was captured, imprisoned and returned to France, but was later released. I don't know why Hollywood had to Americanize the story, but they did.
    At any rate, wonderful reaction by you both!

    • @Movie.Munchies
      @Movie.Munchies  6 місяців тому

      Thank you 🙏 🤗😁

    • @44JMK
      @44JMK 6 місяців тому

      @@Movie.Munchies Thank you both, that was a GREAT reaction video!

    • @gyrene_asea4133
      @gyrene_asea4133 6 місяців тому

      I don't think that it was completely Americanized. The Imperial soldier's uniforms were in the French Pattern of the mid-19th Century. Also, I think that the rifles used in the latter battle scenes were French Chassepots, black powder cartridge bolt-action rifles. The Gatlings, were of course good old Murica, 'cuz "better living through superior firepower"!

    • @44JMK
      @44JMK 6 місяців тому

      @@gyrene_asea4133 That said, Tom Cruise and the Major were both American Army officers. They could've been from any country, but Hollywood has a primarily American audience.

  • @なむさん-g1n
    @なむさん-g1n 5 місяців тому

    14:32
    Seppuku (harakiri) is an old Japanese way of taking responsibility
    Take responsibility for what you have to do with your own life
    And this practice isn't just barbaric; decapitation is intended to minimize the pain of the person who dies
    Instead of inflicting maximum fear and pain, it inflicts instant death
    People at that time, especially samurai, lived with pride. They could not bring themselves to tarnish it, and other

  • @CharlesStevens-e2s
    @CharlesStevens-e2s 2 місяці тому

    I have recently discovered your channel and have enjoyed all the videos I have watched so far, subscribed and this is my first comment. I have seen the Last Samurai many times, both full length and you-tube reactions to it. To me the biggest lesson I have learned from this movie is putting together two lines from Katsumoto. In the middle of the movie he says; "A man can spend his entire life looking for the perfect blossom, and it would not be a wasted life." At the end of the movie he realizes the truth and says; "They are all perfect." To me this means when we embrace our life we discover that it is perfect and we are all important. To understand this more fully, I suggest watching an old classic, 'It's a wonderful Life, staring Jimmy Stewart.'

  • @Gregory-my5vv
    @Gregory-my5vv 3 місяці тому

    “We will show you no quarter”. Quarter, in this instance, means housing, usually safe housing and is most often an institutional term, especially military. He was saying-“you have no privilege, safety against us in this battle.” I am quite confident the character would have known this without it being said, it was a statement of arrogance, presumed victory before the fight.

  • @angelito8676
    @angelito8676 5 місяців тому

    The movie "300" will tell you the story about Thermopylae and the story of the Spartans they talk about before the last battle.

  • @kennethjoseph6362
    @kennethjoseph6362 6 місяців тому +1

    52:20 Algren was in the US army, he knows the range of the cannons being fired, and how far he should be away from them to be safe. this is a great movie, glad you watched it! another great reaction! 👍

  • @kynanono1428
    @kynanono1428 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you! It would be lovely to see you react to "Hero" with Jet Li. Could you talk about how they purposefully mistranslated the film to show it to a Western audience? The film itself had to be sponsored by Quentin Tarantino for it to be shown in North America. He enjoyed the movie so much that he wanted it to be shown internationally. Hence it is Quentin Tarantino Presents "Hero".

  • @patrickcromwell7554
    @patrickcromwell7554 6 місяців тому +1

    I think the reason Algren was laughing at the first meeting was because the Colonel was bragging about Algren's part in the conflict and making him sound righteous and noble.

  • @marcoadan1
    @marcoadan1 6 місяців тому

    His behavior and flashbacks at the beginning is PTSD. And when he's screaming for sake in the village is because he's going through alcohol withdrawal. Just like with drugs, withdrawal is Very unpleasant and can even be fatal.

  • @johnishikawa2200
    @johnishikawa2200 6 місяців тому +1

    By the 1870s , the era of the shogun was over in Japan . The Meiji was restored in 1868 , and this marked the end of the Tokugawa shogunate . The Meiji was Emperor Meiji , and he reigned from 1868 to 1912 . The restoration led to major reforms and also marked a period of aggressive modernization efforts in Japan . One of the key reforms was the abolition of the feudal system and the disbanding of the Samurai class . Foreign influences , like Commodore Mathew Perry's arrival in Tokyo Bay in 1853 may have provided the catalyst for this social upheaval in Japan , but the change was primarily driven by forces internal to Japan . Reformists and revolutionaries within Japan sought to modernize and strengthen the country and to put Japan on an equal footing with the rest of the world .

  • @johnhammonds5143
    @johnhammonds5143 5 місяців тому

    The best scene is when the ninja come to kill Katsumoto. Instead of joining them, Algren fights to defend Katsumoto. And when it's all over, there's the look of shock and realization in his face. Algren is NOT his enemy.

  • @nectarpeach2853
    @nectarpeach2853 2 місяці тому

    When European first come to America, the land was mostly Native American Indian, and there was many fights between European who become American and they fight the Natives. Algren's superior forced them to attack village with women and children and it haunts Algren, that's why he's numb from war and drinks a lot, to dull the pain and memories.

  • @julianmarco4185
    @julianmarco4185 3 місяці тому

    I would like to clarify some things about this movie and real historic accuracy:
    This movie is fiction in fact you can say that it is like the best of Japanese Samurai representation in the movie.
    If you were to ask the Japanese people: "Hey, would you like this movie to be what really happened in your history, most would probably saw: "Nah, it's too dramatic and it's nothing like real samurai." Although the Samurai would probably have wanted something like this.
    In reality Japan was very ahead of it's time, Samurai were already using guns in their armies and they knew about canons and how to use them.
    Samurai were more like private armies and they actually had a huge role in the governance of their lands.
    During the time of the movie, Japan was very rapidly industrializing and importing a lot of good from countries like Britaish Empires, Netherlands and even the USA.
    They were so well prepared and heavily gunned that they started to invade Asia and took over the Korean Peninsula.
    Russia, wanting to get some glory and show off their Empire went to war with Japan thinking there was no way a tiny island nation could stand up to the Russian Empire. However... they got their butts kicked very badly by the Japanese Empire.
    So don't make the mistake of thinking this movie is historically accurate. Maybe the most passionate Samurai would have wanted it to be. But it is not and Samurai is still practiced today although less as an army and more like a sports, passion or performance.

  • @BobarissGish
    @BobarissGish 6 місяців тому +1

    Nobutada is Katsumoto's son which is why he had such a strong reaction to his being shot running across the bridge