Miike has fashioned one hell of a rousing piece of entertainment. It's easily his most accessible film to date, which if you're a big fan of "Ichi the Killer," "Audition," "Gozu" and/or "Dead or Alive" means you may find a more (relatively) subdued Miike not to your liking. But if you hated his clusterfuck of a western "Sukiyaki Western Django," as this writer did ("The Good, the Bad, The Weird" did pretty much the same thing so much better), then this latest effort, a punkish yet traditional samurai film, will be a welcome return to comprehension.

Not so for "13 Assassins." The blood flows, but something Miike understands about the genre is that each character — while admittedly rather indistinguishable due to lack of proper development — brings with them a distinct fighting style. Miike also understands the tropes of the samurai film, and breaks free of some, but also embraces rather too many for this writer's taste. For every classic-Miike well-framed decapitation and river of blood spilled (one hilarious moment recalls the pit scene from "Army of Darkness," where an impossible geyser of blood shoots out from a well-placed explosion), there's double that in cliches: men die during battle and everyone stops to watch instead of continuing to fight, the inevitable deaths of almost every character (wouldn't it be fresh if most survived?), and the final showdown between the lead assassin and the baddy. It lends the film a sense of compromise, or at least it feels like Miike is catering too much to the audience, happy to give the people what they want. It's just goofy enough, and well-made enough, though, to overcome most of these shortcomings. [B]
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