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Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai

22 MAR 2000
Jim Jarmusch lays his hand on the pulse of urban America with this new gangster flick. Blending ancient Eastern wisdom, modern dysfunction, old-school Mafia moral codes of honor and loyalty, and contemporary pop culture, Jarmusch has created a stylized comparison of several different cinematic traditions that all share similar roots. Hip-hop culture made the comparisons long ago, exemplified best in the music of the Wu-Tang Clan, meshing quotes from old martial arts flicks with Ennio Morricone samples--making the Clan's founder, The RZA, the obvious choice for the soundtrack (he also makes a cameo appearance). Ghost Dog (Forest Whitaker) is a solitary black man who lives by the codes of the ancient samurai, working as a contract killer for a small-time mobster to whom he owes his life. It's a perfect set-up, until Ghost Dog makes a grievous error that he must pay for with his own life--but the modern world is not as simple as an old gangster flick. See "Opening Friday" for theaters and times.

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