The Last Samurai (2003 Film) Literary Elements

The Last Samurai (2003 Film) Literary Elements

Director

Edward Zwick

Leading Actors/Actresses

Tom Cruise

Supporting Actors/Actresses

Ken Watanabe, Timothy Spall, Billy Connolly

Genre

Historical Drama, Epic

Language

English, Japanese

Awards

Four Academy Award nominations, Three Golden Globe Award nominations, National Board of Review Best Director (Edward Zwick) Outstanding Foreign Language Film, Japanese Academy Awards

Date of Release

November 5, 2003

Producer

Edward Zwick, Marshall Herskowitz, Tom Cruise, Paula Wagner, Scott Kroopf, To Enelman

Setting and Context

The movie is set in Japan in the late 1870s.

Narrator and Point of View

The point of view is that of the Samurai who are resisting Westernization and the change brought to their culture and status.

Tone and Mood

The film is both very philosophical and also alternately threatening and inspiring.

Protagonist and Antagonist

The Samurai are the protagonists, while the Imperial Japanese Army the antagonists.

Major Conflict

There is conflict between the Samurai and the Imperial Japanese Army who want to suppress them and the rebellion that they are orchestrating against Japan's new Emperor.

Climax

The Emperor realizes that although Japan needs to be modernized he cannot forget his ancestral heritage and history. He rejects Omura's offer of a trade deal and quells their protest.

Foreshadowing

When Algren presents the Emperor with Katsumoto's sword, it foreshadows the Emperor's epiphany and his rejection of Omura's offer, with a new-found intent to remember his country's and his own personal history.

Understatement

N/A

Innovations in Filming or Lighting or Camera Techniques

N/A

Allusions

The film alludes to the French army captain Jules Brunet who fought alongside Enomoto Takeaki in the Boshin War.

Paradox

Algren hates Bagley for his role in the Indian Wars, which Algren believed were unethical in their westernization of another culture, but he decides to work for him and force westernization on Japan, because he needs the money.

Parallelism

There is a parallel between the way in which Bagley ignores Algren's advice and the way in which his mission fails due to an inexperienced and untrained Imperial Army.

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