This week, Trevor sits down for a solo review of Ryuhei Kitamura's, Aragami (2003)!
\nProduced as one half of the \u201cDuel Project,\u201d a collaboration between directors Ryuhei Kitamura and Yukihiko Tsutsumi, the film was constructed under a series of strict guidelines, namely:
\nThe film had to take place in a single location.
\nThe film had to feature a \u201cduel\u201d as part of it's main plot.
\nThe film had to be shot in one week.
\nStarring Takao Osawa and Masaya Kato, Aragami (2003) concerns a young samurai being cared for an then forced to do battle with an immortal swordsman in the hopes that the latter can be freed from his mortal coil in glorious battle.
\nSomehow managing to feel overlong at a scant 78 minutes in length, the film suffers from a repetitive midsection, but is otherwise a handsome and charismatic little action film that wears it's influences and enthusiasm on it's sleeves.
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