| Index | 4 reviews in total |
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Intelligent Yakuza tale, 23 April 2000
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Author:
sharptongue from Sydney, Australia
The story is a bit hard to follow, but quite involving. But the main asset
of this film is the lush photography. The colours are just glorious, and a
number of shots would make wonderful postcards.
Handsome young Katsuta tries to follow the yakuza code, but even his boss
doesn't believe in it. Diamond Fuyu is less ethical, and allows the
idiotic
Tetsu to trick a schoolgirl he fancies, Hanako, into a type of bonded
prostitution.
Because of gang conflict, the Izu family (to whom Katsuta belongs) has
their
last gambling den taken over, and he seeks revenge. This brings him back
into contact with a former lover who is also a card trickster - she is
also
Diamond Fuyu's sister, and is now married to Okaru-Hachi, who has mastered
a
clever card cheating trick called Okaru, which involves the deft use of
mirrors.
Hey, I warned you it was hard to follow ! And it gets more complicated
until, finally, the story starts to gel near the end.
Not a conventional yakuza film, despite containing many of the elements.
Don't expect lots of action. Quite good.
7 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
A flavorless yakuza melodrama from Seijun Suzuki. So, he is human after all., 18 December 2005
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Author:
Ham_and_Egger from Indianapolis, Indiana
Kanto Wanderer is not a good place to start an exploration of either
Seijun Suzuki or yakuza movies in general. For real Suzuki fans it's
interesting to see what he was doing during his "salary man" phase,
before breaking loose with surreal masterpieces like Branded to Kill or
Tokyo Drifter. If you're looking for a superior, mid-career, yakuza
film from Suzuki, watch his action-packed Youth of the Beast (also made
in 1963).
The real problem here is the script, calling it soft would be an
understatement. Yakuza. Gambling. Women. That's the plot, and though it
might sound good, in this case it just fails to gel. If you've seen
other Suzuki films you're probably expecting me to say he triumphs over
a mediocre script. Sorry, not this time. Though there are definitely a
few stylistic flourishes, mostly in the last twenty minutes, overall
it's bland and what's worse it *really* drags toward the middle.
Ultimately the director is as responsible for this mess as his
screenwriter and his star.
Speaking of that star, I don't have any idea if Akira Kobayashi is an
icon in Japanese cinema or someone who faded into obscurity immediately
after this film, but I'd put my money on the latter. Starring as
Katsuta he looks the part of the young yakuza underboss, but he doesn't
have half the screen presence of Jo Shishido or some of Suzuki's other
leads. The three schoolgirls going giggly over him in the opening scene
is all too apropos.
So, that's what's wrong with it. On the other hand the remastered DVD
from Homevision looks spectacular. The film is shot in widescreen
"TohoScope" and Seijun Suzuki is an unqualified master at filling up
that huge rectangular.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
The Futility of It All, 21 February 2007
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Author:
cokramer from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Seijun Suzuki turns the Yakuza genre inside-out once again. By the end of this film, you will once again see the futility of it all, whether the Yakuza member involved believes and acts sincerely and nobly to the "Yakuza" code or simply uses it as a matter of criminal convenience. The really clever thing about this film is in the sly reversal of a "supposed" victim to the one that figuratively gets "one-up" on all of this stuff. It involves one of the three young girls that open this film and her story is almost a literal jab by Suzuki at male desire and stupidity. It certainly had me going. Does this mean I'm stupid? Probably. But after the "reversal", I had to laugh at my own assumptions and wish I could've congratulated Suzuki with a "Touche". Anyways, a good film. Definitely worth seeing. I liked it more than "Tokyo Drifter" and only slightly less than "Branded to Kill". It's amazing how the theme of "men vs men, men vs themselves, and men vs women" repeats in so many of his films, including his more serious Taisho trilogy which he did many years later (20 or so years after his 60's Yakuza period working for the studio that he got fired from). Oh, if you're scared of Suzuki's more artistic and esoteric Taisho stuff done later in his life, don't worry. "Kanto Wanderer" is Suzuki close to his "Yakuza" best. 8 out of 10 for me.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
An authentically Japanese Yakuza film, 4 July 2000
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Author:
Gerard Newham (keltic@zip.com.au) from Sydney, Australia
_Kanto Wanderer_ is a very different film to more contemporary Yakuza
movies, such as _Black Rain_. Rather than focusing on the action, _Kanto
Wanderer_ examines in depth the motivation and ethics of Yakuza members,
in
particular those of the young gangster Katsuta. The Yakuza ethic is of
prime importance to this young man - he is, in fact, derided by an older
member as being too traditional. Whilst examining Katsuta's efforts to
remain faithful to the old ways in a changing world, the viewer is treated
to a very low-key look inside Yakuza business, including several scenes of
card-sharping, Japanese style.
Visually, the film is quite beautiful, with meticulously balanced
composition and very effective use of colour. The latter is particularly
noticeable with reference to banners and signs (which appear in a great
many
scenes), and in the skilful use of contrast - bright colours which stand
out
against white flags in the background, for example. One scene in which
two
gangsters are killed in a gambling house perhaps uses of colour to the
greatest effect and impact, as well as blending diegetic and non-diegetic
visual elements seamlessly.
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