If you loved Samurai X: El Fin de la Leyenda, try Samurai X: Infierno En Kyoto
Un puente entre una película que ya has visto y una que casi nadie ha cruzado. Esto es lo que comparten, y lo que la segunda hace que la primera no hace.
Lo que comparten
Both films are directed by Keishi Otomo, and they both carry the epic, foreign gem, raw mood tags, and they sit in Action / Adventure / Fantasy territory. If that's the register that drew you to Samurai X: El Fin de la Leyenda, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What Samurai X: Infierno En Kyoto is
You track a wandering swordsman into Meiji-era Kyoto, where a fire-scarred phantom from your past gathers an army to burn the new government to the ground. Hidden swords await behind screens, loyalties unravel at hot-spring inns, and the city itself becomes a duel ground. A director once trained in samurai theater stages every clash like a staged play.

