The Magnificent Seven Samurai: Difference between revisions

(update links)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1:
{{trope}}
[[File:sevensamurai2Sevensamurai.jpg|link=Seven Samurai|framethumb|300px|Original flavour]]
 
{{quote|'''Chris''': There's a job for six men, watching over a village, south of the border.
Line 15:
The trope title and [[Trope Namer|namers]] are ''[[Seven Samurai]]'' (''Shichinin no samurai'') and ''[[The Magnificent Seven]]'', the latter of which is famous for both transferring the Kurosawa classic to the Old West (with Kurosawa's blessing) and being a classic in its own right. (A trivial note: ''[[Seven Samurai]]'' was originally released in the USA as ''The Magnificent Seven''; the English title was changed to a direct translation of the Japanese title later to avoid confusion with the remake.)
 
[[File:s290 tvt TheMagnificentSeven 5061.jpg|link=The Magnificent Seven|framethumb|300px|[[Genius Bonus|Cajun-style]]]]
 
The plot is [[Strictly Formula|pretty predictable]], but [[Tropes Are Not Bad|always fun]].
Line 133:
** Correction: Three (or four in ''[[Dragon Age]]'') save the galaxy/world, the rest patiently slack in the base.
*** There are some all-out NPC battles in Dragon Age, and the NPC character types still (partially) fit. Alistair is, arguably, [[The Hero]] who makes the [[Heroic Sacrifice]] {{spoiler|either by giving his life to kill the archedemon, or giving up his freedom to become king}}, The Lancer is [[Token Evil Teammate]] Morrigan, Sten is [[The Stoic]] and thus, also, [[The Quiet One]] who is also a [[Jerk with a Heart of Gold]], Zevran is the (semi) [[Reluctant Warrior]] and [[Lovable Traitor]] who joins you after you defeat his band of assasin [[Tricksters]], Wynne is [[The Obi-Wan]], Leliana is [[Naive Newcomer]] {{spoiler|so she says}} who likes to [[Pet the Dog]], and Oghren is the [[Boisterous Bruiser]] [[Comic Relief]]. Shale shares the [[Deadpan Snarker]] with Morrigan, [[The Big Guy]] with Sten, and proves to be a very sardonic [[Comic Relief]] alternative to Oghren.
** Bioware likes this trope so much that they built the party members of ''[[Video Games/Mass Effect (video game)|Mass Effect]]'' after it. Shepard is the Hero. Kaiden is the Lancer. Ashley is the big guy. Liara is the smart guy. Wrex is the Old Guy (he is a couple hundred years old). Tali is the young guy. Garrus is... whatever's left.
*** If you see Tali and Liara as both being Smart Guys in different fields, then Garrus could be the Young Guy. Shepard becomes his mentor, after all, and his character development reflects what he picks up from your own behavior as a Paragon or Renegade.
*** The bulk of ''[[Mass Effect 2]]'' is basically assembling an entire 10-person team (12 with the [[Downloadable Content|DLC]]) ''Magnificent Seven''-style, with the added wrinkle of getting said team loyal to you and upgrading your ship and weapons before the main mission of going through the Omega-4 Relay. Though it ''is'' possible for people to die during the Suicide Mission, your primary goal is to take out the Collector base and bring everyone back alive.
* ''[[Halo]]: Reach]]'' has some shades of this. {{spoiler|Except it doesn't end very well...}}
*** Carter - [[The Hero]]
*** Noble Six - [[The Lancer]]/[[The Sixth Ranger]]
Line 144:
*** Jun - [[Friendly Sniper]]
*** Auntie Dot - [[Smart Guy]]
* ''[[Metal Gear]] Solid: Peace Walker]]'' is about Costa Rica recruiting a heroic mercenary group to defend it from mysterious invaders, since it legally can't keep its own defence force.
* [[The Western]] chapter in ''[[Live a Live]]'' has a few elements of this.
* ''[[Throne of Darkness]]'' was inspired by the concept.
* The Greil Mercenaries of the ''[[Fire Emblem Tellius]]'' duology; it numbered seven members at least initially.
 
== WebcomicsWeb Comics ==
 
* During the "That Which Redeems" [[Story Arc]] from ''[[Sluggy Freelance]]'', Torg tries to set one of these up after the Dimension of Lame summons/kidnaps him into protecting them from [[Demonic Invaders]]. Unfortunately, all the people he recruits ''come from'' the Dimension of Lame and ... well, [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|it's called that for a reason]].
* ''[[No Need for Bushido]]'' does this and specifically points out that they have seven samurai (if you count [[Those Two Guys]])
 
== Western Animation ==
* ''[[Re BootReBoot]]'' uses this in the post-[[Time Skip]] episode "Icons". Matrix and Andraia find themselves in a rundown computer system and have to [[Training the Peaceful Villagers|teach the inhabitants to win games]] to ensure the system's survival. When Matrix finds that the [[Tagalong Kid]] has brought their makeshift team to seven, he utters a sarcastic "[[Lampshade Hanging|magnificent]]".
 
* ''[[Re Boot]]'' uses this in the post-[[Time Skip]] episode "Icons". Matrix and Andraia find themselves in a rundown computer system and have to [[Training the Peaceful Villagers|teach the inhabitants to win games]] to ensure the system's survival. When Matrix finds that the [[Tagalong Kid]] has brought their makeshift team to seven, he utters a sarcastic "[[Lampshade Hanging|magnificent]]".
* ''[[Wakfu]]'s'' fifth episode does exactly this, down to the title ("''The Magnificent Five''"). Though, to be honest, it actually is more of a parody of this trope, subverting most plot points common to other examples (the ending, for one).
* ''[[Star Wars: The Clone Wars]]'' has the episode "Bounty Hunters". It even mentions Kurosawa in the opening.