This review may contain spoilers
From Chanbara Promise to Death-Game Recycling
Everyone online is calling this the ‘next great samurai series,’ but let’s be honest: it starts like real chanbara and ends as another recycled death game.
The opening is excellent — clean framing, silence, iaijutsu-style movement, a duel over in seconds. Pure Kurosawa influence.
But as soon as the rules, numbers, VIP spectators and the ‘last-one-standing’ structure appear, the mysticism collapses.
It’s Squid Game in a kimono.
Not a bad show — just not new.
And for viewers who actually know classic samurai cinema (Inagaki, Mizoguchi, Kobayashi, Uchida, Kurosawa), this feels more like spectacle than substance.
The opening is excellent — clean framing, silence, iaijutsu-style movement, a duel over in seconds. Pure Kurosawa influence.
But as soon as the rules, numbers, VIP spectators and the ‘last-one-standing’ structure appear, the mysticism collapses.
It’s Squid Game in a kimono.
Not a bad show — just not new.
And for viewers who actually know classic samurai cinema (Inagaki, Mizoguchi, Kobayashi, Uchida, Kurosawa), this feels more like spectacle than substance.
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