Gojoe

Gojoe (五条霊戦記 GOJOE, Gojō Reisenki) is a 2000 Japanese jidaigeki action film directed by Sogo Ishii. In several English-speaking countries, it was released as Gojoe: Spirit War Chronicle.[1] It is a historical fantasy martial arts film set in 12th-century medieval Japan before the Genpei War.

Gojoe: Spirit War Chronicle
Directed bySogo Ishii
Produced byTakenori Sento
Written byGoro Nakajima
Sogo Ishii
StarringTadanobu Asano
Masatoshi Nagase
Daisuke Ryu
Jun Kunimura
Music byHiroyuki Onogawa
CinematographyMakoto Watanabe
Edited byShuichi Kasesu
Production
company
Release date
  • October 7, 2001 (2001-10-07) (Japan)
Running time
138 minutes
CountryJapan

Plot

After the apparent defeat of the Genji in the war for Japan, a mysterious demon lurking at the Gojoe bridge in Kyoto kills every Heike warrior that tries to cross it. Meanwhile Musashibo Benkei, a samurai turned Buddhist monk out of repentance for his past crimes, receives a divine signal from Acalanatha informing him that he only will be forgiven after slaying the demon. Borrowing a sacred sword from a yamabushi sect, and against the wishes of his mentor Ajari, Benkei sets out to destroy the monster.

At the scene of one of the murders in Gojoe, Benkei encounters his old rival Tankai, and also meets a scavenger named Tetsukichi, a former weaponsmith who now survives from looting from battle corpses. One night, during a failed attempt by the Heike clan of killing the demon through large numbers of troops, Benkei discovers the supposed demon is actually three superhuman masked warriors. They are Shanao, a young mystic and heir to the Genji, and his two retainers Gojin and Keshimaru. Back in their cave refuge, Shanao is urged by his priest Sashinbo to take command of the disorganized Genji army to get revenge on the Heike.

Benkei starts a search to locate Shanao's cave accompanied by Tetsukichi. It is then revealed that the latter used to be a legendary swordmaker, but he retired because his weapons were used by sōhei to indulge in bloodshed, and only follows Benkei under the promise of looting Shanao's collection of captured swords. However, he develops a grudging respect towards Benkei after the latter exorcizes a possessed parturient woman, Ashagiri. Later in their quest, they reach a forest cursed by evil spirits, who Benkei tries to banish, but he is stopped by spells sent by Shanao. Benkei and Tetsukichi are then arrested by Heike soldiers, who take the former to their leader Taira no Tadanori.

Tadanori asks for Benkei's help to solidify the Heike dominance over Japan, but Benkei refuses, having dedicated his life to Buddha. Tadanori orders Benkei to be tied under the sun to torment him, and then arrangers for him to duel Tankai, wanting Benkei to show his true power. However, having sworn off his warrior past, Benkei refuses, and he is to be executed when Shanao and his retainers attack the place, which causes a three-way battle in which Tadanori dies. Cutting down Tankai, Shanao faces off with Benkei and breaks the sacred sword due to Benkei's reluctance to fight. However, Ajari appears to scare Shanao away and reveal that Acalanatha's signal was actually a delusion.

After the faceoff, Shanao abandons his allegiance for the Genji and announces he will fight only for himself. He visits Ajari, revealing him that the Buddhist deities have abandoned the world and boasting only he has the power to do so now, and cuts down the old master. Shanao then initiates an iconoclast rampage, killing monks and desecrating statues, which spreads insanity around the lands of Gojoe, and challenges Benkei him to a duel in the bridge. Finding Tetsukichi alive among the corpses of Ashagiri and Tankai's warriors, Benkei asks him to reforge the sacred sword. Tetsukichi feels hopeless, but after watching Benkei mystically revive Ashagiri's baby as his last deed as a monk, he does so.

Shanao comes to the bridge after having assumed the name of Yoshitsune, while Benkei confronts him while wearing armor and carrying multiple weapons, embracing his warrior ethos. The two fight, only for the sacred sword to break again. However, Benkei now utilizes the rest of his weapons, which get similarly destroyed, and while unarmed he uses jujutsu. Although Yoshitsune seems near the victory, Benkei announces he will finally show him his demon blood and fights him wielding a piece of sword. Yoshitsune stabs Benkei through the torso, but Benkei raises the piece to the stormy sky, attracting a bolt of lightning that kills them both and destroys the bridge.

After the duel, Shashinbo meets a group of emmisaries of the Genji, whom he makes believe that Keshimaru and Gojin are respectively Yoshitsune and a now allied Benkei. At the bridge, a Tetsukichi rendered blind by the lightning searches desperately for Benkei among the rubble, but he only finds the baby, still miraculously alive.

Cast

Production

Film producer Takenori Sento, who helped produce the Ring Trilogy, wanted to create a box office hit by making an action film in the jidaigeki genre.[2]

Release

The film was first shown in North America as part of the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival.[3] The film was also shown at the 2001 Sitges Film Festival.[4] The film was set for an October 7, 2001 theatrical release in Japan.[5]

Awards

Actor Tadanobu Asano won the award for Best Supporting Actor at the Hochi Film Awards in 2000 for his role in this film and in Taboo.[6]

Reception

Variety gave the film a mixed review, stating that "Despite an impressive opening and suitably titanic finale, yarn about various warriors battling one another during the "Dark Ages" is way overlong at almost 2½ hours and soon palls with its endless succession of sylvan swordplay."[5] The Japan Times compared the final action scene to the "excessive episodes of the Dragonball Z" and that the film may "bring in the same kids who made the Ring films an event – but it's not going to make anyone forget Shichinin no Samurai. Kurosawa's masterpiece delivers the essence of battle with gut-wrenching authority.[2] Film4 gave the film a positive review, stating that "What it lacks in humour (and there is absolutely none to be found in it), Gojoe more than makes up for in its sheer, unrelenting intensity, something which few other directors would be able to sustain over so long a duration."[7]

Notes

  1. "Gojoe page on the online catalogue of the distributor, Optimum Entertainment". Optimum. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  2. Schilling, Mark (October 17, 2000). "Shock treatment for jidaigeki". The Japan Times. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  3. Deming, Mark. "Gojoe: Spirit War Chronicle". AllMovie. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
  4. "34ed. Festival Internacional de Cinema de Catalunya". Sitges Film Festival. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  5. Elley, Derek (October 15, 2000). "Gojoe". Variety. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  6. "Broadcast Film Award-winner work". Archived from the original on April 3, 2005. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  7. "Gojoe". Film4. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
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