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FATHER GEEK visits some of the JAPANESE OUTLAW MASTERS.
Ol’ FATHER GEEK has returned to his normal self again after my sociological side trip of a couple of days
ago and I’m here to file a report on THE JAPANESE OUTLAW MASTERS. If you read a story I did a few weeks
ago on Film Noir you are aware that Grauman’s Egyptian Theatre (one of the country’s most historic) at 6712
Hollywood Blvd. (about 4 blocks west of Cahuenga) in downtown tinseltown is holding a series of really cooool
film fests. Well, May 6-16th they will be hosting a fantastic collection of Japanese motion pictures that
scrupulously erupted onto Japan’s movie screens between 1960 and the budding 1970’s. This period gave rise to
some of the most superlative genre filmmaking the world has ever had the pleasure to witness; a portentous
cinemascopic kaleidoscope of lunatic yakuza shockers, samurai swashbucklers, and bargain-basement
sexploitation. Excluded from the lists of well-established archetypal Japanese cinema and buried deep in eastern
catacombs of forgotten film most of these jewels have remained lost to fans on our shores. NO LONGER! Thanks
to the Japan Foundation a honest-to-god treasure-trove of demented action from the minds of directors Seijun
Suzuki, Shunya Ito, Yasuzo Masumura, Kihachi Okamoto, Kazuo Ikahiro, Kanji Misumi, Norifumi Suzuki, and
others has found it’s way out of the darkness and into the flickering light of the Egyptian’s silver screen. Many of
these magical masterpieces will be having their U.S. premieres at this long overdue festival and most are not
available on video, laser disc, or DVD. If you liked LONEWOLF AND CUB, if you crave more films like SWORD
OF DOOM and SEVEN SAMURAI, if you love American films like EASY RIDER, GUN CRAZY, CAGED
HEAT, or even AUSTIN POWERS then this is a film festival you dare not miss. You’ve got time to make plans.
Take an early vacation, hop a jet and get your butt to this event of a lifetime. Bring your best bud, your main
squeeze, and/or your teenaged kids with you. They will all thank you, so much so your ego may never fully recover.
You will be changed, re-newed, re-born to a different view of life, love and adventure. FATHER GEEK guarantees
it!
The fun begins Thursday May 6th at 7pm with a U.S. premiere, a mint 35mm print of the extraordinary
surrealistic exploitation masterwork 1972’s FEMALE CONVICT “SCORPION” JAILHOUSE 41. Action-goddess
Melko Kaji is Scorpion the legendary inmate of jailhouse 41 in this transcendental masterpiece adapted from
manga comics by director Shunya Ito. She leads a prison break and begins a journey through barren mountains,
joyless forests, and a scorched, half-buried hamlet pursued constantly by bestial prison guards. This is violent 70’s
cinema at it’s invigorating best. Following that at 9:15 pm will be the chiaroscuro atmospherics and clandestine
rendezvous of MISSION: IRON CASTLE (1970) by the acclaimed director Kazuo Mori. This treacherous ninja spy
movie smacks of film noir and is filled with midnight deceptions and betrayals. There’s an immoral warlord,
kidnapping, paranormal killers, a patrician young lady, assassinated family and of course an unassailable fortress.
What else could you possibly want?
May 7th starts off at 9pm with one of FATHER GEEK’s favorite Japanese directors, Seijun Suzuki and his
erotic chef d’oeuvre GATE OF FLESH from 1964. It’s a story of life in the dog-eat-dog domain of vanquished
Tokyo after World War II. We follow 4 prostitutes as they descend into a social milieu of satanic barbarism. Joe
Shishido (the Japanese Bogart) plays a veteran with an annoying habit of killing U.S. Occupation troops. It is a
devastating tale of post-war underwold crime and punishment told by a true master. That is followed up by another
U.S. premiere film, hardcore action connoisseur Kinji Fukasaku’s WOLVES, PIGS, AND PEOPLE. This 1964
yakuza motion picture features Ken Takakura as a lone-wolf hoodlum that turns on his yakuza clan in glorious
noir style bringing tragedy to his family and all envolved,
May 8th gets an early start at 6:30pm with the 1966 flirting hit women a-go-go gangster/spy tongue-in-cheek
burlesque BLACK TIGHT KILLERS. (Mike Myers eat your heart out) Director Yasuharu Hasebe’s extraordinary
clique of pussycat assassins use wads of bubblegum and scalpel-sharp 45rpm records to carryout their assignments.
This will mark the 1st American screening of this talented filmmaker’s premiere production. At 8:30pm things get
serious, deadly serious at the old Egyptian. 1962’s intense HARA KIRI (Seppuku) by legendary director Masaki
Kobayashi fills the screen with the skirmish between feudal ethos and compassion in the Japanese mind’s eye.
Master composer Toru Takemitsu weaves a scarily strident score thru the ruthless twists and turns to a splintering
climatic use of the samurai code of honor in this film that uses tense dark drama as meditation.
Sunday the 9th gets on the way at 4pm with perhaps the greatest of all yakuza films Masashiro Shinoda’s 1962
standout hit PALE FLOWER with titillation pursuing Marlko Kaga, who looks like some convoluted caricature of
Audrey Hepburn. Takemitsu turns in another amazing score as we are led on a lightning fast tour of Tokyo’s seedy
underworld of gaming dens and passionless murderers. At 6:15 pm a unbalanced, unseeing sculptor kidnaps an
artist model (Mako Midori) in 1969’s BLIND BEAST. Master director Yasuzo Masumura chisels a memorial of
erotic terror in a bucolic depository of horror as we are led through a maze of immense female body parts that is as
wicked as it is demented. Just tooo weirdly cooool!
We pick up again on Friday the 14th at 7pm for the start of Shintaro Katsu night. The 1st feature is Yasuzo
Masumura’s famous anti-war epic HOODLUM SOLDIER, a kinetic black comedy of the WWII Manchurian front.
At once irreverent and sadistic it is punctuated by perverse violence and razor-sharp comedy as Katsu is lead into
moments of jaw-dropping mayhem. 9:15 sees the start of a blind swordsman double feature with 1964’s FIGHT
ZATO ICHI FIGHT!!! See Katsu at his superstar best as he hacks his way thru a gauntlet bounty hunters with a
baby in his arms. The wandering ronin blends the pathos of Chaplin with the hardedged authority of Clint
Eastwood in this the 3rd year of the Ichi series. ZATO ICHI AND THE CHEST OF GOLD is next. Also from 64
this time he is pitted against LONE WOLF AND CUB’s Tomisaburo Wakayama as a sadistic whip wielding
villain in this breathless cliffhanger. Be prepared for a climax with one of the most dynamic, nerve wracking duels
in the history of film making.
Saturday starts real early with THE WANDERERS (1973) at 4pm. This Toho film of yakuza youths is a
bleakly hilarious film that strips away any code of honor. It is followed at 6:30 by HIRUKO, THE GOBLIN a
hallucinatory horror film from 1991. Shinya Tsukamoto directed this dream-like horror film that deals with the
gate to hell, blue-skinned ghosts and deamon hunting. At 8:30 JAILHOUSE 41 repeats followed by SCHOOL OF
THE HOLY BEASTS from 1974. Sexploitation guru Norifumi Suzuki plunges us into a maelstrom of hidden
torture, blasphemous rites and masochistic desires. He pushes us thru a gauntlet of rose-thorns in this shocking
masterpiece which will also be shown at 7pm on the 7th.
May 16 marks the end of our Japanese culture tour with 5pm’s 1966 classic RED ANGEL by Yasuzo
Masumura. Set in the field hospitals of the Manchuran front this is no MASH. It is real front-line horror and this is
the 1st time it has shown in America. Frank and disillusioning it is a beautiful picture of a not too pretty scene.
The festival ends on a bang with 1965’s SAMURAI ASSASSIN starring the great Toshiro Mifune. Director
Kihachi Okamoto and writer Shinobu Hashimoto offer up one of the most perverse twist endings in the history of
Japanese cinema in this fever-pitched massacre in the snow. Brillant film, beautifully executed start to finish. Hope
to see you there. FATHER GEEK signing off for now.
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As I was reading FGs article I was wondering whos more knowledgable about film, QT or FG. It would be a good match of film trivia wit. Don't you think?
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...wish I could be there! I was at the Asian/Fantasy Film Festival in Toronto and they had some way cool flicks and this looks even better. I really have to move.
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Hi. My first post to Talk Back. Just wanted to share some background info on one of the excellent actors listed above - Ken Takakura (or Takakura Ken as the Japanese would say). Ken has been in a handful of US produced movies, and while his uber-coolness may not have been apparent in Mr. Baseball (he was the manager), you can catch glimpses of it in Black Rain, opposite Michael Douglas and Andy Garcia. I mean any actor who gets to do kendo (Japanese fencing) AND sing a Ray Charles tune in the same movie, has got it going on.
Another chance to see Takakura Ken is with Robert Mitchum in the 70's (?) thriller The Yakuza. He plays a former Yakuza clan leader opposite Mitchum's American PI. There is some interesting psychological drama based on both character's mutual history in Post-WWI Occupied Japan. But really Ken is simply a bad-ass. The scene where he takes on katana wielding assasins armed only with a ten speed bike is great. That's all, thanks for listening -
Sorry -- very, VERY sorry -- to do this. But. HEE HEE HEE, I GET TO GO 'CAUSE I LIVE IN L.A. AND PUT UP WITH ALL THE RIOTS, EARTHQUAKES AND LAME SITCOM JOKES ABOUT LIFE IN L.A., AND THIS IS WHY I DO IT!!! Again, sorry. I love the Cinematheque; their Spaghetti Western festival was one of the great transcendent movie experiences in my life. I also attended the recent noir festival, and especially dug the NIGHTMARE ALLEY print. What a movie!
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I was fortunate enough to see "Akai Tenshi" (Red Angel) (sorry FG, LA aint the premiere, we gots cultcha up in Berkeley too) and "Moju" (Blind Beast) at the Pacific Film Archive's Masamura Festival and all I can say is DON'T MISS IT! It is a bit difficult dealing with the whole "rape" obsession in japanese film but I sort of accept it as fetishized icon. I'm dying to see "Gate of Flesh"....ahhh,well..
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He'll have to pick up the mess himself, though.
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