| Index | 2 reviews in total |
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
A brilliant anti-war satire, 9 May 2001
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Author:
squizzix from New York, NY
It's a shame this movie can't be found on home video. See it if you get a
chance. It was distributed in the U.S. under the name "The Human Bullet,"
and tells the story of a Japanese soldier in WWII who eventually finds
himself launched on a kamakazi mission against a U.S. ship.
The free spirit of 1968 is very much evident in the film as, for example,
our hero's blathering superiors are compared to an endlessly skipping vinyl
LP. A funny savaging of the dehumanization of wartime and the military in
general.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Fierce antiwar satire with a bleak sense of humor and a raw homemade feel, 6 November 2009
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Author:
chaos-rampant from Greece
In the days after the events in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, a Japanese
soldier in the closing days of WWII becomes assigned to a suicide squad
training for the Final Fight, the desperate plan and huge manslaughter
prepared by unyielding Japanese generals against an Allied land
invasion of Japan. You'd be forgiven for thinking this is a
grim-as-can-be downbeat war movie in the vein of FIRES IN THE PLAIN.
Kihachi Okamoto may be most well known in the West for his SWORD OF
DOOM, one of the darkest most nihilistic chambaras in movie history,
but that's more of an exception than a rule in Okamoto's oeuvre. A
streak of bleak dark humor and biting satire runs through his work, not
always in subtle ways but never done without a certain taste and
affection for the absurd and the tragic, and The Human Bullet is no
exception. When it veers close to anti-war sermonizing ("when kids hold
grenades it's hopeless, you should be getting an education") it grates
with the rough edge of too much explicitness and not enough subtext,
but it becomes an exhilarating movie when it's allowed room to breathe
and play around in its own comedic absurdism without taking itself too
serious as a satire that must hammer home some political point. When
it's allowed the sheer pleasure of painting surreal images like that of
a man in a bucket strapped next to a torpedo (see screenshot above) or
a foxhole buried in a sand hill in the middle of nowhere and affords
for itself the narrative freedom of no concrete urgent plot to drive
forward but instead the loose interconnectivity of a vignette
structure, a series of encounters between the Japanese soldier and a
motley crew of bizarre characters as he trains himself for the coming
Final Fight, these perhaps giving the film a slight handicap of
repetitiveness because the film's point is made with enough clarity in
the opening scenes where the starving soldier caught stealing food from
the army's granaries is forced by his sergeant to go around naked to
show everyone he's a pig, but it remains a pleasant breezy watch.
This is a low-budget movie (when a plane attacks the soldier in the
torpedo we only see the ripple of its fire and most of the movie is
shot outdoors with a small cast) with a raw unpolished edge, lots of
hand-held shots and experimental non-narrative cutting that in a way
places The Human Bullet in the outer perimeters of the Japanese New
Wave map (although Okamoto was and would continue to be a studio
filmmaker working for Toho first and foremost). In its combination of
fierce antiwar satire, bleak humor, sardonic wit, and irreverent
attitude, reminiscent of DR. STRANGELOVE, yet with a more homemade feel
than Kubrick would ever allow for one of his movies, The Human Bullet
is one of those cult movies in search for an audience. Like most cult
movies it's not perfect or ever truly aspires to that kind of formally
accomplished film-making, but it makes sense in a "let's get on with
it" level. This is the kind of movie that doesn't allow realism to
distract it too much from its overarching aesthetic, a movie that
doesn't allow its viewer to be concerned with the fact that a man holed
up in a bucket in the middle of a sea can survive ten days without
water and remain freshly shaven because more outrageous images are soon
to follow.
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