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Yojimbo
Plot Synopsis by Hal Erickson

Toshiro Mifune portrays a Samurai who finds himself in the middle of a feud-torn Japanese village. Neither side is particularly honorable, but Mifune is hungry and impoverished, so he agrees to work as bodyguard (or Yojimbo) for a silk merchant (Kamatari Fujiwara) against a sake merchant (Takashi Shimura). He then pretends to go to work for the other, the better to let the enemies tear each other apart. Imprisoned for his "treachery," he escapes just in time to watch the two warring sides wipe each other out. This was his plan all along, and now that peace has been restored, he leaves the village for further exploits. Yes, Yojimbo was the prototype for the Clint Eastwood "Man with No Name" picture A Fistful of Dollars (1964). The difference is that Fistful relies on Eastwood for its success, whereas Yojimbo scores on every creative level, from director Akira Kurosawa to cinematographer Kazuo Miyagawa to Mifune's classic lead performance.

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Similar Works
Samurai 1: Musashi Miyamoto  (1955, Hiroshi Inagaki)
The Samurai Trilogy  (1954, Hiroshi Inagaki)
Last Man Standing  (1996, Walter Hill)
Samurai Assassin  (1965, Kihachi Okamoto)
El Mariachi  (1992, Robert Rodriguez)
Zatoichi  (2003, Beat Takeshi Kitano)
More Dead Than Alive  (1969, Robert Sparr)
Messenger of Death  (1988, J. Lee Thompson)
Other Related Works
 Is followed by:    Sanjuro  (1962, Akira Kurosawa)
 Is related to:    A Fistful of Dollars  (1964, Sergio Leone)
   The Warrior and the Sorceress  (1984, John C. Broderick)
   Zatoichi vs. Yojimbo  (1970, Kihachi Okamoto)
   Kaze No Yojimbo [Anime Series] 
 Has been remade as:    Last Man Standing  (1996, Walter Hill)