

In mid-19th century Edo period, a masterless rōnin named Ikematsu Sosuke resides in a peaceful village among those he helps. However, as the prevalent peace and tranquility are sure to be replaced by war and conflict across the land, the swordsman feels restlessness creeping upon him.
Direction
Tsukamoto's handheld chaos makes every slash feel personal.
Editing
80 minutes of breathless, jagged momentum—no fat, all nerve.
Practical Effects
Real blades, real mud, real consequences. No heroics.

Director
Shinya Tsukamoto
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Tsukamoto shot this in two weeks with a skeleton crew, using digital cameras for the first time in his career—the grainy urgency mirrors the Bakumatsu period's collapse of tradition.
The film deliberately subverts Kurosawa's romanticized rōnin—Mokunoshin's 'peaceful' village life is depicted as cowardice, not virtue, interrogating why we mythologize killers.