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Black Tight Killers (1966)

Cast: Akira Kobayashi, Chieko Matsubara, Yuriko Sawanouchi
Director: Yasuharu Hasebe
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Rating: Not Rated
Studio: Image Entertainment/American Cinematheque
Genre: Action, Foreign, Japan
Running Time: 84 min.
Languages: Japanese
Subtitles: English
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This title is currently out of print.

Synopsis
Former assistant director to maverick auteur Seijun Suzuki, Yasuharu Hasebe made his directorial debut with this lurid, bizarre gangster-spy yarn. The film opens on Daisuke Honda (played by matinee idol Akira Kobayashi), a hard-bitten war photographer fresh from the trenches of Vietnam. On the plane back to Tokyo, he happens upon stewardess Yuriko Sawanouchi (Chieko Matsubara, who also starred in Suzuki's masterpiece Tokyo Drifter) and soon our suave protagonist is entertaining the well-coifed lass at the sort of jazz bar one could easily imagine in La Dolce Vita. Unfortunately, their outing is marred by a shadowy foreigner who seems to have dark-hearted designs on Honda's date. As he moves in to protect Yuriko, the foreigner is suddenly attacked by a trio of leather-clad female ninjas with perfect hair. They kill the stalker and attack Honda with blades hidden in compacts and bubble gum bullets. As he reports the murder to the police from a pay phone, Yuriko is suddenly nabbed and stuffed in the trunk of a tail-finned Thunderbird. At the Momochi Ninja Research Institute where he makes his home, Honda wakes up from a nightmare about homicidal female ninjas go-go dancing on a Technicolor set, and takes off to investigate Yuriko's disappearance further. As the plot grows ever more loopy and labyrinthine, Honda befriends his former compact-wielding assailants and joins forces to fight a nefarious band of foreigners looking for some wartime gold that Yuriko's army colonel father hid on a remote deserted island. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

GreenCine Member Reviews

Ninja Girl Go-Go Dancers in Big Batman Color by auntie February 24, 2004 - 5:45 AM PST
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3 out of 3 members found this review helpful
Hullabaloo meets Matt Helm in this stunningly saturated debut by former Seijun Suzuki assistant Yasuharu Hasebe. This loses some of the harshness of Suzuki's themes yet retains some of his style, as well as one of his stars: Chieko Matsubara.

Bad girls with style and great dance moves, campy karate fights, and the requisite car chase in a convertible all left me laughing yet still invested enough to enjoy the movie and subsequent action. The rear-projected driving scenes and cut-away studio sequences alone were worth my time. Tarantino fans will definitely enjoy this pop-art period piece -- and also recognize many of the inspirations and sources for his uh...homages too.







GreenCine Member Rating
12345678910

(Average 6.97)
38 Votes
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Tripped out Japanese Flicks
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Odd, disjointed, or just plain weird films from Japan
CVanWagner
Quentin T. Apparently Hearts These Films
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Some films obviously referenced/ripped off in Kill Bill. I would add Godard's "Made In USA" as well. MSG me any others that you catch.
chabib

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