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Yakuza
Tak Sakaguchi holds free masterclass about directing action movie on Saturday 7th May 11.55 am at Terracotta Festival
March 9-19, 2011
This season, the Globus Film Series presents the Japanese gangster
movie genre through its various avatars, transformations and
contradictions, from 1960s productions featuring chivalrous
kimono-clad, sword-wielding gangsters and gamblers to today's ruthless
gun-toting villains dealing in debt, hustling hardcore porn and
scheming and scamming in dark trades and deeds. Over the past 50 years,
they've remained snarling, swaggering, tattooed and inexplicably sexy.
In the line-up, there will be blood and broken bones, hookers and
hopheads, and plenty of juicy political blackmail… in 15 films that
rack up the stiffs like Jacobean tragedies and show grand visions of
manly amity and betrayal: classics and lesser known titles by Kinji
Fukasaku, Takashi Miike (Dead or Alive), Hideo Gosha (The Wolves), Takeshi Kitano (Outrage), Rokuro Mochizuki (A Yakuza In Love, Onibi: The Fire Within) and Sydney Pollack (The Yakuza), among other offerings you can't refuse.
The violent romantic world of the yakuza (the Japanese mafia) steeped
in cryptic ritual and customs involving full-body tattoos and missing
digits, has long excited the imagination, decades before viewers
started existing on a diet of Sopranos and Boardwalk Empire
melodrama, and has been one of the mainstays of the Japanese film
industry since the 1960s. Harking back to the days when samurai still
embodied traditionalist values of honor, selfless duty (giri) and the noble warrior spirit (ninkyo)
on the silver screen, the shadowy demimonde of organized crime (which
included wandering gamblers and lowly peddlers) rivaled with the noble
swordsmen as the representatives of honor and heroism, in the context
of a rapidly changing society trying to come to terms with a shameful
defeat. In the darkness of movie theaters, they became the very picture
of superhuman macho cool and reptilian menace.
Jackie Chan's latest film, ‘Little Big Soldier', a period-action road-trip movie, will open the festival on 6th May 2010.
The film by Ding Sheng is set during the time when China wasn't yet a country and was still comprised of seven warring states. Jackie Chan plays a reluctant conscript from one of these states and finds himself fortuitously capturing an enemy general, whom he planned to bring back to his home state to trade for discharge from army service.
Other highlights from t...
Article by Anna Takayama
Director Dean Bajramovic gives us an enticing sneak peak into his recent ÉCU 2010 Non-European Dramatic Feature submission, GANGSTER EXCHANGE, a quirky and dynamic (and somewhat autobiographical) gangster comedy about a Japanese Yakuza member smuggling heroin…in a toilet. Anna Takayama get’s the gritty details.
Q: What is your film about?
The film is an action comedy about a couple of gangsters, one Japanese, one Amer...
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