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Written by Silencers

Jun 11th 2008
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Very few things stir up my passion, and one of the most potent things in that respect is an epic work of art. This year, I have yet to come across anything more epic than an animated film that just went on DVD very recently.

Avid anime fans may have come across the trailer[s] since the beginning of 2007, and now we can all set ourselves for the sheer awesomeness that is Sword of the Stranger.

Sword of the Stranger, 無皇刃譚 [Mukou Hadan]

Commonly referred as Stranger, the movie was produced by Studio Bones (Fullmetal Alchemist, Eureka Seven, Wolf’s Rain) and is set in feudal age Japan. In other words, it’s a samurai flick. With more than enough ninja-infested shows of late, getting back some samurai action is a much welcomed reprieve. But that’s not the real reason why Stranger impressed me so much.

Next time, boy, aim for his groin!

Stranger is about Kotaro, a young boy acompanied by his loyal dog Tobimaru, who is being chased by agents of the Chinese Ming Dynasty on an imperial mission. He was to journey to a temple where he was told that the monks there would protect him from harm. Along the way, he meets Nanashi, [literally meaning 'nameless one'] a samurai with extraordinary skills and hires the reluctant stranger as his bodyguard to escort him to the temple. Nanashi is so skilled, he equally matched a Ming assassin without undoing the seal that locked away his sword.

Yes, it vibrates! Try it if you don't believe me.

One thing I honestly enjoyed about Stranger is that it carries a perfect balance of epic storytelling and phenomenal animation work. Some shows may have excellent plots but don’t really get extensive animation [Kino's Journey, Zetsubou Sensei], while others have all these ultra flashy animations but weak stories with terrible plot holes [Appleseed Ex Machina, Vexille].

Stranger starts out brilliantly, immediately gaging the viewer’s attention with a scene of bandits attacking a Ming caravan. In only 5 minutes, we got served with seamless sword dancing, flying limbs and sprays of blood. If a hand was chopped off, we see it chopped off. If an arrow went through a neck, we see it come out from the other side. If someone got decapitated, we see red fountain spraying out of the dude’s shoulders.

Give me that long vibrating thing. Or else...

This is where Studio Bones shines. Throughout their history of animation projects, you rarely [if ever] see them resort to cheap tricks like speed lines and panning still cels. Combat scenes are elaborately choreographed and animated with every single detail accounted for. If they usually put in their standard level of work in producing full length TV series, then this time they have only concentrated all that expansive effort into a 100 minutes’ worth of runtime.

No! It's MINE to play with. Mine ALONE!

But of course, it doesn’t end there. I mentioned a perfect balance, and Stranger comes with an equally delicious side dish to complement the sweet animation work.

[WARNING: SPOILER ALERT]

Nanashi’s true name was never revealed, nor was his background. All we got to find out was that he was an army general and left the army to live by his own principles and belief. While the movie offered a tantalizing bait as to why he never drew out his sword, it was never truly revealed. However, through glimpses of nightmares and flashbacks, it managed to build up so much emotion and weight such that when you see him tearing off the binds that sealed the blade, you just can’t help but say “Whoa.”

HIYEAA- eh? OSHI-!

The simple-mindedness of feudal age warriors also played a factor. Blindly following whoever took charge and obeying the orders of the local feudal lord despite facing impossible odds. However, Stranger made the whole scenario interesting by adding an anomaly or two in the mix. It’s a minor twist, but it adds so much flavour to the big picture.

I can't. The green thing is stuck up my ass.
Why aren't you riding?

While having some intense moments of duels, the film also has calm moments where we get to see exquisite art in landscapes and the meticulous animation of a lively and busy town. Such scenes truly enhanced the realism of the whole experience. The plot is pretty much linear and straight-forward, there was not much character development, but since almost everyone dies, it doesn’t really matter anyway. It ends clean, and maybe a little bit open-ended just enough to keep the audience guessing whether or not Nanashi survives his battle.

[/spoiler]

This is one film I strongly urge you to watch. I give it a magnificent 10 out of 10 stars, and trust me, you’ll agree with me as soon as you watch the first 15 minutes of the show.

I CAME!


Sword of the Stranger OST

As a little gift, we decided to release the very epic soundtrack composed by Naoki Sato [Eureka Seven, X TV]. Grab the torrent here:

Ocha!] Sword of the Stranger Original Soundtrack.rar


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13 Comments

  1. tks, i’ll help, regards from brazil, what about dark side blues?

  2. Smerpy

    Thanks for the heads up and of course the link to the OST.

  3. deadguy

    I watched the movie because PA Works partially produced it (according to the PA Works entry in wikipedia ), but yeah it really has some nice animations.. I thought Nanashi was going to die or maybe the boy’s gonna name him Musashi or something…but then can swordsmen really kick that much arse after running a half day marathon in the snow?

  4. @deadguy
    Hey, John McClane can do it, Robert Langdon can do it, why not a samurai? XD

  5. Guuzen

    This animation was so good that i came several times. And the OST is amazing btw.

    Sweden thanks you for the link.

  6. ninotores

    This movie had gone completely under the radar for me.

    Thus, I am HUGELY GRATEFUL to Ocha! for making me aware of it.

    Awesome fucking movie. Best anime action flick I’ve seen in years.

  7. poopoo

    Awesome movie. Just-as-awesome review =D
    (Of the four five reviews I’ve read for this movie, yours was the most profound and I agreed with it most =)

    Now what I’m really wondering is whether /you/ think Nanashi died or not. I’ve watched the ending few minutes dozens of times and I think he did. Tell me he didn’t!

  8. I think he dies. In fact, I *want* him to die. If he survives, it just makes him this overpowered superhero-level guy. And that takes out the fun in things.

  9. Inoue

    He survived the small battle, a long intense run through the snow, a tower falling on him, more intense battling, a huge fall, a ‘boss battle’… They had better not kill him horseback riding. Plus they played up that the green/jade? treasure saveing him…. I don’t want him to die, he was to cool of a character to die. But it was an open ending, so if you wanted him to die; he did, and if you didn’t want him to die; he didn’t. Though in my mind characters that I love never die, no matter what the creator says. ^^

  10. anifan

    can some one seed the soundtrack please!!!!!

  11. Rozuiki

    Really great movie! And i agree that “Whoa” about tearing off the binds :-) Thanx for the soundtrack-thanks to music it´s even greater….i just love soundtracks

  12. jj

    i just saw it and i really enjoyed it although the only thing that annoyed me is that i got confused with the whole japanese chinese thing going on like what is the ming dynesty you know stuff like that

  13. Jack Ramos

    There is something in the movie that surprisingly touches the human heart that I really wish for Nanase to survive since all of his efforts to save the child will be futile should he die & considering the harshness of society at that period in time the child will be canon fodder. maybe the creators of the movie would like to consider making a sequel? Or it’s possible that they really deliberately left the ending hanging with a sequel in mind the same as with Ninja scroll. I hope that a sequel is already in the works because I loved the characters both Kotaro & Nanashi because they both reminded me of parts in my life & character.

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