Saturday, August 22, 2020
Akira Kurosawas The Seven Samurai and John Sturges The Magnificent Se
Akira Kurosawa's The Seven Samurai and John Sturges' The Magnificent Seven The 1954 film The Seven Samurai, coordinated by Akira Kurosawa, and its 1960 revamp The Magnificent Seven, coordinated by John Sturges have numerous similitudes; for instance, the plot of the two motion pictures involves ranchers recruiting hired fighters to help battle off criminals that yearly loot their homesteads. The two films likewise have contrasts like the portrayal of the crooks in The Magnificent Seven rather than The Seven Samurai. One of the principle similitudes between the Seven Samurai and Magnificent Seven is the plot. In the two motion pictures desperados yearly plunder a little town and the ranchers are left with scarcely enough food to endure. In the Magnificent Seven Calvera and his men really stop in the town and converse with the ranchers, notwithstanding, in Seven Samurai the desperados ride by and are caught by a rancher about returning when the grain is ready. The ranchers at that point have a gathering and choose to employ hired fighters, in Seven Samurai the ranchers use rice and in Magnificent Seven the ranchers offer $20. In the two motion pictures the ranchers are turned down ordinarily before they locate the principal hired fighter, and how they locate the primary hired soldier is comparable in the feeling of the mental fortitude they appear. In the Seven Samurai the principle character Kanbei camouflages himself as a priest and recoveries a youngster kidnapped. Great Seven shows the principle character Chris and his freshly discovered accomplice Vin in a savage encounter with hooligans who are attempting...
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