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===Films=== |
===Films=== |
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{{Main|List of jidaigeki films}} |
{{Main|List of jidaigeki films}} |
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{{See also|List of ninja films}} |
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===Video games=== |
===Video games=== |
Revision as of 22:09, 9 March 2022
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Jidaigeki (時代劇) is a genre of film, television, video game, and theatre in Japan. Literally meaning "period dramas", they are most often set during the Edo period of Japanese history, from 1603 to 1868. Some, however, are set much earlier—Portrait of Hell, for example, is set during the late Heian period—and the early Meiji era is also a popular setting. Jidaigeki show the lives of the samurai, farmers, craftsmen, and merchants of their time. Jidaigeki films are sometimes referred to as chambara movies, a word meaning "sword fight", though chambara is more accurately a subgenre of jidaigeki. Jidaigeki rely on an established set of dramatic conventions including the use of makeup, language, catchphrases, and plotlines.
Types
Many jidaigeki take place in Edo, the military capital. Others show the adventures of people wandering from place to place. The long-running television series Zenigata Heiji and Abarenbō Shōgun typify the Edo jidaigeki. Mito Kōmon, the fictitious story of the travels of the historical daimyō Tokugawa Mitsukuni, and the Zatoichi movies and television series, exemplify the traveling style.
Another way to categorize jidaigeki is according to the social status of the principal characters. The title character of Abarenbō Shōgun is Tokugawa Yoshimune, the eighth Tokugawa shōgun. The head of the samurai class, Yoshimune assumes the disguise of a low-ranking hatamoto, a samurai in the service of the shogun. Similarly, Mito Kōmon is the retired vice-shogun, masquerading as a merchant. In contrast, the coin-throwing Heiji of Zenigata Heiji is a commoner, working for the police, while Ichi (the title character of Zatoichi), a blind masseur, is an outcast, as were many disabled people in that era. In fact, masseurs, who typically were at the bottom of the professional food chain, was one of the few vocational positions available to the blind in that era. Gokenin Zankurō is a samurai but, due to his low rank and income, he has to work extra jobs that higher-ranking samurai were unaccustomed to doing.
Whether the lead role is samurai or commoner, jidaigeki usually reach a climax in an immense sword fight just before the end. The title character of a series always wins, whether using a sword or a jutte (the device police used to trap, and sometimes to bend or break, an opponent's sword).
Sengoku-jidai
Sengoku-jidai (Warring States era setting) is a Japanese genre that has been used as the setting for novels, films, video games, anime and manga. It bears some parallels with the Western; Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, for example, was remade in a Western setting as The Magnificent Seven.
Roles
Among the characters in jidaigeki are a parade of people with occupations unfamiliar to modern Japanese, and especially to foreigners. Here are a few.
Warriors
The warrior class included samurai, hereditary members in the military service of a daimyō or the shōgun (themselves samurai). Rōnin, samurai without masters, were also warriors, and like samurai, wore two swords; they were, however, without inherited employment or status. Bugeisha were men, or in some stories women, who aimed to perfect their martial arts, often by traveling throughout the country. Ninja were the secret service, specializing in stealth, the use of disguises, explosives, and concealed weapons.
Craftsmen
Craftsmen in jidaigeki included metalworkers (often abducted to mint counterfeit coins), bucket-makers, carpenters and plasterers, and makers of woodblock prints for art or newspapers.
Merchants
In addition to the owners of businesses large and small, the jidaigeki often portray the employees. The bantō was a high-ranking employee of a merchant, the tedai, a lower helper. Many merchants employed children, or kozō. Itinerant merchants included the organized medicine-sellers, vegetable-growers from outside the city, and peddlers at fairs outside temples and shrines. In contrast, the great brokers in rice, lumber and other commodities operated sprawling shops in the city.
Governments
In the highest ranks of the shogunate were the rojū. Below them were the wakadoshiyori, then the various bugyō or administrators, including the jisha bugyō (who administered temples and shrines), the kanjō bugyō (in charge of finances) and the two Edo machi bugyō. These last alternated by month as chief administrator of the city. Their role encompassed mayor, chief of police, and judge, and jury in criminal and civil matters.
The machi bugyō oversaw the police and fire departments. The police, or machikata, included the high-ranking yoriki and the dōshin below them; both were samurai. In jidaigeki, they often have full-time patrolmen, okappiki and shitappiki, who were commoners. (Historically, these people were irregulars, called to service only when necessary.) Zenigata Heiji is an okappiki. The police lived in barracks at Hatchōbori in Edo. They manned ban'ya, the watch-houses, throughout the metropolis. The jitte was the symbol of the police, from yoriki to shitappiki.
A separate police force handled matters involving samurai. The ōmetsuke were high-ranking officials in the shogunate; the metsuke and kachi-metsuke, lower-ranking police who could detain samurai. Yet another police force investigated arson-robberies, while Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples fell under the control of another authority. The feudal nature of Japan made these matters delicate, and jurisdictional disputes are common in jidaigeki.
Edo had three fire departments. The daimyō-bikeshi were in the service of designated daimyōs; the jōbikeshi reported to the shogunate; while the machi-bikeshi, beginning under Yoshimune, were commoners under the administration of the machi-bugyō. Thus, even the fire companies have turf wars in the jidaigeki.
Each daimyō maintained a residence in Edo, where he lived during sankin-kōtai. His wife and children remained there even while he was away from Edo, and the ladies-in-waiting often feature prominently in jidaigeki. A high-ranking samurai, the Edo-garō, oversaw the affairs in the daimyō's absence. In addition to a staff of samurai, the household included ashigaru (lightly armed warrior-servants) and chūgen and yakko (servants often portrayed as flamboyant and crooked). Many daimyōs employed doctors, goten'i; their counterpart in the shogun's household was the okuishi. Count on them to provide the poisons that kill and the potions that heal.
Other
The cast of a wandering jidaigeki encountered a similar setting in each han. There, the karō were the kuni-garō and the jōdai-garō. Tensions between them have provided plots for many stories.
Conventions
There are several dramatic conventions of jidaigeki:
- The heroes often wear eye makeup, and the villains often have disarranged hair.
- A contrived form of old-fashioned Japanese speech, using modern pronunciation and grammar with a high degree of formality and frequent archaisms.
- In long-running TV series, like Mito Kōmon and Zenigata Heiji, the lead and supporting actors sometimes change. This is done without any rationale for the change of appearance. The new actor simply appears in the place of the old one and the stories continue. This is similar to the James Bond film series or superhero films, in contrast with e.g. the British television program Doctor Who.
- In a sword fight, when a large number of villains attacks the main character, they never attack at once. The main character first launches into a lengthy preamble detailing the crimes the villains have committed, at the end of which the villains then initiate hostilities. The villains charge singly or in pairs; the rest wait their turn to be dispatched and surround the main character until it is their turn to be easily defeated. Sword fights are the grand finale of the show and are conducted to specially crafted theme music for their duration.
- On television, even fatal sword cuts draw little blood, and often do not even cut through clothing. Villains are chopped down with deadly, yet completely invisible, sword blows. Despite this, blood or wounding may be shown for arrow wounds or knife cuts.
- In chambara films, the violence is generally considerably stylized, sometimes to such a degree that sword cuts cause geysers of blood from wounds. Dismemberment and decapitation are common as well.
Proverbs and catchphrases
Authors of jidaigeki work pithy sayings into the dialog. Here are a few:
- Tonde hi ni iru natsu no mushi: Like bugs that fly into the fire in the summer (they will come to their destruction)
- Shishi shinchū no mushi: A wolf in sheep's clothing (literally, a parasite in the lion's body)
- Kaji to kenka wa Edo no hana: Fires and brawls are the flower of Edo
- Ōedo happyaku yachō: "The eight hundred neighborhoods of Edo"
- Tabi wa michizure: "Travel is who you take with you"
In addition, the authors of series invent their own catchphrases called kimarizerifu that the protagonist says at the same point in nearly every episode. In Mito Kōmon, in which the eponymous character disguises himself as a commoner, in the final sword fight, a sidekick invariably holds up an accessory bearing the shogunal crest and shouts, Hikae! Kono mondokoro ga me ni hairanu ka?: "Back! Can you not see this emblem?", revealing the identity of the hitherto unsuspected old man with a goatee beard. The villains then instantly surrender and beg forgiveness. Likewise, Tōyama no Kin-san bares his tattooed shoulder and snarls, Kono sakurafubuki o miwasureta to iwasane zo!: "I won't let you say you forgot this cherry-blossom blizzard!" After sentencing the criminals, he proclaims, Kore nite ikken rakuchaku: "Case closed."
Famous jidaigeki
Films
Video games
The following are Japanese video games in the jidaigeki genre.
- Downtown Special: Kunio-kun no Jidaigeki dayo Zen'in Shūgō—sequel to Downtown Nekketsu Monogatari (River City Ransom in America) set in feudal Japan.
- Genji: Dawn of the Samurai
- Hakuōki series
- Kengo series
- Live A Live at the "Secret Orders" Scenario
- Ni-Oh series
- Ninja Gaiden series "Ninja Ryukenden", "Legend of the Ninja Dragon Sword" in Japan
- Nobunaga's Ambition series "Nobunaga no Yabō" in Japan
- Onimusha series
- Ryū ga Gotoku Kenzan!
- Ryū ga Gotoku Ishin!
- Samurai, a Sega arcade action game released in March 1980.[1]
- Samurai Shodown series
- Samurai Warriors "Sengoku Musō" in Japan
- Samurai Warriors 2 "Sengoku Musō 2" in Japan
- Samurai Warriors 3 "Sengoku Musō 3" in Japan
- Samurai Warriors 4 "Sengoku Musō 4" in Japan
- Samurai Warriors 2: Empires series "Sengoku Musō 2: Empires" in Japan
- Samurai Warriors: Chronicles "Sengoku Musō: Kuronikuru" in Japan
- Samurai Warriors: Katana "Sengoku Musō: Katana" in Japan
- Samurai Warriors: Spirit of Sanada "Sengoku Musō: Sanada Maru" in Japan
- Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
- Sengoku Ace
- Soul of the Samurai
- Tenchu series
- The Last Blade series
- Warriors Orochi series
- Way of the Samurai series
Although jidaigeki is essentially a Japanese genre, there are also Western games that use the setting to match the same standards. Examples are Ghost of Tsushima, Shogun: Total War series or Japanese campaigns of Age of Empires III.
Anime and manga
- Azumi
- Basilisk
- Dororo
- Fire Tripper
- Gintama
- Hakuouki Shinsengumi Kitan
- Hyouge Mono
- Intrigue in the Bakumatsu – Irohanihoheto
- InuYasha
- Kaze Hikaru
- Lone Wolf and Cub
- Mushishi
- Ninja Scroll
- Oi! Ryoma
- Otogizoshi
- Princess Mononoke
- Rakudai Ninja Rantarō
- Rurouni Kenshin
- Samurai 7
- Samurai Champloo
- Samurai Executioner
- Shigurui
- Shōnen Onmyōji
- The Yagyu Ninja Scrolls
- Samurai Deeper Kyo
- Sword of the Stranger
- Vagabond
- Yasuke
Live action television
- Taiga drama Series on NHK.
Prominent jidaigeki directors
Names are in Western order, with the surname after the given name.
- Hideo Gosha
- Kon Ichikawa
- Hiroshi Inagaki
- Akira Kurosawa
- Masaki Kobayashi
- Shozo Makino
- Kenji Misumi
- Kenji Mizoguchi
- Kihachi Okamoto
- Kimiyoshi Yasuda
- Akira Inoue
- Tomu Uchida
- Eiichi Kudo
- Tokuzō Tanaka
- Masahiro Takase
- Koreyoshi Kurahara
- Kazuo Ikehiro
Prominent jidaigeki actors
- Tsumasaburō Bandō
- Denjirō Ōkōchi
- Chiyonosuke Azuma
- Utaemon Ichikawa
- Ryūtarō Ōtomo
- Kanjūrō Arashi
- Jūshirō Konoe
- Ryūnosuke Tsukigata
- Chiezō Kataoka
- Ichikawa Raizō VIII
- Hashizo Okawa
- Yorozuya Kinnosuke
- Toshiro Mifune
- Shintaro Katsu
- Tomisaburo Wakayama
- Kōtarō Satomi
- Asahi Kurizuka
- Hiroki Matsukata
- Masakazu Tamura
- Kin'ya Kitaōji
- Sonny Chiba
- Hideki Takahashi
- Ken Matsudaira
Influence
Star Wars creator George Lucas has admitted to being inspired significantly by the period works of Akira Kurosawa, and many thematic elements found in Star Wars bear the influence of Chanbara filmmaking. In an interview, Lucas has specifically cited the fact that he became acquainted with the term jidaigeki while in Japan, and it is widely assumed that he took inspiration for the term Jedi from this.[2][3][4]
References
- ^ "1980". Sega Arcade History. Famitsu DC (in Japanese). Enterbrain. 2002. pp. 40–42 (40).
- ^ Duggan, Jedi M. "History of the Jedi & The Jedi Religion". Jedi Sanctuary. Archived from the original on 2007-06-30. Retrieved 2007-07-19.
- ^ "Trivia for Star Wars (1977)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-07-19.
- ^ "Star Wars: The Legacy Revealed". 2007-05-28. about 90 minutes in. The History Channel.
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External links
- A Man, a Blade, an Empty Road: Postwar Samurai Film to 1970 by Allen White, this article discusses specific chanbara films, their distinction from regular jidai-geki, and the evolution of the genre.
- Gerow, Aaron, ed. (2012). "The Sword and The Screen: The Japanese Period Film 1915-1960". Film Series Commentaries. Yale University Council on East Asian Studies. Program for a jidaigeki film series sponsored by the Yale CEAS and the National Film Archive of Japan.
- TOEI KYOTO STUDIO PARK