At the age of 57, the staggeringly prolific Japanese film-maker and master of mayhem Takashi Miike now passes the 100 feature film mark with this expansive and surreally violent supernatural action movie; you could almost call it an undead samurai picaresque. It is based on Hiroaki Samura’s 30-volume manga, which ran for 20 years until 2012. Takuya Kimura plays Manji, a samurai cursed with immortality – “bloodworms” that magically heal any wound – who is asked by a young woman, Rin, to avenge the death of her father at the hands of the renegade ronin group, the Itto-ryu. Rin eerily resembles Machi, the disturbed figure whom Manji had witnessed being brutally butchered 50 years before: they are both played by Hana Sugisaki. Now, burdened by gallantry, honour and a sense of destiny, Manji must accept this mission: to confront and slay the ruthless killer, Anotsu Kagehisa (Sôta Fukushi). It has the bizarre amoral ferocity of a Sergio Leone picture, and the post-combat moments when the camera pulls back to reveal a landscape carpeted with corpses are startling. This is a little overlong and doesn’t have the emotional power of his 2011 film Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai. But what a spectacle.
Blade of the Immortal review – spectacular corpses and an undead samurai
Takashi Miike’s surreally violent action movie based in Hiroaki Samura’s long-running manga may not be his best work but is brutally dramatic