Shinya Tsukamoto Movies
Constant comparisons to such distinctive celluloid experimentalists as
David Cronenberg and
David Lynch may give the uninitiated an idea of what to expect aesthetically and thematically from the works of renegade Japanese filmmaker/actor
Shinya Tsukamoto, though as complimentary as they may be, the comparisons ultimately don't do justice to the remarkably original and frantic essence of his hauntingly jarring cinematic nightmares. From the cringe-inducing, hyper-kinetic body horror of
Tetsuo: The Iron Man to the creeping deliberation of
Gemini,
Tsukamoto's intriguing body of work has isolated critics and audiences while building a strong fan base who share his technophobe paranoia and cyber-punk sensibility. Born in Shibuya, Tokyo, in 1960,
Tsukamoto found inspiration early in his childhood from the television series Ultra-Q. Making his directorial debut via Super-8 film around the age of 14, the future director later found creative outlet in painting and theater. Briefly putting his filmmaking on the backburner to concentrate on writing, directing, and acting in the theater troupe he created at the Fine Arts division of Nihon University,
Tsukamoto briefly took a job at a commercial film studio upon graduation, and soon after quit to again purse stage work with his troupe, Phantom Theater, in 1985. Resurrecting his filmmaking dreams the following year,
Tsukamoto began work on The Phantom of Regular Size, a film that would ultimately be the precursor to his breakout hit,
Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989). Though he would further flex his punk sensibilities with The Adventure of Denchu Kozo the following year, it was the all-out sensory assault of
Tetsuo that would make
Tsukamoto an international cult figure. Its use of nearly every cinematic trick in the book gave the tale of urban industrialization and its frightening effect on man a remarkably distinct energy and though it isolated audiences, it provided solid proof that the developing visionary possessed a strong aesthetic sensibility. His next film, Hiruku the Goblin, took a more conventional approach to horror that, while not altogether ineffective, still found the director attempting to find a balance between the chaos of
Tetsuo and a subdued approach more palatable to the masses. Following shortly after with the more traditional but equally disturbing
Tetsuo II (1992) proved slightly more successful in regards to finding this balance, and fans fearing a sell-out were relieved to find his uniquely frightening vision undiluted by success and larger budgets. Although his next film, Tokyo Fist, was remarkably free of the industrial paranoia of his previous works, the tale of a salary-man turned viciously determined pugilist retained his themes of pain and transformation, albeit internalizing it more in flesh and mind than with metal. And though
Bullet Ballet failed to live up to the growing expectations of his hungry fan base,
Tsukamoto gracefully hit his stride with perhaps his most effective film to date, the viscerally chilling and sometimes
Kubrick-esque Gemini (1999). Inspired by the
Edogawa Rampo story Soseiji (The Twins),
Gemini constructed an almost unbearable dread in its tale of unbridled lust and brotherly conflict, while taking
Tsukamoto's usual theme of transformation to a whole new level. In addition to directing,
Tsukamoto also appears as an actor in both his own films and those of his contemporaries, working and forming bonds with such filmmakers as
Naoto Takenaka (
119 [1994]) and the similar-minded
Takashi Miike (
Dead or Alive 2 [2000] and
Ichi the Killer [2001]). ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

- 2011
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A young, single, mentally unbalanced mother strives to protect her infant son from a grim fate in a cruel and uncaring world, and slowly begins to come unraveled as a lonely author tries desperately to break through her icy exterior. Everywhere Kotoko (Cocco) looks, she sees double. It's gotten to the point where she can't tell what's real anymore, and upon being reported for suspected child abuse, the boy is sent to live with his aunt in the country. Meanwhile, best-selling author Tanaka (writer/director Shinya Tsukamoto) hears the lonely mother lost in song one day on the train, and grows so enamored with her voice that he proposes marriage. But Tanaka gets more than he bargained for when the deeply disturbed beauty turns viciously abusive. Later, things go from bad to worse after Kotoko regains custody of her son, and finds here already tenuous grip on reality slipping even further. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Cocco, Shinya Tsukamoto, (more)

- 2010
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- 2009
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- Add Tetsuo: The Bullet Man to Queue
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Filmmaker Shinya Tsukamoto, who scored international cult successes with his visually startling sci-fi fantasies Tetsuo: The Iron Man and Tetsuo II: Body Hammer, delivers the long-awaited third film in the series with Tetsuo: The Bullet Man. Born to a Japanese mother and an American father, Anthony (Eric Bossick) is a businessman who lives in Tokyo with his wife, Yuriko (Akiko Monou), and son, Tom (Tiger Charlie Gerhardt). Anthony often struggles with his temper, and while his late mother taught him it was important not to give himself over to rage, he can't control himself when an auto accident claims his son's life. As furious anger takes over Anthony's mind, his body undergoes a bizarre transformation -- his flesh turns to metal and an incredible variety of weapons begin to emerge from his body, including a high-powered machine gun. As Anthony confronts his father (Stephen Sarrazin), he discovers that his dad's career as a scientist was not at all what he'd been led to believe -- and neither was his mother's fate. Tetsuo: The Bullet Man received its world premiere at the 2009 Venice International Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Eric Bossick

- 2007
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A troubled woman must confront the madness in others in this offbeat Japanese comedy-drama. Asuka Sakura (Yuki Uchida) is a writer who has enjoyed some success as a magazine reporter, but the stress and long hours of her work has caused her to become dependent on drugs and she's physically and emotionally worn to a frazzle. One day, Asuka awakes to discover she's in a psychiatric hospital after spending two days in a coma; her boyfriend, a television presenter named Tetsuo (Kudo Kankuro), is convinced her accidental overdose was really a suicide attempt, and he's had her committed for observation, even though he's clearly more disturbed than she is. As Asuka struggles to detox and regain her stability, she has to deal with the often-difficult personalities of her fellow patients, ranging from a former porn star with a gift for smuggling forbidden goods into the hospital to a gifted pianist with an eating disorder and a profound fear of open spaces. Kuwaieto rumo ni yokoso (aka Welcome To The Quiet Room was written and directed by Matsuo Suzuki, whose screenplay was based on his own novel. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Yuki Uchida, Kankuro Kudo, (more)

- 2006
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- Add Nightmare Detective to Queue
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Visionary Japanese director Shinya Tsukamoto (Tetsuo: The Iron Man) returns to the helm with this bleak tale of a supernaturally gifted serial killer with the power to enter his victim's dreams, and the mysterious "Nightmare Detective" who provides the only hope of loosening the maniac's murderous grip on dreamland. Detective Keiko Kirishima (Hitomi) was an academic criminologist whose interest in detective work soon found her gravitating into homicide fieldwork. Upon being assigned to investigate a recent rash of suicides in which the victims seem to have slashed themselves to death while sleeping, Keiko observes a strange connecting factor -- each victim's phone displays "0" as the last number dialed before their grisly demise. Encouraged by her superiors to view the case from a paranormal perspective, Keiko soon learns of a man named Kyoichi Kagenuma (Ryuhei Matsuda), who is said to be able to enter the dreams of others while analyzing the thoughts of his slumbering subjects. Despite his initial reluctance to get involved in the case, Kyoichi soon finds his resolve put to the ultimate test when the desperate Keiko dials "0" in a suicidal, last-ditch effort to capture the elusive killer. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ryuhei Matsuda, Reiko Hitomi, (more)

- 2005
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- 2005
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- 2004
- R
- Add Vital to Queue
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Japanese body horror auteur Shinya Tsukamoto, still best known in the U.S. for Tetsuo, teams with hipster icon Tadanobu Asano for the psychological drama Vital. Asano plays Hiroshi Takagi, who wakes from a coma, his memory seriously impaired, and decides, to the relief of his parents (Kazuyoshi Kushida and Lily), to go back to medical school. His memory returns slowly. Eventually, Hiroshi remembers that he had a girlfriend, Ryôko (Nami Tsukamoto) who was with him when he wrecked his car. She was killed in the crash. As he and his classmates begin to work on human cadavers, Hiroshi catches the attention of another top student, a driven and manipulative young woman named Ikumi (Kiki). The two become involved in a twisted relationship of sorts, but Hiroshi is more and more focused on his work. He comes to believe that the corpse he's working on in the lab is Ryôko's. Distraught, he goes to visit the dead girl's parents (Jun Kunimura and Hana Kino), who offer little comfort. Meanwhile, the other students are disturbed by Hiroshi's growing obsession with his "subject." Vital was shown by the Film Society of Lincoln Center as part of the 2005 Film Comment Selects. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Tadanobu Asano, Nami Tsukamoto, (more)

- 2004
- R
- Add Marebito to Queue
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Terror takes on both human and mechanical form in this independent horror film from Japanese director Takashi Shimizu. Masuoka (Shinya Tsukamoto) is a freelance photographer who has become malignly obsessed with fear. Masuoka believes there is a physical component to terror, and he is determined to find it. While his rattrap apartment has become a shrine to documents of fear, he's particularly fascinated with a videotape of Furoki (Kazuhiro Nakahara), a disturbed man committing suicide in a Tokyo subway tunnel by stabbing himself in the face. Masuoka think if he can recreate Furoki's experience, he might be able to find out what he saw at the edge of panic, and after throwing away his antidepressants he makes his way down to the place where the suicide was recorded. Masuoka finds a mysterious passageway in the tunnel, and discovers Furoki is alive and unwell underground. Masuoka also learns of a strange breed of robots who terrify people both beneath the Earth and on the surface; he also finds a strange feral woman and attempts to rescue her, but someone else has already claimed her, and wants her back immediately. Marebito (aka The Stranger From Afar) stars Shinya Tsukamoto, himself a noted Japanese horror filmmaker, best known for his experimental feature Tetsuo (aka Ironman). ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Shinya Tsukamoto, Tomomi Miyashita, (more)

- 2003
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This revealing look at cult movie director Shinya Tsukamoto, Basic Tsukamoto explores the filmmaker's history and motivations through a revealing interview. An accomplished actor as well as director, Tsukamoto reveals his creative process, along with previously unseen footage from some of his films. ~ Cammila Collar, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Shinya Tsukamoto

- 2002
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Kentaro Otani follows up on his critically praised 1998 opus Avec Mon Mari with this airy comedy about the battle between the sexes. The film centers on Asami (Asaka Seto) who is a professional player of shogi (Japanese chess) along with her sister Rina (Mikako Ichikawa). Though married to Kazuya (Shinya Tsukamoto), an elite businessman, and living in a beautiful apartment in a trendy neighborhood of Tokyo, she is suffering one loss after another on the shogi circuit. After a particularly bruising loss, she blames her marriage for her career tailspin. Just then, Rina drops by with her new boyfriend, Hiroki (Jun Murakami), a struggling artist who takes care of all the housework. When Asami sees Rina at the racing track with another guy, it sparks a series of increasingly nasty fights. Meanwhile, Asami, who is facing a humiliating downgrade on her professional rank, is scheduled to face off against her sister in a match that will decide her future. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Asaka Seto, Shinya Tsukamoto, (more)

- 2002
- R
- Add A Snake of June to Queue
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Shinya Tsukamoto's Rokugatsu No Hebi (A Snake of June) is an erotic drama abut a married couple. Rinko (Asuka Kurosawa) and her husband Shigehiko (Yuji Koutari) have seen their marriage become sexless, which frustrates Rinko. One day she receives a letter containing pictures of her pleasuring herself. The person who sends the letter calls her and reveals himself to be Igushi (Shinya Tsukamoto), a former psychiatric patient of Rinko's. Igushi begins to order Rinko to perform increasingly erotic acts. After Shigehiko finds one of Igushi's letters, the husband becomes involved in the mental games - with surprising results for their marriage. A Snake of June was screened at both the Venice Film Festival and the Toronto Film Festival. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Asuka Kurosawa, Yuji Kohtari, (more)

- 2001
- R
- Add Ichi the Killer to Queue
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Maverick auteur Takashi Miike spins this unsettling, blood-soaked yakuza yarn adapted from Hideo Yamamoto's cult manga Koroshiya 1. When mob don Anjo mysteriously disappears, his protégé Kakihara (Tadanobu Asano) vows to find the people responsible. Sporting a blond head of hair and a yawning, pierced slash for a mouth, Kakihara is no ordinary gangster and his methods are equally unorthodox; he impales one poor suspect's naked body on a series of meat hooks and then dumps hot oil on him. Meanwhile, a shadowy character known as Jijii (played by director Shinya Tsukamoto) deftly manipulates, for his own nefarious ends, Ichi (Nao Omori), an unbalanced but ruthless killing machine clad in a superhero suit. Pining for the sadistic abuse of his boss, Kakihara learns of Ichi from a Hong Kong hostess (Alien Sun) and sets out to find this fabled butcher, hoping he can inflict the pain that Kakihara craves. This film was screened at the 2001 Toronto Film Festival as a part of the Midnight Madness program. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Tadanobu Asano, Nao Omori, (more)

- 2001
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Veteran actor turned filmmaker Go Riju spins this love story about the beautiful and doomed. Chloe (Rie Tomosaka) meets Kotaro (Masatoshi Nagase) at an art show at a local mall and true to generic form, they fall in love at first sight. At their fashionable wedding attended by a host of Tokyo hipsters, Kotaro's joy over his newfound nuptial bliss boils over into letting his friend, Eisuke (Shinya Tsukamoto), borrow a chunk of his savings who has gone deep into debt buying the work of shadowy artist Kitano (Shinji Aoyama). The young couple's bliss proves to be short-lived as Chloe's doctor discovers a weird growth in her right lung in the shape of a flower. They manage to remove it, but soon the doctors discover another floral-shaped growth in her left lung, which is inoperable. Desperate to keep her alive, Kotaro bankrupts himself buying the only thing that seems to revive her health -- flowers, and lots of them. When Kotaro asks for his money back from Eisuke, he discovers that his friend blew it all on more art. Without money or flowers, Kotaro can only watch his love die. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Masatoshi Nagase, Shinya Tsukamoto, (more)

- 2000
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- Add Oboreru Hito to Queue
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Ichio Naoki makes his directorial debut with this tale about a marriage on the rocks. The film opens with Tokio (Shinya Tsukamoto) waking from a nap to discover his wife Kumiko (Reiko Kataoka) has drowned in the bathtub. He immediately calls 911 only to stop and hang up the phone. When the operator calls back, he tells her that everything is okay, even though Kumiko looks quite dead. He subsequently freaks out, tries unsuccessfully to bring her back to life, and finally passes out from drink. When he comes to the next morning, he finds that not only is Kumiko is quite alive but also that she has made him breakfast. Tokio is more than a little unnerved, unsure whether or not to write off the whole incident as a bad dream. Yet from that day on, Kumiko's flesh feels cold to Tokio and the apartment stinks of death. Soon Tokio's mental health deteriorates further, as his marriage falls apart. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Shinya Tsukamoto, Reiko Kataoka, (more)

- 2000
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- Add Dead or Alive 2: The Birds to Queue
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In spite of its title, this film bares no direct relation to Takashi Miike's rip-roarin' Dead or Alive, which is not surprising since ended with world going up in flames in the last installment. This film opens with Mizuki (Sho Aikawa), who is hired by an eccentric magic enthusiast (Tsukamoto Shinya) to off a yakuza crime lord, only to have his target wasted by a rival mobster Shuichi (Riki Takeuchi). It turns out that the two are long-lost childhood friends who grew up in an orphanage in a remote island in the Inland sea. After the crime, they find themselves drawn back to their childhood haunt. There they reconnect with another friend, Kohei (Kenichi Endo), who ended up not a hired gun, but a modest fisherman who also runs the orphanage. After giving a hilarious performance for a room full of kids, Mizuki and Shuichi decide to leave the island and to work together as hitmen. This time, however, they're killing to make a difference -- figuring that with each scumbag they ice they can save ten children when they donate their proceeds to charity. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Sho Aikawa, Riki Takeuchi, (more)

- 2000
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- 1999
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Veteran television director Ben Wada spins this bizarre romance of sorts based on a script written by acclaimed filmmaker Kaneto Shindo. The film opens with lonely recent divorcé, Iwamoto (Naoto Takenaka), drugging and abducting a comely high school student named Kuniko (Hijiri Kojima). After tying her to the bed, he does not violate or brutalize her. Instead, he tells her that he is looking for a perfect union of spirit and body and sets about to make her fall in love with him by catering to her every whim. Several McDonald's meals later, she starts to view her captor with new eyes. Meanwhile, Iwamoto deflects questions from his inquisitive and horny landlady (Eriko Watanabe), who seems just as interested in the strange sounds coming from his room as getting him in her futon. Other wacky characters in the same boarding house include gay mascara enthusiast salesman (played by director Shinya Tsukamoto) and an S & M queen (Asami Sawaki), who has a hard time keeping her job at the work place. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Naoto Takenaka, Hijiri Kojima, (more)

- 1999
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- Add Gemini to Queue
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Shinya Tsukamoto's latest work is a bit of a departure for the director of such over-the-top cult films as Tetsuo: Iron Man (1989). Though punctuated by his trademark kinetic camera work, this moody gothic horror film has the sort of brittle formalism more common in Japanese domestic dramas of the 1940s and 1950s. Dr. Yukio Daitokuji (Masahiro Motoki) is a well-to-do doctor living in a wealthy neighborhood located near a shantytown. He lives in a gorgeous old house along with his father, mother, and beautiful young wife Rin (Ryo). The couple seems happy, but Rin's lack of a past, due to amnesia, is a source of anxiety for the socially conscious doctor. The rigid respectability of the couple's upstanding bourgeois life shatters when a bizarre rag-wearing man kills off Daitokuji's parents in sudden and gruesome manners. The terror gets ratcheted up a notch when the mysterious assailant throws Daitokuji into a deep well on the family grounds and then reveals himself to be physically identical to the young doctor. The stranger assumes Daitokuji's identity by making passionate love with his wife and threatening to kill his patients. Tsukamoto brilliantly juxtaposes the oppressive opulence of the upper class, characterized by deathly silences and Kubrick-like compositions, with the grubby, desperate world of the slums, whose residents could have populated The Road Warrior (1981). While Tsukamoto's fascination with revenge, doppelgangers, and male rage, as seen in Tokyo Fist (1995) and Bullet Ballet (1998), are clearly present in this work, it also showcases the director's growing stylistic maturity. This film was screened at the 1999 Toronto Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Masahiro Motoki, Ryo, (more)

- 1998
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- Add Bullet Ballet to Queue
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Shinya Tsukamoto wrote, produced, directed, edited and stars in this Japanese thriller. Goda (Tsukamoto) grieves over the suicide of his lover (Kyoka Suzuki), wondering if he might bear some responsibility. Failing to acquire a gun, he wanders Tokyo streets, meets Chisato (Kirina Mano), and is beaten by her street-gang associates. He sets out for revenge -- only to receive more beatings from the gang. Made in black and white, Bullet Ballet was shown at the 1998 Venice Film Festival and the 1998 Toronto Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Shinya Tsukamoto, Kirina Mano, (more)

- 1998
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- Add Sunday Drive to Queue
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Hisashi Saito follows up on his 1997 opus French Dressing with this deadpan, elusive film about love, murder, and barbecues. Shinji (Takumi Tanji) and Yui (Miako Tadano) are live-in lovers who both work at the same video shop run by the slouching forty-something Okamura (played by director Shinya Tsukamoto). Just before the company barbecue, Okamura confesses to Yui that he is in love with her. Soon afterwards, Shinji confesses to Okamura that he has cheated on Yui. Suddenly, Shinji is seen on the floor in a pool of his own blood while Okamura beats a hasty retreat from the scene of the crime. Okamura then picks up Yui and calmly attends the barbecue as if nothing is wrong. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Shinya Tsukamoto, Takumi Tanji, (more)

- 1996
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Indie filmmaker Shunichi Nagasaki spins this tale about the difficult passage to adulthood by a pair of college chums who have pursued different paths. Shibata (Koji Tamaoki) is a go-getting, hugely successful real estate developer, while Anzai (Lasalle Ishii) is a low-level civil servant who is writing a novel he is too shy to show to anyone. While meeting in a bar one night, they both encounter Kiriko (Kaori Mizushima), a tall drink of water in a red dress. She is immediately taken to Shibata, and after calling his wife to tell her that she will be borrowing him for the evening, the three spend the night on a rooftop staring at the stars and looking for UFOs. As these outings become routine, Shibata's wife -- also a college friend of Anzai's -- becomes worried that he is having an affair with the mysterious Kiriko. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- 1995
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Tsuda (played by Shinya Tsukamoto) is a frustrated insurance salesman who lives a life of quiet desperation with his girlfriend Hizuru (Kaori Fujii). His job yields little fulfillment, his relationship lacks passion, and he feels perpetually fatigued, as if overwhelmed by the inhuman scale of Tokyo. His life takes a bizarre turn when his old high school acquaintance Kojima (Kohji Tsukamoto) pays him a visit. The wild-eyed professional boxer attempts to seduce Hizuru, driving Tsuda into a jealous fury. When he confronts Kojima, he ends up in the hospital and Hizuru ends up with the boxer. Seeking revenge, Tsuda begins boxing training with insane intensity. Watching his former high school chum thrash his sparring partners gives Kojima a rise of some form, bolstering his sagging career in the ring. Meanwhile, Hizuru begins her own brand of self-discovery though self-mutilation, from relatively mild tattoos and nose rings to driving metal stakes into her flesh, until she looks like a vengeful goddess from Japanese mythology. What develops has to be one of the most bizarre, masochistic love triangles ever committed to celluloid. Kojima relishes ripping the rings from Hizuru's flesh; Hizuru tenderly beats Tsuda into a bloody pulp; and Tsuda bashes his own head against the wall. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Shinya Tsukamoto, Kaori Fujii, (more)

- 1994
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- Add The Stairway to the Distant Past to Queue
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The unlucky private detective, Mike Hama, again treads the gray streets of Yokohama in this sequel to The Most Terrible Time in My Life. The adventure begins in Maiku Hama's office, located above a run-down cinema that is so desperate for cash, they charge admission to Hama's potential clients. For this case, the clumsy and nattily dressed detective begins investigating the true identity of the enigmatic crimelord of the waterfront, the White Man. He must also deal with the sudden reappearance of his estranged mother who abandoned him and his sister many years before. She works as a stripper and bills herself as Dynamite Sexy Lily. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- 1993
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- Add The Most Terrible Time in My Life to Queue
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Intrepid Japanese detective Maiku Hama is on the case in this adventure, the first of a three part comedy series. Like the Western detective character he is based on (Mike Hammer, get it?), Hama is suave, macho, and cold. Unlike his American counterpart, Hama is a total klutz. His attempts at machismo always fall flat. When he is on a case he spends more time getting beaten up than he does solving it. Hama works out of a projection booth in a Yokohama movie house. Before his clients can see him, the theater owners make them buy tickets. During his first on-screen case poor Hama must protect a Taiwanese waiter from an irate customer in a mah-jong parlor. He tries hard but ends up getting his finger cut off. He then must pry it from a dog's mouth so it can be reattached. Later the waiter hires him to locate his estranged brother. Hama takes the case and finds himself smack in the middle of a Japanese and Chinese mob war. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Masatoshi Nagase, Shiro Sano, (more)