Thank you, Zack Snyder. It’s not very often you get to express that sentiment to the impassioned but wearyingly bombastic director of Man of Steel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, Watchmen and – most recently – a sprawling two-movie space opera for Netflix.
But it was when hovering over the play button for Snyder’s Rebel Moon Chapter One: Chalice of Blood – a weirdly renamed and apparently more bloody version of Rebel Moon Part One: A Child of Fire – that I realised it had ballooned to 204 minutes long. Jeepers, I thought, that feels like another nod to Seven Samurai (which clocks in at 207 minutes but thoughtfully includes a five-minute intermission).
Then I felt a flush of shame, having never actually gotten around to watching Akira Kurosawa’s 1954 Japanese classic, an enduring foundational text in global film culture. How can I have consumed hundreds of action movies about recruiting a rag-tag squad of warriors to grudgingly fight for what’s right and never seen the daddy of them all?
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So rather than rewatching a slightly different version of a Snyder movie that already pays obvious homage to Kurosawa’s epic – in Rebel Moon, balletic killer-turned-farmer Sofia Boutella rounds up a pic’n’mix of sci-fi badasses to protect her adopted community from a goose-stepping galactic empire – I realised it was time to spend that 204 minutes returning to the source. Turns out this is actually the perfect year to belatedly get into Seven Samurai.
To mark its 70th anniversary, the BFI has released dazzling new 4K UHD and Blu-ray editions crammed with special features and useful context. The film is set in feudal Japan at the end of the 16th century but the plot seems timeless: how do you stand up to a bully? (Answer: hire some extremely lethal help.)