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Branded to Kill
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Directed by Seijun Suzuki.
A delirious fever dream of a film, Seijun Suzuki's Branded to Kill takes the familiar elements of "B"-movie crime drama and transforms them into something outrageously bizarre and unexpectedly poetic. The film's story centers on Hanada, a.k.a. "No. 3 Killer," the third-best hit man in Japanese organized crime. Near the top of his game, his fortunes change when he encounters Misako, a mysterious, death-obsessed woman who brings him a particularly difficult mission. In a famous moment indicative of the film's eccentric sensibility, a butterfly lands on his gun's sight at the exact moment he pulls the trigger, causing him to miss the shot. This failure means that the killer becomes the target, and must run for his life from his former employers, and the mysterious "No. 1 Killer." While the film does contain some spectacular action sequences, the story is played less as a suspense thriller than as a surrealistic, psychosexual nightmare, filled with grotesque imagery and strange touches, from Hanada's fetish for the smell of boiling rice, to Misako's use of a dead bird's corpse as a rear-view mirror decoration. Indeed, the narrative is at times so fragmented that it is often difficult to decipher exactly what is happening; however, the striking black-and-white cinematography and avant-garde editing provide the film with a dream logic all its own. Now considered by many critics a maverick classic comparable to the works of Samuel Fuller or Jean-Luc Godard, the film was less well received at the time of its original release, with its utter strangeness leading to director Suzuki's firing from the Nikkatsu studio and the near destruction of his career. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide
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unclefesteringunclefestering Re:Foreign Gems
by unclefestering in Friends of Foreign Flicks
hasn't rated it.
"[quote user="Risselada"] I see he's been very prolific, so I've only seen quite a small percentage of his films. Specifically I've seen Branded to Kill, Tokyo Drifter, Youth of the Beast, and Fighting Elegy, and every single one of those are five stars to me! [/quote] Branded to Kill is my favorite of his. And if you want to watch him is his prime in terms of a balance of plot and visuals, you are looking in the right era. It is his later works like Pistol Opera where the visuals take over completely and wipe out the plot. Don't get me wrong the visuals of his later work are stunning. but it lacks the pure craft of his movies from the 60s and 70s. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Foreign Gems
by Risselada in Friends of Foreign Flicks
loved it.
"I see he's been very prolific, so I've only seen quite a small percentage of his films. Specifically I've seen Branded to Kill, Tokyo Drifter, Youth of the Beast, and Fighting Elegy, and every single one of those are five stars to me! " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Latest unknown fave
by Risselada in Viewing with a purpose
loved it.
"Out of those I've seen Tokyo Drifter and Branded to Kill.Have you seen Youth of the Beast? I would highly recommend that one. There are some colorful compositions in that one that rival Tokyo Drifter.Oh and there are some good special features on the DVD including an interview with Jo Shishido where he talks about the regret for getting those outrageous cheek implants! " [More]
PuhnnerPuhnner Re: Latest unknown fave
by Puhnner in Viewing with a purpose
loved it.
"Man oh man is his work great!Pistol OperaBranded to KillTokyo DrifterTattooed LifeHe has 48 listed on Spout! I need to see 'em all!!! " [More]
analogzombieanalogzombie Seijun Suzuki
by analogzombie in analogzombie Blog
hasn't rated it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"Unless you’re a fan of cult Japanese film, chances are you don’t know who Seijun Suzuki is. One way to describe him would be a studio hack director for Nikkatsu who primarily worked in the 60’s. You’d be just as justified in describing his as an auteur working within a genre to find his niche. Or even as a visual maverick whose flare for the garish has left an indelible mark on cinema. Yes you could refer to him as all those things and more, but you’d be pompous. What’s worse is that you’d be doing a disservice to the man and his films. So we’re going to take a more humanist look at one of the best directors Japan has ever produced. To understand Seijun Suzuki’s place in film you have to understand how the Japanese film industry operated for the better part of the last century. The studios in Japan signed directors, actors, lighting technicians, and everybody else who worked in movies, to contracts obligating them to ... " [More]
PuhnnerPuhnner Re: Lack of Updates
by Puhnner in From Asia With Love
loved it.
"Here are a couple that I have seen recently that were just great.Sex and FuryDeadly Outlaw: RekkaA Scene at the SeaBranded to Killand here are a few more for your list:Akira Kurosawa's DreamsVisitor QGozuUgestuRed BeardThe Bad Sleep WellBlackmail is my LifeBrotherChaosDodes Ka-denGo, Go Second Time VirginHarakiri just my thoughts... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Like an unholy marriage of Goldfinger (1964) and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919), Branded to Kill is a brilliantly weird reductio ad absurdum of the Japanese gangster flick that still manages to shock, thrill, and entertain. Director Seijun Suzuki presents a hallucinatory ultra-hip world of compulsive sex, frenzied violence, and boiling rice, held together with only the barest attention to logic or narrative coherence. Marked by Pop Art aesthetics, loopy cinematic devices, and disorienting leaps of narrative, it leaves the viewer breathless with its sheer stylistic invention. Yet Branded almost ended Suzuki's career. Executives at Nikkatsu Studios were already growing increasingly impatient with the two-fisted flamboyance of such films as Tokyo Drifter (1966) and Youth of the Beast (1963), and Branded was the straw broke the camel's back; Suzuki was promptly sacked by engaged studio heads. Now Suzuki is recognized as Japan's great cinematic maverick and Branded to Kill is considered one his finest works. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 



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