Activate your BLOCKBUSTER On Demand device

Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989)

Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989)
Play Trailer and Clips
Member Rating:  
An hour-long feature from Japanese director Shinyu Tsukamoto, Tetsuo (also known as Tetsuo: The Iron Man) tells a horrific, cyberpunk-influenced science fiction tale about the intersection of man and post-industrial technology. The central character is a Japanese salary man, an average office worker who is transformed by a brief encounter with a metals fetishist, a man who has purposefully implanted pieces of scrap metal in his body. The salary man soon begins sprouting pieces of metal from various parts of his body, a change which is accompanied by increasingly nightmarish visions and bizarre, metal-filled sexual fantasies. As the man evolves into a strange hybrid of man and machine, he also develops a telepathic connection with another of his kind: the metal fetishist, who has been undergoing a similar conversion, and may indeed be the cause of the salary man's transformation. The two engage in a violent, destructive battle throughout the streets of Tokyo, accompanied by an appropriately industrial soundtrack. Shot on a small budget in 16 millimeter black-and-white, Tsukamoto reprised many of the images and plot elements of Tetsuo in a higher-budgeted sequel, Tetsuo II: Body Hammer. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

 Read More


Starring:
Tomoroh TaguchiKei Fujiwara, (more)
Director(s):
Shinya Tsukamoto
Format(s):
DVD
View All Versions to rent and buy
 
 
 
 

Synopsis of Tetsuo: The Iron Man

An hour-long feature from Japanese director Shinyu Tsukamoto, Tetsuo (also known as Tetsuo: The Iron Man) tells a horrific, cyberpunk-influenced science fiction tale about the intersection of man and post-industrial technology. The central character is a Japanese salary man, an average office worker who is transformed by a brief encounter with a metals fetishist, a man who has purposefully implanted pieces of scrap metal in his body. The salary man soon begins sprouting pieces of metal from various parts of his body, a change which is accompanied by increasingly nightmarish visions and bizarre, metal-filled sexual fantasies. As the man evolves into a strange hybrid of man and machine, he also develops a telepathic connection with another of his kind: the metal fetishist, who has been undergoing a similar conversion, and may indeed be the cause of the salary man's transformation. The two engage in a violent, destructive battle throughout the streets of Tokyo, accompanied by an appropriately industrial soundtrack. Shot on a small budget in 16 millimeter black-and-white, Tsukamoto reprised many of the images and plot elements of Tetsuo in a higher-budgeted sequel, Tetsuo II: Body Hammer. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
67 mins

Complete Cast of Tetsuo: The Iron Man


Director(s):
Shinya Tsukamoto
Writer(s):
Shinya Tsukamoto
Producer(s):
Shinya Tsukamoto
Categories:
Horror
Looking for special editions of Tetsuo: The Iron Man?
See All Versions
Subtitles:
Check All Versions
Closed Captioning:
Check All Versions
 
 
 
 

BY MAIL

Monthly Subscription 
NEW! 7 - Day Rental
No subscription required. Usually ships in 24 hours.
 
Buy New  $12.99
 

IN-STORE

 

What's Your Take?

Add to FavoritesIn Favorites  |  Share:     Email to a friendShare on FacebookShare on Twitter
YOUR REVIEW
WRITE A REVIEW
 
1000 
 
Member Reviews
 
Triston M.

This film is undoubtedly a landmark in Japanese film, although it certainly isn't for the faint of heart. If you can take the stomach the graphic imagery, it is very rewarding and well worth it. Shinya Tsukamoto pulls no punches in this film that comments on man's metamorphosis in the modern world. One of the most disturbing films I have personally ever seen, and one of the most poignant as well.

Yes   |   No

 
Jess N.

somebody please remove the first 20 minutes of this film from my mind.

Yes   |   No

 
Nicholas V.

I do find plenty of enjoyment in weird movies with bizarre images and even somewhat incoherent plots. But this one was just too much for me. "Tetsuo" takes weird and incoherent to an entirely different level. Some of the images are genuinely intriguing and absurdly bizarre and it's for those reasons that sometimes you really can't take your eyes off of what is going on. However, that doesn't mean it was enjoyable. In fact, it was distressing and unpleasant. The rapid, beyond incoherent editing makes it so difficult to get an even decent grasp on just what is happening half the time and that significantly annoyed me. As opposed to Takashi Miike who at least outlines a plot while mixing the random and bizarre in with it, Tsukamoto makes "Tetsuo" up almost entirely of the random and bizarre. It was weird and disjointed to the point of agitating. Too out there for my tastes.

Yes   |   No

 
Read All 14 Reviews