Satan's Sword 3: The Final Chapter (1961) Poster

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5/10
Least dull of 3
sharptongue16 November 2002
Last of a trilogy, and the more empathetic performance of the star Raizo lifts this one a little above the others. He's not quite so zombic here, and even manages a few human touches. As with the other two, the ending is inconclusive, leaving the way open for another sequel. As usual, the costumes and set decoration are the real stars.
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7/10
Kenji Misumi Is Missed, but the Third Film Offers Fitting Conclusion
jrd_7329 August 2020
The third film in The Daibosatsu Toge trilogy starring Ichikawa Raizo as the murderous anti-hero Ryunosuke Tsukue offers a fitting conclusion to the series in spite of some problems.

The biggest problem is that Kenji Misumi does not return to the director's chair. Kazuo Mori, a workmanlike director, takes over. Gone are the bright colors of the first two films. Also, missing is some of the poetry. Throughout the series, Ryunosuke has been beset by sounds and visions of those he has killed. Misumi used voices, a shadow on a wall, to present Ryunosuke's mental deterioration. However, here, director Kazuo Mori gives the audience spectral, deformed figures like in a horror movie. It is a very literal approach, and I missed Misumi's subtler hand.

Another disappointment is the way the third film seems, at least for most of its running time, to be an intriguing, stand alone samurai story, but in the last twenty minutes rushes to a conclusion for the whole series, with some of the major characters absent from the scene/film.

In spite of these, I liked the main story with Ryunosuke getting involved with a corrupt lord and a deformed, wealthy woman. As always, Ichikawa Raizo is marvelous as Ryunosuke. He always had me watching.

I had read about this film's ending in one of Chris D.'s articles on samurai films published in the mid-1990's in Cult Movies magazine (these articles helped get me interested in samurai films). I was waiting in anticipation for the climax. Well, it wasn't exactly the way I had pictured it (Kenji Misumi would have done it better), but it was still a good send off for the murderous Ryunosuke Tsukue.
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Satan's Sword 3: The Final Chapter
chaos-rampant9 April 2008
As was the case with Satan's Sword 2, the third entry begins where the second one left off. A short montage gives a short summary of the story (it came 1 year after the first two, so I guess audiences had to be oriented as to what it is they're watching), and then we're thrust headlong in yet another tale of revenge and death. Ryunosuke Tsuke is still hunted by his sworn enemy Hyoma Utsugi, whose brother he killed in the first episode. Whenever he tries to settle down and live peacefully (and such opportunities do arise), a combination of bad luck and bad kharma force him to continue on the path of self-destruction. It doesn't seem to make a difference whether or not he does the right thing or not. There's no stopping Ryunosuke's cursed fate. Just as he settles down with a young woman and her son and she genuinely shows affection for him, he has to save a young man who is accused unfairly of theft, and finds himself captured and forced to work for a corrupt official. There goes his first chance of peace. In another instance, after he flees with another woman who again seems to care for him, he murders a young girl for no reason, again upsetting the balance. In the end Ryunosuke, plagued by visions of those he killed, will face off with Hyoma in a spectacular ending.

There appears to be a slight mix up here. IMDb states Kenji Misumi as the director but the copy I have gives another name. Anyways, whoever helmed Satan's Sword 3 was smart enough to leave the ending elusive. Indeed, there's no need for a definitive closure to the saga because we know that in the end it doesn't matter whether or not Rynosuke survives. He's already in hell. And it doesn't matter whether or not Hyoma gets his revenge, because Ryunosuke's inner demons have taken care of that.

If you've seen the previous two entries, you should know what to expect. The set pieces, costumes and cinematography are all spot on and even superior in this third entry. The final show down in the middle of a raging storm and flood is perhaps the best part of the series and gives that extra oomph to the ending. The swordfighting leaves something to be desired (still no sign of arterial sprayings), but Misumi (if he did direct the movie) was still new in the chambara game at this point and Raizo Ichikawa is no Toshiro Mifune. It's still adequate though. What drives the story is Ryunosuke's nihilistic character and Ichikawa has made him his own by now.

Even though the whole series as a whole doesn't approach the epic success of something like Lone Wolf and Cub and is nowhere near as famous as Zatoichi, they're still well worth discovering by chambara enthusiasts. Good, solid entertainment with flashes of brilliance.
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