InuYasha the Movie: Swords of an Honorable Ruler

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InuYasha the Movie: Swords of an Honorable Ruler

The American DVD cover
Directed by Toshiya Shinohara
Produced by Michihiko Suwa
Written by Rumiko Takahashi (based on the comics by)
Starring Kappei Yamaguchi (Japanese original),
Richard Ian Cox (2005 dub)
Music by Kaoru Wada
Distributed by Sunrise (Japan),
Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) 2003
Running time 104 min.
Language Japanese
IMDb profile

InuYasha the Movie: Swords of an Honorable Ruler ("Eiga Inuyasha: Tenka Hadō no Ken"; 映画犬夜叉 天下覇道の剣; also known as InuYasha the Movie 3: Swords of an Honorable Ruler) is the third of four movies in the InuYasha franchise. It was released in Japan on December 20, 2003, and in the United States on September 6, 2005. It premiered on Adult Swim on August 12, 2006.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The English logo used in Japan
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The English logo used in Japan

[edit] Background

The protagonist, InuYasha is a han'yō - half-human, half-demon. His half-brother, Sesshomaru, is a yōkai, a full demon. Their father died, protecting InuYasha's human mother Izayoi from Setsuna no Takemaru, a suitor who yearned for InuYasha's mother, 200 years before the events of the original series. InuYasha's father left each of his sons a very powerful sword; the Tessaiga to InuYasha; and the Tenseiga, to Sesshomaru. The inheritance of Tenseiga rather than the more destructive Tessaiga leaves Sesshomaru bitter and he ponders why his father leaves him with none of the two seemingly more powerful swords.

[edit] Synopsis

The film opens with events that happened at InuYasha's birth. The suitor Takemaru kills Izayoi just before InuYasha's father arrives. InuYasha's father arrives and resurrects Izayoi, telling her to escape with their son, whom he names as InuYasha and gives her the red Fire Rat Armor to protect them from the burning palace. Presumably, InuYasha's father died with Takemaru when the entire complex crashed and burned down as the two dueled inside the palace.[1][2]

In the present era, Kagome's Grandfather comes by with a sword which he calls a 'national treasure'; as Grandfather is about to put it in the storehouse for "safe keeping", Kagome's younger brother goes over to the sword, and it speaks. The sword is Sō'unga, the sword of hell, and it possesses a connection to InuYasha's father. It tried to possess InuYasha, but InuYasha tried his best to resist being controlled and finally brings the sword back to the past, but in the process unleashes the deadly powers the sword holds on an evacuated village.

Sesshomaru is also alerted of the presence of Sō'unga, and he follows the scent to find that InuYasha is in possession of the sword. The two of them duel and at a crucial moment, Kagome saves the day and forces the Sō'unga to release InuYasha from its grasp. It finds a new demon host and recovers Sesshomaru's lost left arm, then revives Takemaru and subsequently possess him, aiming to take revenge on InuYasha and Sesshomaru.

So'unga was the third sword that InuYasha's father possessed. Individually, it was stronger than either the Tenseiga or the Tetsaiga. Sesshomaru wields the Tenseiga, and InuYasha wields the Tessaiga, can the two arch nemesis find a way to bring an end to Sō'unga, the Sword of World Conquest?

Movie Poster from Japan
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Movie Poster from Japan

[edit] Cast and credits

  • Director: Toshiya Shinohara
  • Screenplay: Katsuyuki Sumizawa
  • Music: Kaoru Wada
  • Character Designs: Hideyuki Motohashi & Yoshihito Hishinuma
  • Theme Song: "Four Seasons"
Lyrics: JUSME, Music: MONK, Arrangement: MONK, Performed by: Namie Amuro

[edit] Trivia

  • The general that was leading the army that was killed by Takemaru's Dragon Twister and resurrected by Sounga was, ironically, the same one that Sesshomaru had by the neck and thrown into a boat.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ It should be noted here that a conversation between Sesshomaru and his father revealed that their dad was still suffering from wounds incured in a battle with a demon before the start of the movie, and those wounds had not fully healed when InuYasha’s father battled Takemaru, which may have played a part in InuYasha's father's death.
  2. ^ In episode 053, Father's Old Enemy Ryukotsusei, the flea demon Myōga reveals that the wounds inflicted on Inuyashas father while fighting Ryukotsusei are ultimatly what killed him.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

InuYasha
Characters: InuYasha characters | InuYasha Yōkai
Media: Anime | Manga | Rumiko Takahashi | List of songs from InuYasha | Voice actors
Plot: Plot of InuYasha | Anime episodes
Movies: Affections Touching Across Time | The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass | Swords of an Honorable Ruler | Fire on the Mystic Island
Video games: InuYasha: Feudal Combat | InuYasha: The Secret of the Cursed Mask
Locations: Bone Eater's Well | Higurashi Shrine | Mount Hakurei | WcDonald's
Miscellaneous: Special items and attacks