Ichi
or, "I Can't Believe its not a Zatoichi Movie!", is an respectful homage/installment to the long running samurai series, only now with a gender reversed twist and greater character depth then the series usually receives. Despite the additions of extra time on character development, and a less jocular tone then the series is accustomed to, it stays true to the usual beats and expected trademarks (gambling hall, beleaguered town, outrageously evil dudes) that makes every Zatoichi movie so similar to the last but still so much fun to watch. The series has always been about a well executed formula and the variations that make each entry if not unique, then part of a uniquely entertaining whole. This film, like a old favorite meal cooked by somebody else, has pretty much everything that people like, plus a few distinctive touches that make it all a very well made piece of commercial cinema. Its got heart, its got good acting, and its got some really damn awesome swordfights.
That is a great take on the character and the formula. I enjoyed your write-up, and agree with your points.
I finally got around to watching the Ed Norton, Jr. version of
The Incredible Hulk. I watched the Ang Lee version some time ago, and was not particularly impressed, so I was happy to find this newer one to be a better handling of the character. I'd rather watch Jennifer Connelly than Liv Tyler, but Liv honestly does a better job and the chemistry between her and Ed Norton is much more believable than the Jennifer Connelly/Eric Bana relationship.
My favorite part of the writing was dealing with General Ross as a complete, unrepentant jerk of marginal competence. The man doesn't catch a break through the entire film, and every choice he makes is the wrong one. Even so, William Hurt is a really questionable casting decision; Hurt can play a jerk, but he doesn't project the kind of constant-hard-on machismo that Ross needs to present. The only thing that keeps him from being completely distracting is Tim Roth's "Blonsky," the Russian-born, English-raised, "on loan from the Royal Marines" soldier, who on a whim is given the secret US bioweapon treatment. As a package, it's all so phenomenally out of place and infeasible that it makes the cartoon physics and marginal CG fade into actual plausibility.
Still, start to finish it is a fun ride, and I felt more empathy for Banner and Betty than I expected. Rushed ending and forced "there may be a sequel" final sequence aside, I enjoyed it.