Supernaturally gifted with impeccable swordpersonship, a humble sightless outlaw wanders the volatile countryside, in search of incarnate justice virtuously beheld with moral reckoning, convinced of honest trust, and willing to lend a hand.
The ambitious in the village he frequents own a lucrative gambling den, which attracts the hopeful farmers who till the nearby fertile soil.
A bold person of the people peacefully warns them of their folly, once a valiant samurai himself now having embraced age-old non-violence.
Zatôichi (Shintarô Katsu) hears his amicable words freely delivered amidst hardboiled controversy, the local chieftains rather inhospitable regarding farsighted cultural counsel.
Much more sustainable for them to see hard earned wages carefreely lost, in a game they always win, as long as their clients suspect nothing.
Zatôichi heeds the words of a rival boss who claims respectability, then eliminates his rivals, before heading off to a new town.
Until word reaches his modest ears that his friend's greed outweighs even that of his predecessors.
The village folk on the brink of losing everything.
Virtue requisite animate sprawl.
The enduring everlasting narrative wherein which the modest thrive, with hopes of less stern reprisals for simply longing for fiscal fortune.
The powers-that-be vouchsafe possibility only at rare evocative intervals, to generate irrepressible interest in interminable decorum.
Yet the ethical still widely promulgate resounding wisdom begetting verve, their sure and steady dependable advice eventually leading to civility.
The desire to gamble remains strong and can't be vanquished with heartfelt speeches, opposing narratives cultivating instinct insisting they represent spiritual clemency.
The women of the village clearly understand the proactive message, and quietly long for zealous endurance and brave determinate consistent yields.
Zatôichi upholds aggrievéd rights and swiftly defends them with holistic levity.
Unsatisfied with inherent vice.
He upstandingly quells unhinged dishonour.
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