Sukiyaki Western Django
Japan
2007
The white clad Genji, led by Yoshitsune and the red clad Heike led by Kiyomori, face off once again in a poor mountain town. Both sides searching for a legendary treasure that may be buried there. A lone gunman, burdened with emotional scars but blessed with incredible shooting skills, drifts into town. Expectations reach boiling point as everyone wonders which gang the gunman will finally decide to join. Dirty tricks, betrayal, desire and love collide as the situation erupts into a final, explosive showdown.
A contemporary of such noted film experimentalists as Tetsuo: The Iron Man [1989, maverick Japanese workhorse director Takashi Miike became one of the most talked about filmmakers in the international festival circuit. Despite the derailed manic energy of the aforementioned films, it was the stark relationship drama turned sadistic nightmare Audition that found the director receiving increasing international exposure. Audition succeeded in pulling the rug from under viewers as it turned the age-old image of the submissive Japanese female on its head with a shocking and nearly unbearable finale that had many horrified viewers shell-shocked. Born in Osaka, Japan, in 1960, Miike spent his childhood growing up in Osaka, where he eventually opted to study filmmaking at the Yokohama Academy of Visual Arts. Inspired more by Bruce Lee than Seijun Suzuki, Miike’s distinctive style came more as a result of not studying the traditional rules of filmmaking than a conscious attempt to break them… read more
from chopping a foot with a piano string to catching a punch with a mouth, from an earth shattering ending to sucking a woman’s nipple until milk burst out. takashi miike has almost done it all. well… read review
Hyper-stylized Japanese spaghetti western from director Takashi Miike is pretty entertaining – despite a hokey framing device starring an embarrassing Quentin Tarantino. The story is nothing extraordinary… read review
It kind of fell apart after the opening. I was so excited at first since it looked like a comedy version of ‘Big Bang Love’, with the formal fuckery, but the story just lacked so much that the visual… read review