Fightin TX Aggie said:
"I'd love to party with Yabushige.."
Dude would boil you in a pot for giggles. He's a likable, traitorous, coward, murderer. Yet somehow likable!
So be it…would be a f'n honor
Fightin TX Aggie said:
"I'd love to party with Yabushige.."
Dude would boil you in a pot for giggles. He's a likable, traitorous, coward, murderer. Yet somehow likable!
Prophetic! He's a survivor that is for sure.Quote:
He does a great job of playing the bumbling fool with his reactions, and backs down very quickly when needed..but you can also tell there is some viciousness too him too.
BDG02 said:
Yeah on the podcast, they said the intent was to kidnap Mariko, not kill her.
A few episodes ago, the two Christian reagents confirmed to each other that they were hostages. They weren't living under any delusions. I can't see how letting her go, would suddenly make them see the light. They know what is going on.Definitely Not A Cop said:
I thought the show did an excellent job of explaining the reasoning. Ishido was holding them hostage through BS security measures established earlier in the season. Mariko said her lord's orders superseded those measures, no matter the danger. If he's allows a high born woman to go, then there is no reason any other man or woman can't leave too. If he allows the daughter of the man who murdered a hated emperor to turn herself into a political martyr by seppuku, then the entire city revolts. He chose option A.
aTmAg said:A few episodes ago, the two Christian reagents confirmed to each other that they were hostages. They weren't living under any delusions. I can't see how letting her go, would suddenly make them see the light. They know what is going on.Definitely Not A Cop said:
I thought the show did an excellent job of explaining the reasoning. Ishido was holding them hostage through BS security measures established earlier in the season. Mariko said her lord's orders superseded those measures, no matter the danger. If he's allows a high born woman to go, then there is no reason any other man or woman can't leave too. If he allows the daughter of the man who murdered a hated emperor to turn herself into a political martyr by seppuku, then the entire city revolts. He chose option A.
And that same daughter is going to commit seppuku in a few weeks anyway. Why would the timing matter to the city?
I don't buy any of that. Reading around the internet, I came across this reason:Definitely Not A Cop said:aTmAg said:A few episodes ago, the two Christian reagents confirmed to each other that they were hostages. They weren't living under any delusions. I can't see how letting her go, would suddenly make them see the light. They know what is going on.Definitely Not A Cop said:
I thought the show did an excellent job of explaining the reasoning. Ishido was holding them hostage through BS security measures established earlier in the season. Mariko said her lord's orders superseded those measures, no matter the danger. If he's allows a high born woman to go, then there is no reason any other man or woman can't leave too. If he allows the daughter of the man who murdered a hated emperor to turn herself into a political martyr by seppuku, then the entire city revolts. He chose option A.
And that same daughter is going to commit seppuku in a few weeks anyway. Why would the timing matter to the city?
Yes everyone in the castle knew they were being held hostage. But Ishido was posturing it publicly as holding them for their safety because of the bandits (that he sent) were targeting the elite. Just like with any political posturing, most people aren't willing to burn everything down to point out that people in charge are lying about their motivations.
And the Mariko killing herself mattered because how and when she was choosing to do it. If someone sentenced to death ends up burning themselves alive for example, it's going to make a bigger hubbub to most people.
He reminds me of Bodie from "The Wire".Fightin TX Aggie said:
"I'd love to party with Yabushige.."
Dude would boil you in a pot for giggles. He's a likable, traitorous, coward, murderer. Yet somehow likable!
??LB12Diamond said:
Go back and rewatch the council meeting on reviewing what to do. That pretty much explains everything. It even has you in it. You are Torrinada's brother in that scene.
This makes perfect sense, but none of it is clear in the episode. At least to me.Fightin TX Aggie said:
"Do not be fooled by our politeness. Our bows, our maze of rituals." Mariko
In the Eightfold Fence episode, Mariko explained to Blackthorne the complexity of the samurai culture of the day.
Honor mattered greatly, but honor to Ishido is about perception, not truth. Ishido's quest for power must balance the perception of his honor against his scheme for power.
Toronaga sent Mariko into Osaka as a weapon. She spoke boldly in front of all the high families from a posture of duty & honor. Don't miss the dialogue where she says she is no peasant to be trampled upon. It's Ishido who rose from a low family. Mariko's lineage is ancient. This is a swipe at Ishido, and the others in the room saw it. His weakest attribute, among this audience, is his lineage
Once she spoke so boldly, the trap closed. Ishido must let her leave (thereby destroying the illusion that "guests" in the castle were there to be protected from bandits) or he must allow her to commit suicide because he denied her her own honor and duty to her lord.
Trap closed. As soon as she spoke.
Ishido's strategy then was to blame the ninjas for her death or kidnapping. He would use the ninjas to create the illusion that (1) he wasn't involved and (2) his other castle "guests" still needed protection.
Yabushige allowed the ninjas in, but then he pretended to oppose them in order to maintain his own veneer of innocence. He wanted Mariko's group to run for the gate because he knew the ninjas would be there.
Toronaga needs the other "great houses" to come to his side. Mariko's key role was to pierce Ishido's illusion to the point that the other houses could not ignore the dishonor.
I read that spoiler because I thought you were afraid to spoil the episode we just watched (and you were being extra careful). But that sorta spoils next weeks too.Fightin TX Aggie said:
I just had an idea.
It was Toronaga who engineered Mariko's marriage to Buntaro, thus saving her life. Toronaga is such a long-term planner that it seems possible (likely) he knew that one day Mariko could be useful to him. She came from one of the most respected families in Japan, and she had deep connections with the nobility. In short, no telling how she might be useful one day. Toronaga might as well "collect" her and keep her close.
Why did I put spoiler tags on this? Because in the book and the original miniseries, Toronaga also "collects" Blackthorne. He doesn't know exactly how Blackthorne might be useful, but he wants him just in case. At the end of the miniseries, Toronaga secretly has Blackthorne's ship burned. He then orders Blackthorne's ship to be rebuilt, but he has already decided Blackthorne will never leave Japan. Just as it is his (Toronaga's) destiny to be Shogun, it is Blackthorne's destiny to remain his vassal.
this was a dick thing to post in this way, spoiling the ending of the book and likely the TV show, with no warning you were going to be spoiling the ending.Fightin TX Aggie said:
I just had an idea.
snipped
My apologies, sincerely. I thought the spoiler tags would be enough.C@LAg said:this was a dick thing to post in this way, spoiling the ending of the book and likely the TV show, with no warning you were going to be spoiling the ending.Fightin TX Aggie said:
I just had an idea.
snipped
hell I got a 1 month ban for making a Stranger Things joke about a single plot point in the MCU thread... three weeks after the show aired.
Because we can't get away from the GOT comparisons, Yabushige really is this show's Sir Bronn of the Blackwater.El Gallo Blanco said:I'd love to party with Yabushige...something about his mannerisms and the different looks he gives crack me the hell up. He's good comedic relief at times. He gives great "are you f-ing kidding me" and "not this sh** again" looks.Belton Ag said:
I'm loving the Blackthorne/Yabushige team up, here. You could tell in the cliff scene earlier that something was going to happen with those two. They begrudgingly respect each other.
Eye rollAl Bula said:
Five episodes in so haven't read any of this thread since the show started. Keep in mind that Shogun is in my top 5 books and I can't not compare the book to show.
Halfway through impressions:
- Shogun is way too complex to do in Japanese subtitles, for anyone enjoying this series but haven't read the novel yet, there are so many more layers to this story than what FX is putting out. maybe this will change in the later episodes.
- girlboss Mariko is cringe, they completely botched this character, it was eye rolling when she told Blackthorne to call her Mariko-sama
- Fuji/Fujiko is well done, probably the most pleasant surprise halfway through
- Yabu is a smiling idiot
- Omi is a joke through half the show
- Ajiro (or Anjiro in the novel) is on the Izu peninsula and has a coastal climate. The snow is driving me nuts because that is way inaccurate. I guess that's what you get when you film in Canada, so the geography may not be authentic but at least it's not CGI.
- Ishido and Blackthorne are pretty good. There's still some stuff lost in the tv adaptation vs superb novel between Ishido and Toranaga
- Toranaga in the show is pretty good but he doesn't compare to the novel version, physically nor cunning-wise