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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Reception  





4 References  





5 External links  














Shinobi: Heart Under Blade






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Shinobi: Heart Under Blade
Theatrical release poster
Directed byTen Shimoyama
Screenplay byKenya Hirata
Based onThe Kouga Ninja Scrolls
byFutaro Yamada
StarringYukie Nakama
Joe Odagiri
Tomoka Kurotani
Erika Sawajiri
CinematographyMasashi Chikamori
Edited byIsao Kawase
Music byTarō Iwashiro
Ayumi Hamasaki
Distributed byShochiku

Release date

  • September 15, 2005 (2005-09-15)

Running time

97 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Box office$11,987,868[1]

Shinobi: Heart Under Blade is a 2005 Japanese romantic drama film directed by Ten Shimoyama and written by Kenya Hirata. It is an adaptation of Futaro Yamada's novel The Kouga Ninja Scrolls, although the characters are highly altered. It depicts the clash between two ninja clans, Iga and Kouga, and the fated love between Gennosuke (Kouga) and Oboro (Iga). The film's theme song was "Heaven" by Ayumi Hamasaki.

The film was released by Shochiku on September 15, 2005. On February 6, 2007, Funimation released the film on home video in the North America. The contents of the DVD is a 2-Disc Set with the main movie available in Japanese and an English dub. The 2nd Disc contains Special Features and making-ofs. All of the films are subtitled in English.

Plot[edit]

Set immediately after the Japanese Sengoku period, Iga and Kouga, two mercenary clans have been waging a vendetta against each other over hundreds of years. Around 1614, Tokugawa Ieyasu, the ruler of Japan and the founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate, perceives the threat posed by the two clans. Attempting to consolidate his reign, he deliberately stirs up their feud by inviting the clans to choose their five best warriors to fight to the death. Designated as the leaders of the two clans respectively, Kouga Gennosuke (Joe Odagiri) and Oboro (Yukie Nakama), who have secretly married, are unwillingly embroiled in the political plot. Hence, they have to make a difficult decision.

Initially, being peaceful and knowing the preciousness of life, they try their utmost to prevent this meaningless and brutal fight by questioning the shogunate's motives. After the deaths of all their comrades, however, they gradually accept their fate. In the last fight, Kouga Gennosuke chooses not to defend himself and allows his lover Oboro to kill him, thus letting the clan of Iga "win". Meanwhile, Ieyasu sends his armies to exterminate the ninja villages. To accomplish Gennosuke's hope of saving them, Oboro implores Tokugawa Ieyasu not to destroy the villages and, as a show of her sincerity, blinds herself, thereby destroying her most powerful weapons, her eyes (which possess a deadly technique called "Piercing Eyes" (破幻之瞳, "Hagen no Dō" lit. "the pupil of annihilation"). Moved profoundly by Oboro, Ieyasu withdraws his armies and issues an injunction to protect the ninja villages. For generations hence, the villages live peacefully.

Cast[edit]

The list of six top ninja of Iga and Kouga, along with other characters.

Kouga
Iga
Others

Reception[edit]

The film was successful financially in Japan earning roughly 11 million US dollars. Shinobi won both best actor and best new actress awards at both the Kinema Junpo Awards and Yokohama Film Festival.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Box office by Country: Shinobi Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2012-06-04
  • "Shinobi: Heart Under Blade". (January 2007) Newtype USA. Vol. 6 No. 1 p. 23.

External links[edit]


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shinobi:_Heart_Under_Blade&oldid=1111825691"

Categories: 
2005 films
2000s adventure films
Films directed by Ten Shimoyama
Films scored by Taro Iwashiro
Funimation
2000s Japanese-language films
Ninja films
2005 romantic drama films
Shochiku films
Japanese martial arts films
Cultural depictions of Hattori Hanzō
2005 martial arts films
2000s Japanese films
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This page was last edited on 23 September 2022, at 04:03 (UTC).

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