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Watch The Last Samurai (2003) Free Online Without Registration With English Subtitles, Watch The Last Samurai (2003) online, free With English Subtitles. Epic Action Drama. Set in Japan during the 1870s, The Last Samurai tells the story of Capt. Nathan Algren (Tom Cruise), a respected American military officer hired by the Emperor of Japan to train the country's first army in the art of modern warfare. The Gymnastics Samurai Season 1 Episode 7 English Subtitle Watch Free Online.

Watch The Last Samurai (2003) Free Online Without Registration With English Subtitles, Watch The Last Samurai (2003) online, free With English Subtitles.

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In the 1870s, Captain Nathan Algren, a cynical veteran of the American Civil war who will work for anyone, is hired by Americans who want lucrative contracts with the Emperor of Japan to train the peasant conscripts for the first standing imperial army in modern warfare using firearms. The imperial Omura cabinet’s first priority is to repress a rebellion of traditionalist Samurai -hereditary warriors- who remain devoted to the sacred dynasty but reject the Westernizing policy and even refuse firearms. Yet when his ill-prepared superior force sets out too soon, their panic allows the sword-wielding samurai to crush them. Badly wounded Algren’s courageous stand makes the samurai leader Katsumoto spare his life; once nursed to health he learns to know and respect the old Japanese way, and participates as advisor in Katsumoto’s failed attempt to save the Bushido tradition, but Omura gets repressive laws enacted- he must now choose to honor his loyalty to one of the embittered sides when …

Director: Edward Zwick
Writers: John Logan
Stars: Tom Cruise, Ken Watanabe, Billy Connolly

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Here's the scene: Tom Cruise wields katana and slices and dices his way through like four Japanese dudes at the same time because he's like the sword version of Neo from The Matrix. On the way to becoming Japan's true White Savior and its final, bestest samurai ever, he gets dressed by a Japanese widow who develops feelings for him, teaches some lessons about never giving up to other Japanese people, and leads a rebellion of Japanese samurai against some other white guys with cannons in a sword-swinging horse charge at a time when samurai had been using guns for hundreds of years. Then he teaches the Japanese emperor a lesson and lives happily ever after with the widow. Also, this isn't Dances with Wolves, starring Kevin Costner. Or Avatar. Why oh why would historians ever have an issue with this movie?

Set in the 1870s during Japan's Meiji Era, when the country underwent rapid modernization, 2003's The Last Samurai gets about everything wrong when it comes to, um ... most things. Except the actual sword-fighting, that is, which is generously rated by sword-fighting master Kaito Suiji as fairly accurate (you can watch his assessment on YouTube, around the five-minute mark). As War History Online states, the costumes are all wrong, but Meiji-era downtown set design is decent. The military equipment is pretty spot on, but the overuse of English is absurd (practically no one in Japan spoke English then). And Tom Cruise's character Algren? Straight up didn't exist.

A grab-bag of Japanese history fuels a Hollywood blockbuster

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To be fair, Algren was loosely based on a French military figure, Jules Brunet, sent by Napoleon to help modernize the Japanese army. Like Tom Cruise's character in Samurai, Brunet grew fond of Japan, and when the Tokugawa Shogunate (the military leadership of Japan) was overthrown in 1868, attempted to restore it. So the timeline for The Last Samurai more or less fits, including the final, intentionally suicidal charge. That charge, however, wasn't led by Brunet, nor was its antecedent uprising, the Satsuma Rebellion. As described in Emory Magazine, that was led by Saigo Takamori, an historically revered samurai born in 1827. Takamori, however, didn't try to restore the Shogunate, he worked to overthrow it and institute the Meiji government, no matter how this action ultimately led to the dissolution of the samurai class.

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Basically, The Last Samurai pulled from a grab bag of historical facts and spliced them into Hollywood blockbuster fodder, complete with Tom Cruise, swords, as few subtitles as realistically possible, samurai, and ninja (yeah, they're in the movie, too, no matter that they hadn't existed for centuries). Granted, The Last Samurai might not have been trying to be historically accurate, so it gets something of a pass in that regard. But as a film set in our actual world, at a period of time that requires a bit of cultural sensitivity, it might have been a better choice to remedy some of its more glaring inaccuracies.