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  2. Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto. Musashi Miyamoto ( Japanese: 宮本武蔵, Hepburn: Miyamoto Musashi) is a 1954 Japanese film directed and co-written by Hiroshi Inagaki and starring Toshiro Mifune. The film is the first film of Inagaki's Samurai Trilogy of historical adventures. [3] [2]

    • Kazuo Takimura
    • Ikuma Dan
    • 26 September 1954 (Japan)
  3. Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto: Directed by Hiroshi Inagaki. With Toshirô Mifune, Rentarô Mikuni, Kurôemon Onoe, Kaoru Yachigusa. Depicts the early life of the legendary warrior Musashi Miyamoto; his years as an aspiring warrior, an outlaw and finally a true samurai.

    • (9.3K)
    • Action, Adventure, Biography
    • Hiroshi Inagaki
    • 1955-11-18
  4. Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto. IN JAPANESE W/ ENGLISH SUBTITLES!!! The first in this trilogy of the outlaw samurai, Takezo of Miyamoto, who slowly changes his ways and becomes Musashi the honorable samurai.

    • 33.1K
    • ultragoji2
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  6. Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto. In the first part of the epic Samurai Trilogy, Toshiro Mifune thunders onto the screen as the iconic title character. When we meet him, Miyamoto is a wide-eyed romantic, dreaming of military glory in the civil war that is ravaging the seventeenth-century countryside. Twists of fate, however, turn him into a fugitive.

    • Takezo/Musashi Miyamoto
    • Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto1
    • Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto2
    • Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto3
    • Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto4
  7. Japanese. The Samurai Trilogy is a film trilogy directed by Hiroshi Inagaki and starring Toshiro Mifune as Musashi Miyamoto and Kōji Tsuruta as Kojirō Sasaki. The films are based on Musashi, a novel by Eiji Yoshikawa about the famous duelist and author of The Book of Five Rings . The three films are: Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto ( 1954)

    • Kazuo Takimura
    • Ikuma Dan
    • 1954–56
  8. May 8, 2012 · The three films in Hiroshi Inagaki's Samurai trilogy are among the most widely seen Japanese films in the U.S. In fact the first part, Musashi Miyamoto (1954), was only the fourth Japanese film to receive distribution in America; the first three were Rashomon (1950), Ugetsu Monogatari (1953) and Gate of Hell (1953).

  9. At the house the four hide jewels in the ceiling attic, the women scavenge from dead samurai. Oko explains her dead husband was a brigand also and she has plans to move to Kyoto. At night the bandits arrive and begin to ransack the house and menace the women. They find the treasure.

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