Outrage (2010)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 (720x480) | 01:49:20 | 7,95 Gb
Audio: Japanese AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps | Subs: English, Spanish
Genre: Crime, Drama
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 (720x480) | 01:49:20 | 7,95 Gb
Audio: Japanese AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps | Subs: English, Spanish
Genre: Crime, Drama
In a ruthless battle for power, several yakuza clans vie for the favor of their head family in the Japanese underworld. The rival bosses seek to rise through the ranks by scheming and making allegiances sworn over saké. Long-time yakuza Otomo has seen his kind go from elaborate body tattoos and severed fingertips to becoming important players on the stock market. Theirs is a never-ending struggle to end up on top, or at least survive, in a corrupt world where there are no heroes but constant betrayal and vengeance.
IMDB
A while back, Takeshi Kitano was one of Japan's top entertainers. He has been a comedian, painter, writer, singer, and TV show host in addition to being one of the country's most interesting film directors, screenwriters, and actors (he also edits his own films). Over the years, he has created a number of vicious gangster and crime films, usually featuring a unique kind of slow boil, or rather, stillness juxtaposed with sudden explosions of brutal violence.
I have no idea if Kitano – who acts under his stage name "Beat" Takeshi – is still as popular today in Japan as he was 20 years ago. But in this country, he has been largely absent since The Blind Swordsman: Zatoichi was released here in 2004. Thus his new movie Outrage may have a different feel to audiences here, more like a comeback or an attempt to re-capture some old, former glory. Happily, Outrage is super-cool; it's inventive, funny, and shocking enough that it really doesn't matter much where Kitano has been. He's back now.
Takeshi plays Otomo, a right-hand man to a top Yazkuza gangster, Ikemoto (Jun Kunimura). During a meeting with the "Chairman" (Soichiro Kitamura), Ikemoto is ordered to sever his ties with a lower-level gangster, Murase (Renji Ishibashi), even though they are sworn brothers. Ikemoto orders Otomo to open an office on Murase's turf and start a small skirmish with him. He does, over an unpaid bill in a Yakuza nightclub. In true Kitano style, this small thing turns into an enormous turf war, with dozens of dead bodies, slashed faces, severed fingers, and painful dental work.
In this film, Kitano has picked up the pace a bit from his earlier gangster pictures Sonatine and Fireworks, and he drops the odd humor that was present in Zatoichi. Now his deadpan humor returns, based on that previously mentioned cross between stillness and violence. In one scene, Otomo is in the bathroom, wiping blood from his nose after a skirmish. An explosion rocks the building outside; his reaction is to move his head a little to the left. Then, the "before" and "after" shots of the affected room provide a further laugh. These laughs, of course, arise from the quality of the film's violence. Kitano's brand of shock is specifically designed to result in a release of laughter.
The storytelling isn't as crisp as it could be, and it's sometimes not easy to follow the dozens of characters and the intricate double-crosses and chess moves between them. And I was hoping that the ending would hold more of a zinger than it actually does. (Though Kitano is reportedly at work on a sequel.) But overall, this is a terrific movie for those that don't mind a dash of gallows humor in their crime stories.
Special Features:
- Cast Interviews: Making Outrage
- Cast Panel Interview
- Premiere Q&A
- Outrage Inside Out: Behind the Scenes Documentary
- Cannes Red Carpet Premiere with Takeshi Kitano
- U.S. and International Trailers
Many Thanks to Original uploader.
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