Dead or Alive (Unrated Director's Cut)
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Average customer review:Product Description
A yakuza of chinese descent and a japanese cop each wage their own war against the japanese mafia. But they are destined to meet. Their encounter will change the world. Studio: Kino International Release Date: 10/05/2004 Run time: 105 minutes Rating: Ur
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #60225 in DVD
- Brand: Kino Video
- Released on: 2003-05-27
- Rating: Unrated
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Formats: Color, DVD, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: Japanese
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 105 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The director of Dead or Alive, Takashi Miike, made his name on the international scene with Audition, a chilling psychological thriller that builds from a quiet start towards a prolonged torture sequence almost too unbearable to watch. But such deliberate pacing isn't typical of Miike, whose movies often assault the viewer with an onslaught of slam-bang action that makes John Woo look like Eric Rohmer. Dead or Alive, his most successful cops-vs-yakuza thriller to date, kicks off with six nonstop minutes of machine gun-paced violence, sex, and slaughter, all set to a pounding heavy-metal beat. Thereafter things calm down a little, though not much. Given Miike's penchant for murky, livid-toned visuals and skewed camera angles, it's not always too easy to work out exactly who's doing what to whom, but the general outline's clear enough. The Tokyo underworld is being torn apart by a turf war between the yakuza gangs and the invading Chinese triads. Ambitious yakuza member Ryuichi (Riki Takeuchi) isn't above playing both sides off against each other in his bid for power, while police detective Jojima (Sho Aikawa), himself none too scrupulous in his methods, is out to destroy the gangs.
Into this conventional plot framework Miike piles enough warped characters and bizarre, twisted happenings to fuel half-a-dozen Tarantino movies, while cheerfully borrowing--and inflating--key moments from such hard-boiled gangster-noirs as The Big Heat and Kiss Me Deadly. One character deep-fries his own hand, a stripper is drowned in a paddling-pool filled with her own excrement, and the literally apocalyptic finale, the showdown to end all showdowns, will leave you gasping. The appallingly prolific Miike, who regularly makes about five movies a year, has since directed two sequels--the first only three months after the original. --Philip Kemp



