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Pistol Opera Director: Seijun Suzuki Number of Items: 1 Format: Color Audience Rating: Unrated Running Time: 112 minutes Studio: Media Blasters, Inc Product Group: DVD Release Date: 2003-06-24 Buy from Amazon |
From Description As powerful and energetic as ever, 78-year old director Seijun Suzuki, creates a stunningly lurid, extreme tale of a woman assassins (portrayed by new sensation Makiko Esumi) surreal rise in the criminal underworld. Thirty-three years later, this master of the pulp thriller reworks his own BRANDED TO KILL into a totally new, jaw-dropping experience! The original BRANDED TO KILL (1967, KOROSHI NO RAKUIN, starring Jo Shishido, Mariko Ogawa, Anne Mari) is the stylish action movie that has been the subject of homage from world-class directors such as John Woo, Quentin Tarantino, and Jim Jarmusch. Its eccentric, eye-popping images and extreme action is fast earning PISTOL OPERA a worldwide cult following. |
"Impressive amalgamation of styles." Picture Sergio Leonne crossed with John Woo and then add a big dash of Martha Grahmm. A visually unique film, a remake of Suzuki's 1967 film Branded to Kill, which (obliquely) tells the story of a young hit-person named Stray Cat (Brian Setzer jokes intentionally witheld) who has been forced into a killing tournament with other ranked assasins. The aspect of this film that holds it in such sharp relief from others in the genre is the visualization. Suzuki use a few conventional setups, but on the whole the film shows an expresionist representation of the story taking place. There are even portions of Pistol Opera where dance becomes the intergral means of communicating plot to a viewer. While it can be a bit confusing at times (I still don't get the deal with the bulldozer and the poppies) and has a taste of being filmed in a hurry (there was one scene where I stopped counting boom shots around 10 and a very important scene where someone runs into a "tree" and nearly knocks the flimsy thing over), these are nitpicks. I just finished watching this film and wanted to write this while the experiance is fresh in my mind. My advice is to relax. If a story element has you frowning, give it a minute and things should become clear. Even if it doesn't, don't worry about it. This is a rad flick, a cool story with awesome visual impact. Then watch it a second time and see if you can figure out what was going on with that dang bulldozer. "Innocence, intensity, and intractability" Plot doesn't count. Not with this baby. It doesn't matter about who's the No. 3 killer or who's No. 1 or No. 5 or...whatever. What matters, if it can be stated that way, is the constant barrage of visuals and the trying to be hip dialogue. This is a wacky, peculiar movie. Some folks dismiss it as being a big bunch of nothing--very likely because there is no real linear plot. Some tout it as being a work of genius--possibly because, in addition to it having no real linear plot it has all kinds of surreal imagery and complete non-sequiturs (sp.?) plotwise, logic-wise, character-wise, and any other kind of way-wise. What I'm gonna do here is to say that it does have some elements of interest but that for anyone who loves character and/or plot development, this is NOT gonna do it for ya. What we DO know is that the main character is a young woman, Stray Cat, who is the No. 3 killer and that there is a mysterious woman she hangs out with who is her "agent" and also that she, Stray Cat, has a much younger sister who wants to learn from her older sibling how to kill. We also meet Hundred Eyes, the No. 1 killer, Painless Man, the No. 5 killer--a long-bearded American who speaks Japanese, Teacher, the No. 2 killer--a man in a wheelchair, and various other "Numbers" all of whom have colorful names and, again, no character development at all. The only real connection this has, it seems to me, to Branded to Kill, Suzuki's delirious 1967 film, is the similarity of the presence of "No. 1" and "No. 2" and all that. Other than that, this film is radically different. Aside from the difference in color (Branded to Kill is in black & white; Pistol Opera is in blazing color, similar to Tokyo Drifter), Pistol Opera makes use of so many hallucinatory/dream sequences that it is virtually impossible to distinguish the "real" from the "non-real". This seems to be the point of the whole thing, in fact. That, and the juxtaposition of innocence with mortality. The younger sister is the representation of innocence who her older sibling, Stray Cat, does not want to corrupt by teaching her how to kill, and with whom Stray Cat has a strong bond. The No. 3 killer (i.e., Stray Cat) wants to try to have her cake and eat it too. She wants to be No. 3, or even higher, but she also wants the innocence of her younger sister. Is this an "art film" analysis? Gee, I dunno. This is just the way it struck me when I saw the film. The intensity of the brilliant colors is nothing new for Suzuki; as mentioned previously, he did this before with Tokyo Drifter and other films as well. But here he, in essence, goes overboard. The yellows are blindingly bright, as are various other hues. Intensity, too, is obvious in the hipper than hip, often arch dialogue that smacks the viewer in the mental face all the time. It never lets up. This wacky fusion of innocence and intensity marks Suzuki as an original who has no intention of giving up on how to push style so far, so hard, and so frequently that while the viewer may not cotton to this film at all, he won't soon forget it. Not my kind of film...but truly different, unique, and a fascinating piece of cinema. Wacky to the max. Recommended? Wow, who knows??? "Seijun slipps a gear . . ." or lose the plot, which ever cliche works for ya, because this movie doesn't. I watched the whole thing a 2x speed (cause you can still read the subtitles) and I was still bored senseless. Branded To Kill is so much more brilliant and nuanced than this stilted peice of pretentious dreck, the comparison can't even be made. Let's no forget some utterly pointless lesbian undertones and underage nudity. About the only thing that held my interest was Stray Cat; she has a wonderful face. Too bad it's this quagmire of a film. "Pistol Opera is not Very Good" I had big expectations for this movie after seeing the trailer for it but I was very dissapointed. The movie has some very nice visuals and is quite beautiful. As well a few of the characters are interesting like the sneezing assasin or the young girl who always carries a lantern. Despite this it is very painful to watch. It is as though the director tried to make a movie into one huge movie trailer. The story is chaotic and there isn't enough to keep your attention. The only thing remarkable about this movie is the nude scenes with a 14 year old girl that push sexual taboos. Maybe the film was an excuse for the 78 year old director to see a REALLY young girl naked. If you are expecting it to be like Ichi the Killer or Versus than you will probably not like it. At such a steep price you should rent before you buy. "Suzuki certainly hasn't mellowed..." Pistol Opera is a difficult movie to watch. Scenes do not connect in a standard linear fashion. Movements are stylized, drawing more inspiration from modern dance movements than Tarentino-esque action flicks. Makiko-chan makes a compelling heroine, but we never get any insight on her character or any others. And the tempo of the movie slows towards the end, repeating certain shots, increasing the tedium and the desire for a more meaningful conclusion, which never comes. Why four stars then? Suzuki is a master of this kind of cinematic tone-poem, and this is probably his most unrestrained work yet. It was just this bizarre vision which got him black-listed back in the 60's, and it comforting that he has lost none of his confidence in his own extremely unconventional style. Often visually stunning and filmed in beautiful primary colors (as opposed to "Branded to Kill", the 'prequel' which was in B&W), "Pistol Opera" gets off on its own audaciousness and if you're ready for a REALLY different trip to the movies, then maybe you're ready for this baby |