George Lucas was inspired by many things when he wrote that first Star Wars script.
And legendary film maker Akira Kurosawa's film Hidden Fortress was one of the biggest.
Rian Johnson gave it a go with The Last Jedi and it's now the turn of Jon Favreau and his collaborators to make some new Star Wars - and his show The Mandalorian is a wonderful format change for Star Wars - the first live-action show - but one that rings true to what came before.
This means players like Favreau and Dave Filoni have been true to the roots of Star Wars and incorporated a great deal of that Kuroawa into The Mandalorian. This has been in the form of themes and nods and homages to the films themselves.
The man who plays Mando Pedro Pascal said that his character was "built on the iconic presence of the Man With No Name in the Sergio Leone movies, played by Clint Eastwood, [and] the lone samurai [Toshiro Mifune] in Akira Kurosawa. It's aesthetically and very, very much narratively built in that kind of iconic lone gunslinger/sword-wielder."
So while the wild wild west side of Mando is cool, let's have a look at the influence of director Kurosawa on two episodes.
Season One's Episode 4: Sanctuary
Yojimbo translates to "bodyguard" which sums up both the episode and Din Jarin's role protecting baby Grogu.
Season Two: Chapter 12: The Jedi
This is a more direct rinse and repeat of the wandering Samuari plot from Kurosaw's films and Yojimbo again.
Director David Filoni mines this basic plot for “The Jedi.” producing a classic Star Wars moment.
In this episode, Mando mirrors the role of Toshiro Mifune’s wandering ronin, while Magistrate Morgan Elsbeth and Ahsoka fight each other to determine the fate of Calodan in a similar manner like the crime lords did in Kurosawa’s film.