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Visitor Q
Director: Takashi Miike
Number of Items: 1
Format: Color
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Running Time: 90 minutes
Studio: Media Blasters, Inc
Product Group: DVD
Release Date: 2002-11-26

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"No cannibalism!"
If you have never seen a a Takasha Miike film, don't make this your first. If you found this movie because some freak like me happened to buy it along with something normal and you got a "customers who bought blank also bought Visitor Q" then click the back button right away!

As the subject says, there is absolutely no cannibalism in this movie! It has everything else though, including things I never imagined. I bought this movie sight unseen because of who directed it, and until that moment I never realized that I had a complete and total lack of movies about incest, lactational-watersports, and necrophilia. This movie took care of all three in one fell swoop.

Interestingly, this movie is fairly simple and straightforward compared to movies like Audition, and The Happiness of the Katakuris. I had to watch those movies several times (and if you've never seen Audition you can't imagine how hard that can be) before I felt that I had a grasp of what was going on. Visitor Q is pretty simple: an angel comes to help a dysfunctional family get back together. That said, don't be fooled into complacency! Watch this movie alone first, and then think long and hard about who you plan to show it too

There are two major annoyances in the film. One is that since it is Japanese, they blur out things that would be perfectly OK in an American movie. The other is that a microphone and a stage-hand are visible in a mirror during a fairly long scene, and they aren't hard to spot either. They must not have had enough budget to reshoot that terrible mistake.



"Off the wall satire on reality TV (4 1/2 stars)"
This is the type of film I would love to see made here in America. Not that I want theatres filled with excessive violence, incest, and necrophilia; it's that this film goes as far out as it wants to and never looks back. That kind of ballsy satire is what we need; anything to keep from being safe and PG-secure. Back to the point: this is an extremely edgy take on reality programming which features a truly disturbed family. Taboos are violated almost at random in the film's attempt to push and maintain it's distance from the expected well behaved Japanese family. As far as I'm concerned it works, and works well.

This is not to say Visitor Q is an enjoyable watch, or a film you'd recommend to your friends, but you might if you like your entertainment off the wall and far, far from conventional. The basic plot follows a distorted nuclear family as they go through their day. Nothing is normal or expected in what they do, or more shockingly, how they react to each other's behaviors. It's the lack of response that's the kicker here, and you should really see it for yourself.

I really did like this film. Even though it's not a pleasant watch I think anyone who likes raw unrestrained films that want to push your buttons and not only do so but have very good reasons to in the first place should get their hands on this one.



"Transgressive cinema at its best"
Remarkably talented filmmaker Takashi Miike scores again with this demented fable. Before seeing Visitor Q I was anticipating something much faster and flashier, more along the lines of his brilliant yakuza films Dead or Alive and City of Lost Souls. Instead, Visitor Q is slow and almost sedate, closer in tone to the incredible Audition. The film is an ambiguous, absurd black comedy. VERY black, that is. Scenes dealing explicitly with incest, copious lactation and necrophilia insure that this is not something you'd want to watch with your mom. But this isn't just a shock-fest. The film raises all sorts of questions, some dealing with the narrative itself (Just who or what IS the titular visitor?), some dealing with the nature of family and conventional morality. For the open-minded viewer, this unique film is a must.



"Visitor Q"
I happened upon this little masterpiece while visiting my sister in Minneapolis. I saw it at a local art gallery by the name of "The Walker". I think, I was probably the only one out of the three of us who attended in our small group who absolutely loved this film. It was so demented, so twisted, and so unbelievably hilarious, that I began to regret living in Florida, where such films are non-existant. No heavy worded review here, simply a solid thumbs up. If you enjoy cynicism, creatively revamped, and artfully employed... you'll love this film. Its almost like taking every fault you might find with a family, amplifying it to an astounding end, and then just taking a sharp left into insensability. This film has it all, an abusive son who is then bullied by his peers, a lactating mother hooked on heroin, a father who not only delves in necrophelia, but lest we forget incest, and a number of other things. Thats alright however, as everyone is sucking on mummys nipples at the end. Its then you smack yourself in the face with the proverbial hand of understanding, and exclaim... "Oh now I get it". Yeah... its great.



"A touching celebration of family values"
A subversive fable from the brilliant Takashi Miike, Visitor Q is some kind of demented masterpiece. I detect diverse influences here, from Bunuel (his delight in mocking bourgeois values) to Kubrick (static, symmetrical compositions) to absurdism and surrealist film in general. Miike presents us with a family that gives new meaning to the word "dysfunctional." The father is a TV reporter so desperate for sensational topics to tackle that he videotapes himself having sex with his prostitute daughter. He placidly eats his supper while his teenage son whips and beats the mother, who also works as a prostitute. One day the father brings home a mysterious guest (the titular Visitor, although his name is never given) who casually exerts an almost godlike power over the family, bringing them together in a most unexpected manner. The film is very funny at times, sometimes in an almost slapstick way, sometimes in a VERY dark, twisted way. There's plenty of room for debate. Who or what is Visitor Q? What exactly has he done and what does it say about the nature of familial love? This daring film will haunt you for days after seeing it.






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