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Monday, August 27, 2018

MYTHCOMICS: "THE GUNS OF SAKAI" WEEKLY MANGA ACTION, 197?



As with my last LONE WOLF AND CUB review, it's taken from the translation provided by First Comics.

I noticed a pattern in a re-read of several LONE WOLF issues. that the series' glorification of the samurai code bushido usually takes one of two positions. Either assassin Itto Ogami comes across people who deviate from the honor of the code, after which Ogami either kills them or shames them with his dispassionate scorn, or he comes across people who fulfill the code, after which Ogami usually duels them to the death.

"The Guns of Sakai" takes a somewhat broader sociological view of Ogami's world, 16th-century Japan, then under control of a Shogunate constantly trying to keep all its subjects in line. Ogami's skills as an assassin are engaged by a group of gunsmiths who provide rifles for the Shogun. The gunsmiths claim that one of their number, Shichirobei "the Silent Gunsmith." has been providing guns to rebel forces. Ogami asserts that the gunsmiths want him to do their dirty work so that they can steal his gun-making secrets, but he accepts the contract anyway.



Eventually Ogami comes face to face with Shichirobei, and sword contends with gun as Ogami explains his willingness to die because "only one thing matters [to the assassin on the path of hell]. Death to the opponent."



Shichirobei's rifle-armed students show up, but once Shichirobei realizes that Ogami is willing to die as long as he slays his target, he asks a boon from Ogami: to let him impart to his students his 'secret traditions of the quest of the gun," after which he will submit to assassination. Ogami agrees, and sits in while Shichirobei hectors his students about their inability to understand his doctrines.



He also excoriates his rival gunsmiths for trying to steal his secrets and making a bad job of it. Nothing is said about his supplying guns to rebels, which suggests that this was a lie by his rivals, for the Silent Gunsmith-- apparently so called because he can talk about nothing but guns-- has a scientist's desire for infinite improvement : "striving toward the future, innovating, refining..." Then Shichirobei reveals his real intentions: he knows that all three students sold his secrets to the rivals and hoped to steal yet more. He kills them all with a device not unlike a handheld gatling-gun.



Having slain his betrayers, Shichirobei expresses a quasi-patriotic desire for innovation in weapons-building, in part because of the threat of barbarian outsiders.




He gives Ogami his gun-plans, so that the Lone Wolf can use them in his quest for justice, and then accepts his death by the assassin's sword.

Ogami then leaves with his son Daigoro in the usual baby-cart, but his employers catch up with him, demanding to be given the plans. The Lone Wolf decimates the riflemen with the repeating-rifle,  but spares the gunsmiths because it was Shichirobei's wish that they be spared, so that they could carry on the work of innovation, albeit without his help. The story ends by showing how Ogami uses a forge to incorporate the guns into the baby-cart, which remains one of the signature images of the series.






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