| Index | 4 reviews in total |
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
From frenzied action to comedy--A change of style that worked for Fukasaku, 2 June 2007
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Author:
Henry J Sosenite from Boise
Kinji Fukasaku is much better known for his violent and daring films
such as Battle Royale and the Yakuza Papers, which is possibly why the
cover of this movie boasted "A comedy from the director of Battle
Royale". it was a tough tag-line to resist when I saw it on the rack at
the video store.
I think the cover should have said something along the lines of "a
romantic comedy", or maybe just "romance", because it was much more a
romance film than a comedy. Sadly, it's one of those movies that starts
out pretty damn funny, but loses its edge. the first half is full of
slapstick humor, but I guess they forgot to put it in there in the
second half or something.
It began with a hilarious sequence of a samurai movie being filmed.
From there, we follow one of its actors, seeing his pretentious and
ignorant attitude. The next day he visits his friend Yasu, the movie's
fall guy, and tells him that he got one of his on-and-off girlfriends
pregnant. He begs Yasu to pretend it's his kid. Yasu and the girl get
married and build a surprisingly stable relationship, and everything
seems find, but another chance to be a "fall guy" comes up and Yasu is
faced with a tough decision.
Some of the scenes between Yasu and Konatsu are kind of cheesy, but
there's some good sad moments in there. This includes the best "tearing
apart a room" scene I've seen. Yasu's behavior definitely goes a little
overboard, but it's more funny than lame.
I'd recommend this to anyone who "gets" Japanese humor. if you can't
stand it, this is the last movie you want to see. I found it a little
tedious myself, but only because it was inconsistent.
3 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
A Funny Romantic Comedy of Errors, 15 February 2002
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Author:
StSparky from Fukuoka Japan
FALL GUY (KAMATA KOSHINKYOKU) Directed by Kinji
Fukasaku, 1982, 109 min
Fall Guy depicts the inside story of a film studio in a comical touch,
where a nearly has-been movie star takes full advantage of an
adoring member of his entourage & hanger on's blind devotion.
The former has the hanger on, who works as a bit player, marry
the lovely actress he accidentally impregnated, in a bid to preserve
his image, and then asks the fan to perform a show-stopping,
life-threatening stunt in the hopes of making a big comeback.
At times moving, funny, and even romantic, Fall Guy, was well
received and has won the first place in the "Ten Best Films" poll by
Kinema Jumpo, as well as many other awards.
PS The honeymoon trip to Kyushu is a sweet moment of the film
and clearly an inside joke.
0 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
a more than decent soap-opera with bits of uproarious 'making-movie' comedy, 30 September 2008
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
Fall Guy is advertised on the front of the recently released DVD as "a
comedy from the director of Battle Royale". That last part is true, but
it's not entirely a comedy. I was expecting that, and in the first
fifteen minutes it is that, incredibly and with total personality-laden
hilarity as a Japanese movie star, Ginshiro (Morio Kazama) is a
prototypical ego-maniac who is furious that there's stalling on
building a gigantic staircase for an action sequence and then proceeds
to get drunk and complain about not having enough screaming fans. Up to
this point it is a comedy... and then it suddenly starts to unfold
deeper, and we meet the characters Konatsu (Keiko Matsuzaka),
Ginshiro's presumed love interest and father of her unborn child, and
Yasu (Mitsuru Kirata), a close friend and would-be low-level stuntman
who may be the father of Konatsu's baby by "default", and it becomes a
soap opera.
To say soap opera isn't really to decry it, as one might imagine 'soap
opera' to be something already to be wary of. It isn't quite melodrama,
though it edges it in some fiery scenes (my favorite was an explosive
bit where Yasu rebels from this existential conundrum of doing a
non-death-proof stunt down the stairs), and a lot of it surrounds
taking care of an unborn baby, marrying someone who might not be the
right one and a shady ex-lover who is obsessed with his scenes being
cut from the current martial arts movie. So it's all stuff you could
possibly catch on daytime TV. The difference is, thankfully, director
Fukasaku casts his actors based on impressive personality, on lots of
intense emotional power, and he interweaves the personal love story
with an absorbing look at the making of Japanese martial arts movies;
just watching Yasu in the montage of doing various stunts for 5 to 10
thousand Yen is funny but also a small love letter for the movies.
It's also topped off, I should add, with a climax that has been
building for about half of the movie and pays off, incredibly, and is
in a way a better climax than some of the rest of the movie deserves.
In a way a director like Fukasaku, a seasoned veteran probably not too
unlike the director character in the film directing the film within
Fall Guy, is needed to imbue the screenplay with real dramatic force
and a sense of how to slip in those wonderful bits of comedy. At the
least, if you love Japanese cinema, it's worth watching once. At best,
it's fun romantic pulp. 7.5/10
4 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Entertaining romance/comedy, 10 November 2002
Author:
noirfilm from United States
A bit player in samurai films does a favor for the hammy star actor by marrying the star's pregnant girlfriend. This movie includes a funny peek at samurai filmmaking. There's a memorable sequence of a filmed samurai battle scene on a staircase and the aftermath.
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