PRODUCT INFORMATION
Street Date 3/31/26
All pre-orders will be shipped as soon as they are in stock. Sometimes this is 1-2 weeks early, sometimes this might be a few days after the street date.
If other in-stock items are ordered at the same time, all items will ship together. If you want your in-stock items shipped immediately, please place pre-orders separately.
All dates, artwork and features are subject to change.
Pre-orders will be charged when you place the order.
No cancellations on pre-orders.
Throughout Japanese cinema, the image of the noble samurai righting wrongs katana in hand remains a fixture of the jidaigeki genre, with the authoritarianism and corruption of the country's medieval past often attenuated for the sake of spectacle and entertainment. But in the 1960s, director Eiichi Kudo's Samurai Revolution trilogy shattered this idealised conception of the samurai, providing an authentic and scathing portrayal of Japan's tyrannical past to question the social and political landscape of his day. Beginning in 1963 with 13 Assassins (remade in 2010 by Takashi Miike), followed by The Great Killing in 1964 and 11 Samurai in 1967, the Samurai Revolution trilogy depicts the rot at the heart of the Tokugawa shogunate: despotic lords oppress their people and abuse their power with impunity, loyalty to the Shogun is valued above compassion and righteousness, and samurai have shed any trace of nobility in favor of their own self-interest, which they pursue with gleeful cruelty. Each film portrays a group of honorable samurai driven to plan the political assassination of a corrupt lord, hoping to light the fuse that will eventually destroy the regime. But the rebels must understand the fatal consequences of their mission. Should the Shogun falter, then their lives and the entire samurai class will be forfeit. Eiichi Kudo masterfully deploys expressive black and white cinematography, spectacular swordfights and compelling performances to paint a rich visual and narrative tapestry, using each film to further explore questions of ethics and morality. Featuring a who's who of iconic jidaigeki actors including Chiezo Kataoka (Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji), Ko Nishimura (Lady Snowblood), Kei Sato (Hara-Kiri) and Toru Abe (Zatoichi and the One-Armed Swordsman), Kudo's Samurai Revolution trilogy rank among the most important samurai films ever made and are a must-have for chanbara connoisseurs.
FEATURES:
High-Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation of all three films
Original lossless Japanese mono audio on all three films
Optional newly translated English subtitles for all three films
Limited edition packaging with reversible sleeves featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Tom Fournier
Illustrated collectors’ booklet featuring new writing on the films by Chris D., Earl Jackson and Alain Silver
DISC ONE – 13 ASSASSINS
Brand new audio commentary by film critic and Japanese cinema expert Tom Mes
The Samurai Variations, a brand new video essay by music supervisor and Japanese cinema expert James Balmont on legendary composer Akira Ifukube’s score for the film
Samurai Guerilla Part 1, an archival interview where Eiichi Kudo’s former assistant director Misao Arai and filmmaker Dirty Kudo discuss Eiichi Kudo and Toei’s role in the Japanese film landscape of the 1960s
Theatrical trailers
DISC TWO – THE GREAT KILLING
Brand new audio commentary by film critic David West
Magician of Light and Shadow, a brand new video essay by film critic and Japanese cinema expert Daisuke Miyao on the cinematography seen in the film
Samurai Guerilla Part 2, an archival interview where Misao Arai and Dirty Kudo discuss the jidaigeki genre and expand on the political dimension of The Great Killing
Masaaki Ito Remembers Eiichi Kudo, a tribute to the director by his former assistant and brother-in-law
DISC THREE – 11 SAMURAI
Brand new audio commentary by film critic David West
Fighting the Poison, a brand new video essay by film critic and Japanese cinema expert Jonathan Clements on the historical setting and context of the film
Samurai Guerilla Part 3, an archival interview where Misao Arai and Dirty Kudo discuss some of the filming techniques seen in the film and the conception of the Samurai as seen in Eiichi Kudo’s jidaigeki films
Eiichi Kudo: The Art of Realism, an archival interview with Fabrice Arduini, filmmaker and programmer for the House of Culture of Japan in Paris, where he discusses jidaigeki and the films of Eiichi Kudo

![EIICHI KUDO'S SAMURAI REVOLUTION TRILOGY (LIMITED EDITION) BLU-RAY [PRE-ORDER]](http://grindhousevideo.com/cdn/shop/files/SAMURAIREVOLUTIONTRILOGYBLU2.jpg?v=1766081009&width=1080)
![EIICHI KUDO'S SAMURAI REVOLUTION TRILOGY (LIMITED EDITION) BLU-RAY [PRE-ORDER]](http://grindhousevideo.com/cdn/shop/files/SAMURAIREVOLUTIONTRILOGYBLU3.jpg?v=1766081009&width=2000)