Product Details
Sabu

Sabu
Directed by Takashi Miike

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Product Description

Takashi Miike (Full Metal Yakuza, The Black Society Trilogy), one of the most prolific directors in chambara today delivers a haunting tale set in the Tokugawa Era. Framed for a crime he did not commit, Eiji is subjected to the harsh realities of the Ishikawa Island workhouse. Sabu, Eiji’s longtime friend, must discover who is responsible for Eiji’s incarceration, before prison life consumes him completely. Adapted from the classic Japanese rites of passage novel by Shugoro Yamamoto, Miike uses the work to his own purpose with his usual flair.

STARRING: Tatsuya Fujiwara – Eiji Satoshi Tsumabuki – Sabu Tomoko Tabata – Onabu Kazue Fukiishi - Osue

Directed by Takashi Miike

EXTRAS:
THE MAKING OF SABU
2 TAKASHI MIIKE INTERVIEWS
INTERVIEW WITH MALE LEADS TATSUYA FUJIWARA & SATOSHI TSUMABUKI
INTERVIEW WITH FEMALE LEADS TOMOKO TABATA & KAZUE FUKIISHI
BIOGRAPHIES/FILMOGRAPHIES
ORIGINAL MOVIE TRAILER
ORIGINAL TV TRAILER
ARTWORK/PROMOTIONAL MATERIAL
SCENE SELECTION.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #103031 in DVD
  • Released on: 2004-06-29
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.77:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: Japanese
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 122 minutes

Customer Reviews

Costume drama + Takashi Miike = Surprisingly good.4
Sabu (Takashi Miike, 2002)

To say this movie surprised me would be an understatement. I guess it shouldn't have, being a made-for-TV film and all, but for me, the name Takashi Miike brings to mind the tongue hitting the floor in Audition, the claymation lava swallowing everyone in The Happiness of the Katakuris, or the fountains of blood showering from the doorway in Ichi the Killer. Tokugawa-era costume drama with not a hint of Miike's excess? Say it ain't so, Jack.

Well, it's so. And even more surprisingly, Miike pulls it off with his usual flair.

Based on a novel by Shugoro Yamamoto (as yet, unfortunately, not translated into English; I'm getting to the point where I'm desperate to learn Japanese simply so I can read novels on which Takashi Miike movies are based), Sabu is the story of two friends, Eiji and Sabu, who grow up together. While both have somewhat rowdy childhoods, as they grow up and enter into their professional lives as paper-hangers, Sabu becomes the studious, staid "good kid," while Eiji retains his high-spiritedness. Eiji is fired from his apprenticeship, and a few days later disappears without a trace; Sabu, though forbidden to do so, must track him down. (There's much more to it than this; I'm covering about the first half-hour of the two-hour film in the synopsis. But from there, everything turns on minor spoilers.)

Miike has always been a director who, even when working in the normally-mindless action-flick genre, has been a master at creating characters with real depth. Here, with a more character-based story, he shows his full range of ability. Sabu, Eiji, and many of the minor characters in the film are exceptionally well-drawn. The film moves along at a rather slower pace than the American filmgoer will likely be used to, but you won't care; you're busy enough getting to know these wonderful characters.

Not to say there aren't some problems with the movie, but they are sins of omission, rather than commission; one assumes the novel has none of these flaws. Given that Miike was probably stuck with a time slot and needed to work within it, some of the film's minor characters get little screen time, but do things that make it seem as if they were major characters in the novel (Roku the pimp being the best example of this). Miike keeps them here, and gives them enough that we know they're important, but it would have been nice to get a little more time with them.

For those avoiding this because of the celebrated Miike violence, don't. The film contains the odd fistfight here are there. Swords are drawn in the movie (three times, if memory serves), but no heads or other limbs get lopped off, no one gets more than a black eye and a nosebleed, and no small animals spontaneously explode. This may, in fact, be Takashi Miike's least violent film to date, so if you've been wondering what all the fuss is about but scared away by the gore factor, this is the perfect place to get an eyeful.

Sabu is a film not to be missed, both for the hardcore fan of recent Japanese cinema and the complete neophyte. As it's now available domestically on DVD, hopefully Takashi Miike will find himself with the far wider American audience he so richly deserves. ****

Sex in the air4
Young actors having already performed (separately) in Battle Royaleand Kisarazu Cat's Eye play same age young men in the story of the eighteenth century Japan, whose sexual jealousy is simply an other side of a mutual attraction and testosterone urges young people of both genders demonstrated slowly-slowly on a screen.

Also this movie is a sound departure from a Japanese-exported tradition of samurai fighting, murdering and vassal unrests mixed with less or more explicit sex (In the Realm of the Senses, Memoirs of a Geisha (Single Disc Version)) even the most similar genre movies such as Taboo, Yaji and Kita - The Midnight Pilgrims present, a reviewer felt himself already walking the streets of this village and sea shores depicted, and inside scenery of Japanese prison added valuably to his existing acquaintance with a topic.

It is better one time to see than dozen times to read a comment on.