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4[[quoteright:345:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mpw-3125_9151.jpg]]
5
6->''"This is the nature of war. By protecting others, you save yourselves."''
7-->-- '''Kambei Shimada'''
8
9''Seven Samurai'' is a 1954 Japanese film directed by Creator/AkiraKurosawa under Creator/{{Toho}}; it starred his longtime collaborators Takashi Shimura and Creator/ToshiroMifune in two of the lead roles. It is considered by many Western critics to be the one of the best Japanese films of all time, and quite a few of them consider it to be [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_films_considered_the_best one of the best films ever made]], period. In any case, it's been a highly influential film for decades.
10
11Menaced by an army of bandits and on the brink of starvation, a village in medieval Japan decides to hire a small, motley collection of {{Ronin}} to defend them. Pity they have nothing to hire them ''with'' but rice...
12
13It has been [[TheMagnificentSevenSamurai remade, homaged, or flat out ripped off numerous times]], in genres ranging from western (''Film/{{The Magnificent Seven|1960}}'') to science fiction (''Film/BattleBeyondTheStars'', ''Anime/SamuraiSeven'', ''[[Recap/StarWarsTheCloneWarsS2E17BountyHunters Star Wars: The Clone Wars]]'', ''[[Recap/TheMandalorianS1E4Chapter4Sanctuary Star Wars: The Mandalorian]]''), medieval adventure (''Film/TheThirteenthWarrior'') and, if you're willing to stretch a bit, anthropomorphized animals (''WesternAnimation/ABugsLife'') and goofy comedies (''Film/ThreeAmigos'').
14
15This film has a serious claim to not only being the forebear to nearly ''every'' getting-the-team-together-for-a-mission movie -- whether it's a HitchhikerHeroes, RagtagBunchOfMisfits, PuttingTheBandBackTogether, or even TheCaper -- but also to being the first ''modern'' action movie. While it wasn't the first movie to use such tropes as [[SlowMotionFall dramatic slow motion]] or [[ResignedToTheCall a reluctant hero]]—Kurosawa himself had been influenced by the films of Creator/JohnFord—it was the first to bring them together in such a way that would be instantly recognizable and familiar to the present-day audience.
16
17This film -- very frequently appearing in Top Ten of All Time lists -- is a TropeMaker or early example for many tropes. But if you want to watch it, you're gonna have to make a day of it -- it's three and a half hours long, with an intermission in the middle long enough for a bathroom break.
18----
19!!Tropes featured in ''Seven Samurai'' include:
20* AlliterativeName: Heihachi Hayashida.
21* AlliterativeTitle: ''Seven Samurai'' / ''Shichinin no Samurai''.
22* AllWomenAreLustful: It's Shino that's trying to cajole Katsushirō into consummating their affair, rather than the reverse.
23* AndYourRewardIsEdible: The peasants can offer nothing more than food to the samurai they hire to defend them from bandits. Even this paltry reward means that the peasants don't have enough rice for themselves and must subsist on millet. The elder, Gisaku, even specifically recommends that they seek out hungry samurai because those would be the only ones who would accept such a reward; indeed, the villagers are seen looking dejectedly at throngs of visibly well-off samurai who would likely demand something more substantial.
24* AnnoyingArrows: Inverted. Not many people are shot with arrows, but it's an instant death one-hit kill.
25* AntiCavalry: The bandits are all on horseback, and the defenders have to take that into account. Kambei plans for this by building barricades and ditches around half the town, flooding the fields and tearing down a bridge, thus forcing the bandits into attacking by the forest road if they want to get into the town ahorse at all. The villagers use sharpened bamboo poles as spears [[spoiler:and even a few looted spears]] to scare the horses.
26* AnyoneCanDie: [[spoiler:Four of the seven and several villagers, including all of the comic reliefs.]]
27* ArentYouGoingToRavishMe: "Coward! Act like a samurai!" Shino clearly expects violent behavior from samurai, and her first attempt to seduce Katsushirō comes across like she's trying to convince him to rape her (it's also clear that she's nearly as afraid as she is eager). Katsushirō, who's behaving like a young man usually does with a girl he likes, is confused and put off.
28* ArtisticLicenceHistory: Played with both ways. The film portrays the main samurai of the cast as men of courage and integrity, but also acknowledges that the majority of samurai were brutal thugs who used their higher social position to oppress the weak. Several of the bandits are implied to be {{ronin}}, with the leader having a full set of samurai armour and another being a skilled horse archer (something samurai were traditionally trained in). Kurosawa said he did this because he's descended from a samurai family and wanted in some way to apologize for his ancestor's actions. While the Japanese regard this film as a classic, many were upset at this particular deconstruction.
29* AttackAttackAttack: The bandits attack the village repeatedly over three days, and ultimately decide to fight to the last man instead of leaving to rob an easier target. [[spoiler:The final bandit, hiding with the women, still sees fit to shoot at the samurai and betray his position rather than simply flee]]. This is discussed several times in act 2, with Kambei pointing out that the bandits are likely starving and also probably divided on whether to attack or flee: The bandit leader is later seen executing two of his men for cowardice, implying he's attacking partially out of pride. Most likely, raiding this village was the only way to keep his band together at all.[[note]]The American remake ''The Magnificent Seven'' resolved this puzzle by stating explicitly that the bandits were starving and had to take the village to make it through the winter.[[/note]]
30* AuthorTract: Kurosawa presents a critical view of the class system of feudal Japan, most notably through Kikuchiyo.
31* AvengersAssemble: If not the first movie to detail a recruitment of heroes to fight for a cause, it's definitely the one to [[TropeCodifier codify it]].
32* AwesomeByAnalysis:
33** Gorōbei only needs to take one look at the footprints outside the (seemingly) empty house to realize there are more people in the house, and being so empty means that someone is probably standing behind the door, and thus waiting to hit him. He instantly calls Kambei out on it.
34** During the duel between Kyûzô and the unnamed ronin, Kambei mutters that it's obvious who would win, even though the previous result looked like a draw to anyone who was less perceptive. It is another indication to the audience that Kambei is not just strategist who relies on sneaky tricks, and is actually a legitimate fighter.
35* AwesomeMcCoolName: Gorōbei lampshades this by explaining that despite his name, he isn't really that tough.
36* BadassAdorable: Shichirōji is short, chubby, jovial and can skewer you like a fish with his spear.
37* BadassBoast: Before the final battle, an angry Kikuychio gathers a cluster of swords in the village square and states that he's collecting them there because he won't be able to kill enough bandits with just one. [[spoiler:He lives up to the boast by using several of them during the battle and killing at least three of the remaining bandits.]]
38* BadHabits: In Kambei's introductory scene, he rescues a child from a hostage situation by cutting off his topknot and having monks shave his head and lend him some robes. In this disguise, he appears at the door with food for the criminal and the child. When the hostage-taker lowers his guard to take the food, Kambei rushes in, kills the man, and saves the child.
39* BaldHeadOfToughness: Kambei is an old, badass samurai, and he has not one hair on his head. Inverted in-story, as Kambei shaves his head early on to impersonate a monk in his EstablishingCharacterMoment, something [[ImportantHaircut no honorable (read: proud) samurai would do.]]
40* BatmanColdOpen: One of the earliest examples of this trope in Kambei's introduction -- rescuing a peasant boy taken hostage. This serves as his EstablishingCharacterMoment.
41* BattleInTheRain: Arguably the {{Trope Maker|s}} for film is the final battle where a downpour leaves the villagers scrambling in puddles and mud as bandits on horseback run them down.
42* BerserkButton: Manzo is absolutely ''paranoid'' that his daughter, Shino, will be seduced by a samurai: he hacks off her hair, orders her to pretend to be a boy [[spoiler: and beats her when he discovers that she'd slept with Katsushirō]].
43* BewareTheNiceOnes: Shichirōji is a friendly, pleasant guy, but he absolutely loses it when Kikuchiyo [[spoiler:brings in stolen arms and armour that Manzo had been hiding in his house, tackles Kikuchiyo and lashes out on the farmers who brought the armour by hurling a spear in their direction]].
44* {{BFS}}: Kikuchiyo's nodachi is almost as big as he is. [[spoiler:The fact that he's using a sword that's not intended for combat makes perfect sense given that he's not trained in sword use to begin with, and when he's not swinging it around wildly to show off he tends to use it as a stabbing weapon]].
45* TheBigGuy: Kyûzô and Kikuchiyo are different types: Kyûzô is the silent, highly skilled 'pro' and Kikuchiyo is the BoisterousBruiser.
46* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: The village and its people are saved. But four of the samurai are dead, and Katsushirō cannot remain with Shino. Kambei, reviewing the scene of their victory, sadly remarks "In the end, we lost this battle too. I mean, the victory belongs to the peasants, not to us."]]
47* BlessedWithSuck: Being samurai may put you in the top rank of society, but that doesn't mean much when you're broke. The virtues samurai have sworn to uphold also limit their lifestyle choices, like their choice of employment or spouse[[note]]Samurai were in fact forbidden from taking up any vocation at all outside of fighting or serving a lord in a similar capacity; those who owned land lived off their taxes, a few were employed by the government as administrators, and the remainder either went into service to a landlord or became {{ronin}}. Banditry amongst ronin was rampant, especially during wartime like when the film is set. During the later Edo period, a large amount of samurai families were wholly dependent on a rice stipend from the government to stay alive, and the end of that stipend would eventually lead to a bloody insurrection.[[/note]].
48* BloodKnight: Kyûzô to test his warrior skills; [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo because he wants revenge.]]
49* BloodlessCarnage: Many people die, but you won't see a drop of blood or physical wounds of any kind. The fast editing during the battles makes this somewhat easier to hide. This was 1954 after all.
50* BlueBlood: The samurai, naturally. Most notable with the rich but inexperienced Katsushirō, and least with the naturally humble Heihachi. [[spoiler: And it doesn't apply to Kikuchiyo no matter how many thirteen-year-old girls he impersonates.]]
51* BoisterousBruiser: Kikuchiyo, [[spoiler:the farmer's son turned would-be samurai]]. Double points by being played by ''Toshiro Mifune'', of all people.
52* BoomerangBigot: [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo claims to hate farmers. It turns out he's a farmer's son]].
53* BottomlessMagazines: A downplayed case, as guns of the period could only hold one bullet at a time, yet we hear two shots in quick succession after the bandits only have one gun left.
54* BreakTheCutie: Katsushirō starts off as a sheltered young man wanting to prove himself and seeking glory. The events of the movie introduce him to the consequences of a forbidden love affair and [[WarIsHell the horrors of battle]]. By the end he seems a much more conflicted, ambivalent young man.
55* BringHelpBack: A couple of farmers go to a city in order to enlist help from masterless samurai. Because they have nothing but food to purchase help with, the elder advises them to find "hungry samurai."
56* ButtMonkey:
57** The other samurai mock Kikuchiyo incessantly, arguably Heihachi most of all, but they accept him more as a teammate as the movie goes on. Kikuchiyo performs heroically during the final attack and even [[spoiler:earns a samurai's death.]]
58** Yohei [[TheChewToy suffers a lot more humiliation]] throughout the movie, and becomes the ButtMonkey to ''Kikuchiyo''.
59* CentralTheme: What good was/is the Japanese caste system, when the samurai (who ideally should serve and protect their lessers) include both noble men like Kambei and Katsushirō (who nonetheless see themselves as different to the peasants by virtue of their birth), men like Heichachi (who would practically be a peasant if not for his birth), or some of the bandits who rape and kill the peasants? Kikuchiyo, [[spoiler:being of both worlds yet neither (as a peasant who wants to be a samurai)]] is central to this internal contradiction, and lays out a speech pointing out how the samurai ultimately cause the peasants to be equally nasty and underhanded as a response as a survival mechanism to all the nasty treatment they receive from the samurai.
60** Who has it better, the peasants who live normal but undistinguished lives, or the warriors who live exciting but violent lives?
61* CharacterTics: Kikuchiyo has a habit of scratching parts of his body, something [[Film/{{Rashomon}} Tajomaru]] before him and [[Film/{{Yojimbo}} Sanjuro]] after him have in common. Kambei has a tendency to rub his shaven head a lot, which counts as a ThinkingTic.
62* CombatPragmatist:
63** Kambei shaves his head within his first scene (to samurai, this was a symbol of shame) so he can trick a bandit into thinking he is a monk and save a child. Heihachi mentions how he usually runs away from battle when he's about to die. Other samurai mention less-than-noble (from the standpoint of a samurai) tactics used for survival. The film takes place before the Edo period, when samurai really took HonorBeforeReason seriously.
64** When the farmers of the abandoned outlying houses try to desert the militia because they feel marginalized, Kambei threatens to personally execute them rather than let them go, citing that [[DividedWeFall the individual who fights for the individual not only dies as an individual, but endangers the rest of the group]] (and kills morale before the fight even starts).
65** Kambei stacks the deck as much as he possibly can for the actual battle, reinforcing the town so that there is only one way in for the cavalry and training the peasants to let the bandits in in groups of one or two so they can be ganged up on in the village square and killed piecemeal. [[spoiler:The samurai also commit to a night attack and burn the house the bandits are sheltering in while they sleep, which is implied to have killed four of them.]]
66* CoolOldGuy: Kambei is the oldest of the samurai, but fights right alongside the young and serves as their leader.
67* DeathWail: Katushiro sobs openly at all the carnage after the final battle. [[spoiler: He can't even avenge his friends because [[TakingYouWithMe they wiped out the one who killed them.]]]]
68* DebutQueue: We meet the Samurai one at a time as they assemble the team.
69* {{Deconstruction}}: These are not the flawless samurai of poems and legends. They are real, flawed people.
70** In RealLife, being a samurai sucked. They weren't allowed to change jobs to earn money. They could only rely on their martial prowess to make a living. And the possibility of death is very high. The fact that some of the bandits themselves are implied to be samurai only adds to it.
71** The HonorBeforeReason trope is symbolically called out during the opening, where Kambei does not hesitate to shame himself by shaving his head, since it saves a boy's life. Peasants are also shown to have their own virtues that the samurai openly envy.
72** Instead of a final, decisive battle, the attack on the village takes several days and includes two night raids, several scouting actions, and the heroes 'winning' the two first days by making the bandits retreat back to their camp after a few casualties. [[spoiler:Two of the samurai even die before it comes to the final day]]. The battles themselves are extremely messy and uncoordinated, and most of the bandits who die do so while running away in fear from mobs of villagers.
73** The final battle, with only a handful of desperate bandits remaining, is quick and the opposite of grand, and takes place in pouring rain with the village full of mud. Before you know it [[spoiler:the bandits are all dead and two of the five remaining samurai have fallen in battle]]. The entire thing is played as realistically as possible, [[WarIsHell from beginning to end]].
74* DecoyProtagonist: Played with. For the first thirty minutes, the film follows four peasants tasked with hiring samurai. Once they recruit Kambei, the story focuses mainly on the samurai.
75* DefiledForever: Shino's father Manzo loses his mind after finding out she slept with Katsushirō.
76* {{Determinator}}:
77** Kikuchiyo. [[spoiler:Even after getting shot, he walks slowly towards the bandit leader and runs him through before dying]].
78** [[spoiler:He infiltrates the bandit gang and goes to get one of the arquebuses from the bandit guardsman.]]
79** A woman manages to carry her child from a burning house even after being stabbed in the back and promptly dies at the feet of the astonished samurai. Kambei remarks, "Such [[HeroicWillpower willpower!]]"
80* DontMakeMeDestroyYou: Kyûzô doesn't like killing people; he's also considered one of the finest swordsmen around. This is seen early in the movie when he is shown dueling with training swords; he begs his opponent not to challenge him with real swords, because the opponent would quite certainly die. [[spoiler:He does]].
81* DoWithHimAsYouWill: Kikuchiyo and Kyûzô capture a bandit and immediately have to protect him from the (justifiably) murderous villagers. However, when they are approached by the oldest woman of the town, who lost every member of her family to bandits and has since been almost unwilling to continue living, they quietly step aside and allow her her vengeance.
82* DreamTeam: The main team consist of some of the best samurai around, plus two rookies.
83* DressingAsTheEnemy: Kikuchiyo sees a [[IndyPloy quick opportunity]] to grab one of the bandits' firearms by quickly plundering a fallen bandit's gear, then walking right up to the bandit and talking to him. The bandit eventually realizes he doesn't recognize Kikuchiyo, and also that he's just drawn a sword in his presence. [[spoiler: It doesn't save him. And unfortunately, this gets Gorōbei and Yohei killed in the ensuing attack.]]
84* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Rikichi's wife runs back into the bandits' burning shelter, killing herself rather than having to face her husband after having been used as a SexSlave.]]
85* DwindlingParty: [[spoiler:Four of the seven samurai are bumped off throughout the story, starting fairly early]].
86* EmotionsVersusStoicism: Goes all the way from Kyūzō who probably has icewater in his veins over to Kikuchiyo, who's a hop and a skip away from being stark raving loony.
87* EnsignNewbie: Katsushirō.
88* EstablishingCharacterMoment: ''All'' of the seven get one.
89** Kambei's moment, in which he shaves his head to impersonate a monk, shows how he doesn't place much stock in honor or ego if an innocent life is on the line. He rubs his bald head throughout the film to remind the audience of it.
90** Kikuchiyo is quickly established as a ruffian and buffoon, who shows up completely wasted in his attempt to join the team of samurai and tries to confirm his identity with a thirteen year old girl's family scroll, earning him nothing but laughter and scorn from his fellows. He gets his moment later on, when he uses a simple false alarm to bring the samurai and the farmer militia together.
91** Katsushirō seems like a simple starry-eyed novice; his WealthyPhilanthropist moment comes when the peasants' rice (their intended pay to the samurai, and rations for the trip home) is stolen, and he donates enough money to cover their costs.
92** Gorōbei takes one look at a SchmuckBait doorway, and immediately deduces what's going on. Kambei is impressed.
93** Kyouzo's moment comes when his unnamed dueling opponent demands a rematch with real swords. In one line he shows utter confidence, compassion, and a certain lack of diplomacy: "No use. You'd die."
94** Heihachi, who is found woodchopping, admits with cheerful honesty that he's not very good as a warrior. Yet he still agrees to join the mission.
95** Shichirōji is an old war buddy of Kambei's. He's asked to join this nearly suicidal fight simply to fight alongside his friend once more, and he can't say yes fast enough.
96* EpicMovie:
97** This cost about $500,000 and a year to produce. Most films at the time took 1 month to film and cost $70,000! The combined production of this movie and ''Film/{{Gojira}}'' (budgeted at an estimated $1,000,000) nearly drove Creator/{{Toho}} into bankruptcy.
98** Some cuts of this film are rather long. For example, the DVD version released by the British Film Institute describes itself as "the most complete version of the film available," and lasts three hours ten minutes.
99* EveryoneMeetsEveryone: This is how the samurai are introduced.
100* EyepatchOfPower: The bandit leader sports one.
101* FakeWeakness: Kambei says, "A good fort needs a gap. The enemy must be lured in. So we can attack them. If we only defend, we lose the war."
102* FalseReassurance: Kikuchiyo assures a bandit he meets (who assumes Kikuchiyo is a fellow bandit) ''Don't worry. All your troubles are soon over''. [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo stabs him with his BFS.]]
103* {{Fanservice}}: Creator/ToshiroMifune spends most of the movie wearing very little, so the viewer gets to look at his strapping, muscular body.
104* FantasyForbiddingFather: Manzo is so terrified that his daughter will be seduced by the Samurai (or worse) that he cuts off her hair to disguise her as a boy.
105* FeudalOverlord: Discussed. One of the first suggestions the villagers float when they learn of the bandit attack is to ask their feudal lord for help. This is almost as immediately shot down when another villager points out their lord has never helped them in the past when the bandits have raided them, so why expect anything from him now?
106* FieldOfBlades: Kikuchiyo invokes this by planting five swords around for the final battle. If one breaks, he wants back-ups nearby. He goes through all of them.
107* FirearmsAreRevolutionary: Downplayed; the film is set in the late Sengoku period, some forty years after firearms were introduced to Japan and ten after the Battle of Nagashino, which was a watershed moment for firearms use in Samurai warfare. The main characters are all clearly used to firearms, and quickly blink out the bandits' arquebuses as the biggest threat, using every opportunity to make the bandits waste their shots or take their arquebuses away from them. [[spoiler:Ultimately, all of the samurai who die are killed by one of the bandits' firearms.]]
108* FluffyTheTerrible: Kikuchiyo is named after the fake papers he has to "prove" he's of noble birth. Unbeknown to him and to the amusement of the others, Kikuchiyo is the name of a little girl.[[note]]It means "chrysanthemum"[[/note]] He still kicks lots of ass.
109* ForegoneConclusion: Kyûzô had no objection to duelling a random stranger with bamboo sticks. When his angry opponent insists on a rematch with real swords, he doesn't mince words.
110--> '''Kyûzô:''' No. You'll die.
111* FriendToAllChildren: Kikuchiyo starts to show he's more than just a loudmouth and a drunk by entertaining some of the farmers' kids, showing he does have some kindness in him.
112* TheGadfly:
113** Heihachi is a joker and a clown who likes to tease people sometimes. He's particularly fond of picking on Kikuchiyo. He is the one who coined "Kikuchiyo" as the samurai wannabe's new permanent name, as a reminder of the drunken scene that the man made the night before the samurai left for the village.
114** Shichirōji has a little too much fun mocking Manzo after he learns that he disguised his daughter Shino as a boy.
115* GallowsHumor: What Shichirōji tells Kambei after their battle is over.
116--> "[[spoiler: Looks like we've survived again]]"
117* GenderBlenderName: Kikuchiyo is actually a ''girl's'' name. (Actually two girls' names in one). Kikuchiyo, being illiterate, picked out his name at random.
118* GetAHoldOfYourselfMan: Kikuchiyo when Rikichi breaks down crying at [[spoiler: Heihachi's]] funeral.
119* GoryDiscretionShot: The bandit whom Kyûzô and Kikuchiyo capture is savagely gored offscreen by the farmers while begging for his life. The only thing we see is the samurai walking away.
120* GunsVsSwords: The samurai fear the bandit's arquebusers more than any other threat, [[spoiler:and with good reason - all of the samurai that die ultimately do so by gunshot]].
121* HandGagging: Heihachi does this to Kikuchiyo when Kikuchiyo blows his team's cover.
122* HaventYouSeenXBefore: When Gorōbei recruits Heihachi chopping wood:
123--> '''Heihachi''': Haven't you ever seen anyone cut firewood before?
124* TheHeart:
125** Heihachi is the jokester of the team, and specifically brought in to raise morale despite being 'average' in skill (but still better than Kikuchiyo). [[spoiler: He's the first to die.]]
126** Kikuchiyo evolves into the new conscience of the team, though. He's the one who builds a moral connection between the farmers and samurai, and [[spoiler:it's that connection that's lost when he is killed in battle]].
127* HeroicBSOD:
128** Kikuchiyo suffers from this [[spoiler: after his glory seeking results in the deaths of one of the samurai and many of the villagers, particularly his bumbling assistant Yohei]].
129** Katsushirō as well at the end of the battle when [[spoiler: Kyûzô is killed.]]
130* HonorBeforeReason: [[spoiler:Rikichi's wife]] does not care about the fire at the bandit camp that she is in. She is so [[DefiledForever ashamed over what happened to her]] [[spoiler:she runs right back into the flames when she sees Rikichi trying to rescue her.]]
131* HorseArcher: One of the last bandit attacks features a horse archer. [[spoiler:although he is ultimately killed, he kills three villagers, including Yohei, before his horse is stopped.]]
132* HotBlooded: Kikuchiyo is a loud and boisterous glory seeker.
133* HypocriticalHumor: At one point Katsushirō is lazily picking flowers in the mountains when he happens across a young woman dressed as a boy (Shino), also picking flowers. He angrily tells her that an able-bodied young man should not be picking flowers at a time like this... emphasizing his point by gesturing with the flower he's just picked.
134* ImportantHaircut:
135** Kambei cuts his hair (a sign of his samurai status) in his first scene to rescue a child hostage, proving he cares more about life than personal dignity.
136** Manzo, worried about womanizing samurai coming to town, tries to cut his daughter Shino's hair and disguise her as a boy. [[spoiler:It doesn't work. Good news is, the just-as-innocent Katsushirō is the one who finds Shino and begins a humorously sweet courtship with her.]]
137* InopportuneVoiceCracking: Kikuchiyo's voice cracks when he screams at the peasants to stop crying [[spoiler: at Heihachi's funeral]].
138* InstantDeathBullet: [[spoiler:Heihachi and Kyûzô are incapacitated by a single gunshot and die on the spot. Kikuchiyo averts this, staying alive long enough out of pure rage [[TakingYouWithMe to run the bandit leader through before dying]].]]
139* {{Intermission}}: It was a long movie: an intermission occurs once the samurai and villagers have begun to train, and cuts away to reveal that harvest time has arrived.
140* IShallTauntYou: Kikuchiyo leaves the ditches specifically to taunt the bandits when they first scope out the town and discover the walls and ditches. He gets shot at twice for his trouble, but the bandits miss him both times.
141* JackOfAllStats: The samurai have their own specialities, but Kambei is pretty good in all those fields as well. He's a damn fine swordsman, but [[MasterSwordsman Kyûzô is the best fighter]]; he looks at morale from the big picture while [[DrillSergeantNasty Shichirōji]] is good at personally motivating the men; he's good with a bow, but Gorōbei is the designated archer; and while he's a great tactician and strategist, Kikuchiyo is the TheSocialExpert, and the [[TheHeart true conscience]] to remind the samurai what they're truly fighting for.
142* JerkWithAHeartOfGold:
143** Kikuchiyo may be abrasive and loud, but he's deeply empathetic towards the farmers' plight and gets very emotional when he feels that they have been done injustice in some way.
144** Heihachi is a mild-mannered, well-intentioned man whose remarks are either made at Kikuchiyo's expense or unintentionally provoke a DudeNotFunny reaction.
145* {{Jidaigeki}}: One of the most famous examples of the genre, at least outside of Japan, and responsible in part for the association of the genre with samurai films. The film is set around 1586[[note]]Gorōbei comments that Kikuchiyo's supposed birth date of 1574 would put him in his 13th year of life[[/note]] during the sengoku era.
146* KatanasAreJustBetter: Averted: While the seven (and most of the bandits) have katana, the vast majority of on-screen deaths come from being speared or trampled. The samurai do kill a few bandits with swords, but most of them are impaled while downed or running away rather than killed in sword duels. [[spoiler:All of the samurai are killed by gunshot wounds as well.]]
147* KidSamurai: Katsushirō is the youngest of the seven and only beginning the samurai way.
148* KnightErrant: The samurai fit this to a T.
149* KnightInShiningArmor: Subverted. The samurai are enraged when they discover that the villagers whom they are defending [[spoiler:have in the past sometimes killed or looted samurai escaping from battles and stripped them of their armor and weapons]]. As the other samurai begin muttering about how they'd like to slaughter the entire village, Kikuchiyo [[spoiler:(who was born a commoner)]] angrily reminds them that it was living under samurai rule that forced the villagers to live like that in the first place. This case of WriterOnBoard is widely held to be an apology by Kurosawa, who was from a family with samurai heritage.
150* {{Leitmotif}}: Kikuchiyo and Shino both have their own theme music.
151* LargeHam: Kikuchiyo. His presence is bigger than the other six put together.
152* LastBreathBullet: [[spoiler:At the climax, all but two of the bandits are dead, and while the remaining samurai are trying to ascertain if there are any left, the Big Bad manages to shoot and kill two of the remaining heroes before [[TakingYouWithMe being killed himself]]]].
153* LeaveNoManBehind: One of the villagers and his wife leave the fortifications to try and coax his aged father out of the mill (which is outside the fortifications) just before the bandits attack. [[spoiler:All he succeeds at is to get himself and his wife killed, and the mill burns down with the father presumably still inside, leaving their young child an orphan.]]
154* LineOfSightName: Kikuchiyo got his name from a scroll he mysteriously happened to have with him that clearly wasn't his, and pointed to his name at random.
155* LostInTranslation: Some of the lines and jokes are lost through translating them into subtitles (Dutch, for instance), such as the joke that Kikuchijo's lineage not only would mean that he's 13 years old, but also that he would be a girl.
156* TheMagnificentSevenSamurai: Trope Maker. 'Seven warriors defend a village from bandits' has become a template used in many places.
157* ManipulativeEditing:
158** How Kyûzô is shown to be such a great swordsman. The actor was terrible at it, but clever editing made him look awesome.
159** Kyûzô's actor also had no experience with riding horses. Creator/ToshiroMifune, on the other hand, was a legitimately skilled swordsman and horse rider. In the scene where the samurai ride to scout out the bandit camp, Kikuchiyo was intentionally staged as an idiot with his horse to disguise the other actor's lack of skill.
160** Also when the villagers try to [[spoiler: execute the captured bandit]], the samurai are holding back the entire crowd. Realistically, there was no possible way the samurai could keep the entire mob away from the captive, but careful close-ups and choreography made it look realistic.
161* ManlyFacialHair: Kambei's well-groomed gray mustache sets him apart as a mature, wise, and put-together authority figure to inspire the men of the village to battle. [[http://www.oocities.org/azuchiwind/seven_samurai_shimada.jpg Aw yeeah.]]'
162* MasterSwordsman: Kyūzō is the best example. Kambei certainly counts as well.
163* MobileShrubbery: Manzo disguises himself among the tall grass when he hears the bandits approaching at the beginning.
164* MoodWhiplash: The [[spoiler:first samurai]]'s burial scene goes through no fewer than four intense emotions in less than 30 seconds.
165* MookDepletion: The eponymous samurai learn approximately 40 bandits will attack the town they are defending come harvest time. They spend time training the villagers, staging a raid on the sleeping bandits, creating fortifications and traps, picking off the problematic bandits with muskets (the bandits have muskets, making them very dangerous to the samurai), and so on in order to deplete the bandits. Kambei, the oldest and wisest of the samurai, even says "We must reduce them," in the English subtitles.
166* MustNotDieAVirgin: [[spoiler:Katsushirō and Shino realize it's now or never.]]
167* MutualKill: [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo and the bandit leader kill each other]].
168* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Kikuchiyo has this reaction when his decision to leave his post for a commando raid on the bandit camp ends up getting several people, including [[spoiler: Gorōbei and Yohei]] killed in the ensuing counterattack.
169* NiceJobBreakingItHero:
170** Kikuchiyo's decision to leave his post has disastrous results, leading to a MyGodWhatHaveIDone reaction.
171** When Rikichi tries to go into the bandits' burning camp to try and save his wife, [[spoiler:Heihachi is killed dragging him to safety]]. Rikichi understandably feels terrible about it afterwards.
172* NoIndoorVoice: Kikuchiyo. Never is this more clear than when the samurai visit an old lady. Heihachi even asks him, "Why the hell are you always screaming?"
173* NoNameGiven: "Kikuchiyo" is only a name that the man picked out and random and the name stuck.
174* NoRespectGuy: Kikuchiyo is a bumbling drunk of a {{ronin}} [[spoiler:and an impostor who was born a peasant]] who is a complete laughing stock of his companions, especially [[TheGadfly Heihachi]]. No matter what he tries, he looks like an idiot in front of everyone. Though he does earn a little bit of respect once in a while [[spoiler: and after he dies, he is buried with his sword like the other three samurai casualties]].
175* NoSneakAttacks: Averted; the bandits attempt to take the town by sneak attack on the first night. The samurai expect it, so the bandits run straight into the sentries and lose four men with no losses to the defenders.
176* NonIndicativeName: The seven samurai themselves. While they are of the samurai caste, legally they are all {{ronin}}. And the seventh of them is a peasant.
177* NotSoStoic: When it is revealed [[spoiler:the villagers scavenged weapons and armor off dead/dying samurai, the stoic Kyûzô is the first to say that he wants to avenge them by killing the villagers]].
178* NumberTwo: Shichuroji is a born second-in-command.
179* ObfuscatingStupidity: While Kikuchiyo is blundering and awkward, and makes some fatally stupid mistakes throughout the film, he's surprisingly insightful towards the class differences between the farmers and samurai, and helps both parties to sort them out.
180* OneHitKill: Kyūzō has a SingleStrokeBattle. There are also several cases where swords, spears, arrows, and (particularly) bullets are immediately lethal.
181* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: "Kikuchiyo" has forgotten his own name and, being illiterate, initially pretends to be the last name on the parchment he stole… which is the 13-year-old daughter of a noble family. Heihachi and the other samurai mockingly start calling him by that name, and it sticks after [[spoiler: Heihachi's death]].
182* TheOutsideWorld: The peasant village is isolated by geography - peasants have to stay near their crops - except for when wars pass back and forth. It is the center of the whole movie and everyone else is exotic and somewhat scary to them.
183* PetTheDog: While Kikuchiyo's default personality is screaming derision, he's kind to the village's children, uses humor to encourage the farmers under his command, and helps with the wheat harvest (albeit to impress one of the village's women).
184* PluckyComicRelief:
185** Heihachi Hayashida, who lacks skill, is recruited in hopes he can be this during adversity. However [[spoiler:he is the first one killed before the big battle]].
186** Kikuchiyo serves as this due to his role as the ButtMonkey through most of the film.
187** Yohei, the duck-footed, bumbling little old man, plays the role well - before suddenly becoming a SacrificialLion.
188* PovertyFood: The peasants must eat millet because they're giving all their rice to their samurai.
189* PreClimaxClimax: Katsushirō and Shino have sex the night before the bandits' final attack on the village.
190* PyrrhicVictory:
191** The night raid before the first day of battle [[spoiler:is implied to kill four bandits and destroys the building they were sheltering in. But it also costs the defenders one of the samurai, a loss Kambei explicitly said they could not afford.]]
192** Ultimately, the samurai succeed. But it's debatable whether they ''won...''
193--->[[spoiler:'''Kambei:''']] So, again we are defeated. The farmers have won. Not us.
194* TheQuietOne: Kyūzō rarely says a word, and when he must, he only uses a few.
195* RapePillageAndBurn: Samurai as a whole have done a lot of this. It's why the peasants have been reluctant to seek their help.
196* RatedMForManly: A movie about {{Samurai}} fighting bandits and one of them romances a local girl.
197* ARealManIsAKiller: Katsushirō spends most of the movie as Kambei's attendant and messenger and not allowed to participate in battle (even Kikuchiyo is allowed to fight). By the eve of the final battle, [[spoiler: he sleeps with Shiro]], and the next day, Kambei lets him fight and he kills his first man. [[BreakTheCutie Neither fills him with the sense of manhood that he had expected.]]
198* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech:
199** In possibly the most emotionally-charged scene of the movie, Kikuchiyo delivers one to the farmers for [[spoiler:hiding goods and weapons from the samurai]], then turns around and delivers an equally scathing one to the samurai for the constant warfare that drives the peasants to be vily and harsh simply to survive, setting up TheReveal [[spoiler:that he is actually born a peasant and pretends to be a samurai]].
200** Rikichi gives a very short one to Manzo [[spoiler:after Manzo finds Katsushirō and Shino together and beats and disowns her. Rikichi screams that at least Shino is still alive and was in love, with the strong implication [[SexSlave that he's contrasting it to what the bandits did to Rikichi's own wife]] which [[DefiledForever drove her to kill herself in front of him]]. Manzo immediately shuts up.]]
201* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler: Kikuchiyo abandons his contingent of farmers, leading to Yohei's and Gorōbei's deaths. He makes up for it during the FinalBattle by rescuing the village women and bandits' leader, before dying of his wounds]].
202* TheReveal:
203** [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo is revealed to be a common-born farmer's son. This explains his reactions to the villagers, lack of training, and his unwitting assumption of a child's name. A thirteen-year-old girl's, no less]]
204** [[spoiler:The villagers either scavenged weapons and armor from dead samurai, or killed samurai and stripped them of their belongings.]]
205* {{Ronin}}: The "seven samurai" are ronin, samurai with no master, [[spoiler:and Kikuchiyo's technically a peasant]]. Several of the bandits are implied to be ronin as well, as they own armour and weaponry that would be difficult to get outside of military service (especially their arquebuses), and one of them is a skilled horse archer.
206* RuleOfThree: The doorway gag in the village. Specifically, the peasants invite various samurai to Kambei's inn room to 'discuss' the job, and Katsushirō's hiding just inside the door ready to hit them with a stick (to test their skills). The first applicant is so fast that he actually dodges the blow and disarms Katsushirō... but he isn't willing to stay. The second (Gorōbei) stops in front of the doorway, looks through at Kambei, and says with a smile, "Please! No pranks." The third applicant is a drunk Kikuchiyo, who gets whacked.
207* TheRuntAtTheEnd: Katsushiro tagging along with the much older samurai. Of course, Kikuchiyo is the real odd one out of that group.
208* {{Samurai}}: Technically, they're {{ronin}} because they have no master, but all seven are still striving to follow bushido.
209* SamuraiPonytail: All seven feature the short-and-straight version, except Kikuchiyo, who has a short-and-messy version. Kambei's hair, sadly, is [[IDidWhatIHadToDo sacrificed to a greater goal.]]
210* SatelliteCharacter: Out of all the Samurai, Shichirōji gets the least to do.
211* SceneryPorn: It is Kurosawa, after all. Only natural lighting and quite minimalistic.
212* SchmuckBait: Kambei leaves a gap in the village's defences to allow the bandits a way into the village, which the villagers can then close off after 1 or 2 bandits enter and pick them off. Despite seeing the fortifications, being totally outnumbered, and knowing that the villagers have been trained to fight them, the bandits still rush the gap and get slaughtered.
213* ScreamingWarrior:
214** Kikuchiyo, going with his boisterous personality.
215** The warrior sparring with Kyûzô, when Kyûzô is first introduced.
216* SexAsRiteOfPassage: Briefly mentioned; on the morning of the bandits' final attack on the village, Kambei allows Katsushirō to fight with the other samurai as he "became a real man" by having sex with Shino.
217* ShooOutTheClowns: Comic relief villager Yohei [[spoiler: is killed shortly before the final battle]].
218* ShoutOut:
219** The bandit leader and his lieutenant wear headgear that makes them look like [[UsefulNotes/DateMasamune Date Masamune]]. One of them even has an eyepatch.
220** Kambei's introduction is a shout-out to Wyatt Earp beating up an armed drunk in ''Film/MyDarlingClementine''.
221* TheSiege: The bandits technically puts the village under siege, but due to lack of food are forced to repeatedly assault it. It only takes three days for things to resolve.
222* SingleStrokeBattle:
223** Early in the film, Kyūzō is seen holding a duel with another swordsman. They face off, neither moving for some time - then there is a sudden charge, Kyūzō swings, his opponent falls to the ground, dead. It's possibly the most famous SSB in film history. Some argue that it is the TropeCodifier, if not TropeMaker, for SSB.
224** Later in the movie, Kambei does this as well, but against ''horsemen''. [[spoiler: He wins.]]
225* SlowMotionFall: A pioneering example is used when Kyûzô kills his opponent in a duel.
226* StarCrossedLovers: Either [[spoiler:Katsushirō and Shino]] or [[spoiler:Katsushirō and Kyūzō]], depending on your interpretation. Also possible is [[LoveTriangle all three]].
227* TheStoic: Kyūzō has an unshakeable composure, although he's seen smiling and laughing with the others, usually when there's a joke at Kikuchiyo's expense. During his first battle, while his opponent fidgets nervously and moves back and forth, Kyūzō barely moves at all, and when he does, it's calmly and with confidence.
228* TakingYouWithMe: [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo kills the bandit leader before dying of a fatal gunshot wound.]]
229* TheTeamWannabe: Katsushirō and Kikuchiyo approach this trope from opposite directions; the former is a child that wants to be a samurai while the latter [[spoiler: is an adult peasant that pretends to be a samurai.]]
230* TeamTitle: Sort of. The film is about seven samurai who protect a village from bandits.
231* TechnicianVersusPerformer: Kyūzō and Kikuchiyo are the extremes respectively of this trope in terms of samurai; the former is a quiet perfectionist who practices his art for the sheer love of it - while the latter is a natural talent who loudly mocks his foes and basks in the glory of victory.
232* ThanksForTheMammaries: Played for drama. Katsushirō realizes that Shino is a girl when he accidentally feels her breast.
233* ThemeNaming: With the exception of Kambei all samurai have numbers in their names. Katsu''shi''ro: 4, ''Go''robei: 5, ''Shichi''roji: 7, Hei''hachi'': 8, ''Kyū''zō: 9 (the kanji is different but the pronunciation is the same), Kiku''chi''yo: 1000. Probably intentional, but leaves one wondering why Kambei is an exception.
234* TheseHandsHaveKilled: Yohei is in shock after spearing a bandit. Katsushirō has the same reaction after running another through.
235* ThrowingYourSwordAlwaysWorks: Played with. [[spoiler:Kyūzō]] does this, but only to show the others where his attackers are hiding [[spoiler:before he dies]].
236* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Kikuchiyo prepares for the last battle by stabbing several swords into the ground. "I can't kill enough with just ''one'' sword!" After his signature nodachi breaks, he starts to use his spare swords until only two remain.
237* TookALevelInBadass: All the villagers, really, who greet the news of the bandits by literally hanging their heads in despair, but who under the samurai become a disciplined fighting force and successfully defend the village. However, Yohei stands out. After spending most of the movie vacillating between LovableCoward and plain old coward--he advocates surrendering to the bandits, he wants to go home when the rice is stolen, he looks so ridiculous with a spear that everyone bursts out laughing--he stands his ground, kills one of the bandits, and dies during the final battle.
238--> '''Yohei''': (last words) I defended my post.
239* TrainingThePeacefulVillagers: The TropeMaker. The samurai rely heavily on using the peasants to ZergRush small groups of bandits and stab them with wooden pikes.
240* TranslationYes: One of the peasants expresses his uncertainty about what Kambei is planning with a fairly long sentence. The subtitle boils it down to, "I'm confused."
241* TraumaticHaircut: Manzo cuts his daughter's hair to disguise her as boy to protect her from the samurai.
242** Subverted with Kambei, who shaves his head in his introduction in order to save a child from a robber. While most samurai would see the haircut as a sign of dishonor, he takes it in stride as a sign that he places getting results over the trappings of his position.
243* UnbuiltTrope: This movie subverts or deconstructs many tropes, but only because ''they hadn't become tropes yet.'' For instance, the villagers aren't ''utterly'' helpless - they simply [[TrainingThePeacefulVillagers need leaders]]. The seven samurai aren't [[InvincibleHero invincible warriors]] ''just'' because they're {{Samurai}}. The bandits are murderous thieves, but not faceless {{Mook}}s - they're shown relaxing, complaining, weeping in terror as they run for their lives... And, of course, since the GoryDiscretionShot hadn't been invented yet, it isn't subverted. WarIsGlorious, on the other hand, is a trope that ''did'' exist, and the movie subverted ''that'' pretty thoroughly.
244* UntrustingCommunity: Some villagers think the samurai will just rob them, then leave and let the bandits have whatever's left.
245* UptownGirl: Gender-inverted: Katsushirō and Shino probably can't be together because she is a peasant.
246* VictoriousLoser: Inverted. The samurai may have won the battle and their reason for going to the village, but don't gain anything for themselves. As Kambei points out the townspeople are prospering and planting while singing and nothing but cold graves or hunger and the road await the samurai. Saved from being a Downer Ending by Kambei's wise outlook and the amazing heroism of the seven.
247* WarIsHell: There is no glorious charge, no clever one-liners, no climactic swordfight. There is mud, and blood, and the squeals of men impaled on spears. And the corpses of friends.
248* WarriorPoet: Kyūzō, the most skilled samurai of the group, sits studying a wildflower while he waits to ambush some of the bandits.
249* WeaponBasedCharacterization: Each samurai carries a katana, but some have personal weapons for their work, especially in the final battles.
250** Kikuchiyo carries a [[{{BFS}} nodachi]].
251** Gorōbei has a bow.
252** Shichirōji uses a spear.
253* WeaponTombstone: [[spoiler: The graves of the four fallen samurai are marked with their own swords. Yohei's is marked with his spear.]]
254* WeHelpTheHelpless: The film gives a somewhat ambivalent and often cynical treatment of this. Yes, the seven samurai are willing to stand up and protect a peaceful peasant village against overwhelming odds, but they are also the exception to all the other samurai who ''aren't''. Kambei and Shichirōji are implied to see it as TheLastDance, Katsushirō is a starstruck GlorySeeker who doesn't even need the meager rice stipend the farmers are willing to pay him with, Kyûzô and Gorōbei [[ItAmusedMe have seemingly nothing better to do]] and Heihachi is so poor he'll take any job that feeds him. Finally, Kikuchiyo joins because he wants to join the other samurai.
255* WhamShot: When Kikuchiyo is training his group farmers, he points out that they all have simple bamboo spears... Except for Yohei, who has seemingly grabbed a proper spear out of nowhere. [[spoiler:This leads to his discovery of the peasants' looted weapon stocks and the reveal that they've been looting or possibly even murdering samurai in the past]].
256* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: When [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo faces down the Bandit Chief, there's one other bandit with him who disappears when the Chief is killed.]]
257* WhenItRainsItPours: Once it starts raining on the eve of the final battle, it comes down in buckets non-stop until the battle is won or lost.
258* {{Wipe}}: Used many, many times by Kurosawa to transition from scene to scene.
259* WithFriendsLikeThese: Kikuchiyo and Heihachi frequently bicker and argue throughout the entire first act. Although after Heihachi accidentally offends Rikichi, he discusses the incident with Kikuchiyo and the two agree on something for once.
260* WriterOnBoard: Kikuchiyo, [[spoiler:a farmer's son, not a samurai]], dissuades the other samurai from blaming the villagers for killing and stealing from samurai in the past; after all, it was samurai rule that had forced them to live that way. This is widely seen as Creator/AkiraKurosawa apologizing; he came from a family with samurai ancestors.
261* YouAreAlreadyDead: The guy who challenged Kyûzô to a duel first with sticks, then with swords. [[spoiler:Kikuchiyo's death could also qualify]].

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