

Samurai Wars is a line that is set in feudal Japan in a era of clan
rivalries as the emerging Emperor of Japan struggles to maintain control in
a land honor and war. The line was heavily influenced by samurai films
by many directors including Akira Kurosawa.
Chipao
Chipao is the loyal head servant of
the Oganata Clan.

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Ryuuto
Ryuto is another servant of the the
Oganata Clan and companion of Chipao

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Soto-Mu Bushi
Sotu-Mu Bushi are the huge groups of
armored samurai that control the provinces and enforce the Shogun's
law.

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Princess Layu Oganata
Princess Layu Oganata is the daughter
of a wealthy daimyo (landed noble) who has been taken hostage for his
attempts to start an uprising against the shogun.

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Shogun Daku Joutei
Daku Joutei is the ruthless shogun who
serves at the behest of the Emperor of Japan. His iron law brings
order in his twisted attempt to maintain stability at any cost.

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Sora Hokosusha
Sora Hokosusha is the adopted son of
peasant rice farmers. He longs for adventure out of the damp rice
paddies.

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Obu Wankabe
Once a proud samurai, Obu Wankabe now
wanders the provinces as a ronin, or masterless samurai.

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Chikushou
Chikushou is a frightening oni demon
who serves his master Han Dokuen.

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Han Dokuen / Han Solo
Han and Dokuen is a merchant, pirate, and junk captain who had hangs
around the port city of Nagasaki (the only port that allowed trade
with the west) and as a result has been somewhat westernized.

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Fetababe
Fetababa is a cunning ninja who serves the shogun to
eliminate the natural enemy of the ninja...the samurai.

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The
following is a fake write up that I did for a convention.
____________________
Last
year you may recall reading or hearing about a discovery that shook the
cinematic world to its foundations. The
famed Ekafama Auction House in Yokahama announced its astonishing discovery,
pictures. However, these were
no ordinary pictures, they were in fact stills from a movie a half a century
old that was not supposed to exist.
The
film was a movie that even the most wishful cinephile thought was an urban
legend. The movie was Mononofu
Woza: Ryu-Mikomi by acclaimed Japanese director Akira Kurosawa.
Very little has been written about the film over the years as very
little was known. The facts are
hard to come by as the story and legends surrounding it grew substantially
over the years until the entire project entered an ethereal state.
The
facts that can be confirmed by the limited studio records that survive are
few. It was to be something of
mega project unheard of in its day. The
film was budgeted to be the most expensive film in Japanese history and
boasted a veritable who's who of Japanese cinema and Kurosawa regulars (see
inset table below). It
began filming in 1955 and would have been released the following year in
1956. Most of the principal
photography had wrapped when tragedy struck.
A fire broke out in the offices at the famed Toho Studios. The arson investigation ruled newly installed faulty wiring
as the cause of the blaze. The
studio decided the project could not be restarted due to the numerous
commitments of its many stars to other films, many of which Toho studios was
also overseeing.
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Masayuki
Mori
as
Da-ku Joutei
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Machiko
Kyō
as
Princess Ogami
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Takashi
Shimura
as
Chipao
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Daisuke
Kato
as
Ryuuto
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Minoru
Chiaki
as
Sora Hokousha
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Toshiro
Mifune
as
Obu Wankabe
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Tatsuya
Nakadai
as
Han Dokuen
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Namigoro
Rashomon
as Chikushou
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Susumu
Fujita
as
Fetababe
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Kamatari
Fujiwara as Yuuto
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The
decision to cancel the production over was always a great sadness for
Kurosawa. Many of the sets and
plot details were reused a few years later in another Kurosawa film, The
Hidden Fortress. However, in
respect for the work he had already completed as a unique creation much of
the film was changed and scaled down for the second attempt.
The
plot, according to those involved in the production, was epic.
The film was set during the feudal era of Japanese history that
preceded a unified country with a shogun and Emperor.
The story followed the rise in power of warlord daimyo, Da-ku Joutei,
as he struggled to bring all of Japan under his control.
In a final attempt to take power from the final clan that stood in
his way, he took Ogami, the daughter of their leader, hostage. She was in secret negotiations with a few small bands of
rebellious groups to unify against Da-ku while there was time.
Just as she was being captured she dispatched two of her servants the
overly prudish Chipao and the trustworthy Ryuuto.
Their mission was to find an aged ronin, a masterless samurai, named
Obu Wankabe, for only he could complete the mission with which she was
tasked. Lost and on a hopeless
quest the servants befriend Sora Hokousha, a wide-eyed peasant, who jumps at
the chance for a little adventure. With
Sora’s help the two find Obu and continue their mission.
The major problem is that Da-ku’s fortress is on a remote island
cutoff and protected from invasion. In
a ruthless sake tavern, the band hires Han Dokuen a westernized sailor and
criminal who happened to be the only one in the establishment not currently
employed by Da-ku. Once
settling on a price, they group sets sail for the island on Dokuen’s ship
with his first mate, Chikushou, a huge hairy oni, or demon, that Dokuen
controls through a magic amulet. Word
reaches Da-ku about the band and he dispatches Fetababe, a ninja and
assassin, to eliminate the threat. On
the voyage, Obu instructs the young Sora on the way of the samurai and the
code of bushido. After some skirmishes with Da-ku’s troops and Fetababe the
rescues assault the stronghold and rescue Ogami dealing a crucial blow to
Da-ku’s plans and instilling the countryside with hope that they could
still stop his takeover.
Next
fall a new line of action figures commissioned by the Kurosawa estate will
hit stores. The 7” figures
will be sculpted by Sillof Studios and come complete with accessories and
bases. The line will contain
all of the characters in the inset table.
The prototypes for the figures are below.

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