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Review - The Wolves

Posted by kevin at 12:52am EDT on Saturday, September 6, 2008

Filed under: Crime, Drama

The Wolves cover art

In 1971 Toho Studios tried its hand at the yakuza chivalry (ninkyo) genre with Hideo Gosha’s The Wolves. For the better part of a decade ninkyo had been dominated by rival studio Toei, which had created a niche with films that often starred Ken Takakura as an honorable yakuza who rigidly sticks to the old-fashioned yakuza code even when surrounded by corruption and ruthless violence. Gosha’s offering, starring Tatsuya Nakadai, doesn’t attempt to stray from this established formula—quite the opposite, in fact—but it does offer a surprising level of character depth and gritty realism that should appeal to fans of yakuza eiga as well as cinema fans in general.

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Review - Down the Drain

Posted by kevin at 4:16pm EDT on Thursday, September 4, 2008

Filed under: Comedy, No US distribution

Down the Drain cover art

Director Shinobu Yaguchi must have a really good therapist, because over the span of his 15-year career his films have been getting progressively more upbeat and, dare I say it; downright bubbly. Falling in line with that logic—but in reverse—is his debut effort Down the Drain (Hadashi no Picnic), the story of a typical teenage girl named Junco (Saori Serikawa) who commits a fairly innocuous crime only to see her life spiral out of control with one unbelievable chain of bad luck after another. Who knew the guy that brought us Waterboys and Swing Girls could have such a mean streak?

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Naomi Kawase returns with ‘Seven Nights’

Posted by kevin at 1:24am EDT on Thursday, September 4, 2008

Filed under: Drama, Future releases, New trailers

A year and a half after winning the Grand prix at Cannes with what can only be described as a filmgasm for critics, “The Mourning Forest”, Naomi Kawase will attempt to follow up that massive success with Seven Nights (Nana yo Machi); a relatively simple story about a woman who gets lost in Thailand and ends up “finding herself” through the art of traditional Thai massage.

The trailer is pretty self-explanatory but the basic premise is that the woman named Ayako (… or Saiko?), played by Kyoko Hasegawa (Love Never to End, The Sword of Alexander), has a some sort of miscommunication with her taxi driver while in Thailand and ends up getting dropped off with a Thai woman and a French tourist (Grégoire Colin). Over the course of her 7 nights stuck there she gradually makes the transition from a stressed-out ball of rage to completely mellow and friendly, largely due to the therapeutic effect of Thai massage, but also because of her relationship with Colin’s character.

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Review - Scrap Heaven

Posted by kevin at 3:54pm EDT on Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Filed under: Drama

Scrap Heaven cover art

If David Fincher’s “Fight Club” extolled the virtues of the anti-establishment way of life with its unbridled machismo and nonstop assault on commercialism, Sang-Il Lee’s Scrap Heaven takes the road less poignant; the result being a movie that, while sufficiently entertaining as the arthouse equivalent of a popcorn flick, lacks the cleverness and clarity of intent that could have put it over the top.

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‘The Magic Hour’ with English subs!

Posted by kevin at 4:19am EDT on Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Filed under: DVD releases

It’s always a nice surprise when you discover a Japanese R2 DVD release will have English subtitles. Not only because we get to watch the movie months, if not years ahead of the normal turn-around, but because Japanese DVD releases are usually so much better than the treatments we get here in the US. The downside? They’re expensive as hell.

Japanese distributor Pony Canyon is big on offering English subs with their releases, and thankfully they’ve continued that trend with their release of Koki Mitani’s smash hit, The Magic Hour, due out December 3rd. There will be 3 versions: Standard Edition, Special Edition (standard disc + bonus features disc), and Blu-ray. See links below for specs.

Standard Edition DVD
Special Edition DVD
Blu-ray

Also, if you haven’t been paying attention to our DVD release schedule (RSS feed), there have been a few other notable R2 DVDs with English subs released or announced recently:

The Glory of Team Batista
Kekkon Shiyo yo
Bokutachi to Chuzai-san no 700-nichi Senso
Fine, Totally Fine
Gachi Boy
Cyborg She
Shaolin Girl

Some notable releases that don’t have subs? “Cyborg She”, “Real Onigokko”, and “Sushi King Goes to New York”. That’s cold.

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