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Nakito - Profis der Liebe

Originaltitel: Nikutai no mon
  • 1964
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
3568
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Nakito - Profis der Liebe (1964)
Drama

Ein verletzter Dieb auf der Flucht findet Zuflucht in einem Bordell mit vereinten, rücksichtslosen Frauen.Ein verletzter Dieb auf der Flucht findet Zuflucht in einem Bordell mit vereinten, rücksichtslosen Frauen.Ein verletzter Dieb auf der Flucht findet Zuflucht in einem Bordell mit vereinten, rücksichtslosen Frauen.

  • Regie
    • Seijun Suzuki
  • Drehbuch
    • Taijirô Tamura
    • Gorô Tanada
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jô Shishido
    • Kôji Wada
    • Yumiko Nogawa
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    3568
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Seijun Suzuki
    • Drehbuch
      • Taijirô Tamura
      • Gorô Tanada
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jô Shishido
      • Kôji Wada
      • Yumiko Nogawa
    • 20Benutzerrezensionen
    • 30Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos89

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    Topbesetzung32

    Ändern
    Jô Shishido
    Jô Shishido
    • Shintaro Ibuki
    • (as Joe Shishido)
    Kôji Wada
    Kôji Wada
    • Abe
    Yumiko Nogawa
    Yumiko Nogawa
    • Maya
    Tomiko Ishii
    • Oroku
    Kayo Matsuo
    Kayo Matsuo
    • Omino
    Kuniko Kawanishi
    Misako Tominaga
    • Machiko
    Isao Tamagawa
    • Horidome
    Chico Lourant
    • Black Pastor
    • (as Chico Roland)
    Eimei Esumi
    Eimei Esumi
    • Sen
    Hiroshi Chô
    • [potato seller]
    Keisuke Noro
    • Ishii
    Mikiko Sakai
    Terue Shigemori
    Kôji Yashiro
    Takashi Nomura
    Shinzô Shibata
    Akira Hisamatsu
      • Regie
        • Seijun Suzuki
      • Drehbuch
        • Taijirô Tamura
        • Gorô Tanada
      • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
      • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

      Benutzerrezensionen20

      7,23.5K
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      Empfohlene Bewertungen

      7lreynaert

      Rely on your own instincts

      After WW II, a gang of prostitutes has their home base in the slums of Tokyo. They live in a world where the old generation of 'big shots still talk big.' For them, 'democracy means (having sexual intercourse with) foreigners.' These foreigners are GIs, members of the occupying forces in Japan. The main principle of the gang is 'no sex for free'. If a member of the gang transgresses this rule, she will be harshly punished. The movie contains some very sadistic lashing scenes.

      Vision on mankind Seijun Suzuki unveils in an interview published on this DVD his view on mankind: 'physiology is the strongest force and only acts through human will. We can depend on nothing but the physicality of the flesh.' The gate to the world is the gate of flesh, where you have to 'rely on your own instincts'. Morality and religion, here represented by a black catholic priest, are hopeless pipe dreams.

      Highly recommended, like other films by Seijun Suzuki's: his 'manga' movie 'Pistol Opera', his 'ghost' movie 'Princess Raccoon' (with Ziyi Zhang) and his gangster movie 'Underworld Beauty'.
      8freakus

      A great japanese exploitation movie, 60's style

      Suzuki is the master! He has made the greatest examples of 60's low budget exploitation cinema. The way he uses a different color to represent each of the prostitutes almost makes them appear like demons in that underground lair of theirs. But who is the real monster of the film? The occupying Americans who use the prostitutes? The prostitutes themselves? Or is it the hate filled ex-soldier (played by the great Joe Shishido!) who controls the women?
      10zetes

      We need to see more films of this type from Japan in the US

      I was under the impression when I rented this film that it was

      directed by Sezuki Seijun, but the credits gave a different name. It

      still might be him (it was something else Sezuki), and I am

      assuming it was as I write this review.

      Having totally fallen in love with Branded to Kill and, to a slightly

      lesser extant, but not too much lesser, with Tokyo Drifter, I was

      overjoyed to find this at the video store (I remembered having

      heard at one point of its being on video). And I was even more

      overjoyed to watch it. It's an amazing film which I would place

      slightly ahead of Tokyo Drifter and Branded to Kill, giving it a 9/10.

      The film opens right after the end of WWII with a young woman

      starving in the street (not something I would expect from the two

      previous yakuza films I've seen of Seijun's). She meets up with a

      group of four prostitutes who allow her to work with them. They are

      self-sufficient and need no pimp. They keep themselves in line

      with the threat of torture if any one of them ever sleeps with a man

      without accepting money. Of course, you can see the possibility for

      exploitation, and there is exploitation, believe me. After a while, a

      robust thug (Jo Shishido of Branded to Kill, cheekbones and all)

      shows up in their crumbling household. They respect him

      because he resists the GIs who try to keep the law in their city

      (never specified) and those Japanese people who cooperate with

      them. They're also all attracted to him. After this is developed, there

      isn't much more plot - only a couple of events happen afterwards.

      More or less, it is a character study and also a sociological study.

      The anti-Americanism is very interesting to see. Seijun was a

      soldier in the Japanese army himself and, although I could easily

      point out that, hey, you started it, it's easy to understand what he

      must have felt after he and his comrades lost a war, what it would

      have done to the male psyche as well as the female (this film was

      made about twenty years afterwards).

      Some people would naturally hate this film because it mixes its

      styles, often very harshly. It's really nothing that Godard wouldn't

      have done - in fact, it's actually something that Godard, despite my

      great affection for him and his films, could never have achieved; he

      was far too interested in subverting filmic conventions and too

      unconcerned with making interesting films at times. It is filmed in

      color, and its art design/cinematography/costuming, everything

      technical, is color coordinated in a way akin to something like a

      1950s musical. Four of the five prostitutes are color-coated and

      there is, for instance, an amazing scene where these four color- specific hookers muse over Shishido alone against a set

      designed only in their colors. Often the film is quite melodramatic,

      almost like a Douglas Sirk film. At other times, it is something like

      sado-masochistic porno, especially during the torture scenes.

      There are scenes akin to the brutality in Tokyo Drifter and Branded

      to Kill; there is some major brutality to women (sometimes

      inflicted by women), so if you're particularly sensitive to that, you

      might want to avoid this. Also, if that's a problem with you, take

      special measures to avoid Branded to Kill. You might want to skip

      over this next description tot he next paragraph if you very easily get

      sick or if you're a militant animal rights activist, but there is a

      stunning scene where Jo Shishido slaughters a live cow. I'm pretty

      sure it's a real scene of slaughter. If not, then it's a damned good

      facsimile. If you were horrified at the real scenes of sacrifice in

      Apocalypse Now, you might just want to avoid this film altogether.

      The bottom line for me is that this film is a masterpiece. An insane

      one, to be sure, but this film, as well as Tokyo Drifter and Branded

      to Kill, demonstrate just how gorgeous insanity can be

      sometimes. Janus Films, whose logo you see on the videotapes

      before just about 90% of all foreign films that were made before

      1970, and Home Vision Cinema, who distributes about everything

      made after 1970, collaborated on the videotape that I watched,

      which recently went out of print. Those two companies should be

      ringing tons of bells for anyone who collects videos. Yup, those are

      the two companies who produce DVDs' (and Laserdiscs') Criterion Collection, the only DVDs, in the long run, which are really

      worth owning. This company has already released both Branded

      to Kill and Tokyo Drifter. I pray to God - I'd even sell my soul to the

      devil - so that Criterion will release Gate of Flesh and - please,

      please God! (or Satan!) - other Seijun films, or even other films

      which generally resemble his, if such other artists do exist, that I

      have not seen or even heard of. Think about it Criterion. I know that

      Branded to Kill and Tokyo Drifter aren't your most popular DVDs,

      but, having talked to so many people who are discovering them

      and having never resisted an opportunity to spread his name and

      reputation to any other film buff I have met (and others who are

      familiar with him do the same), I know that he is becoming a huge

      cult item. In my mind, judging only by the three films of his that I've

      seen, I prefer him even to Akira Kurosawa (I cannot comment on

      Ozu or Mizoguchi; unfortunately, I have only ever seen one Ozu and

      no Mizoguchis, merely based on availability), whom I generally

      prefer to nearly every filmmaker with whom I am very familiar.
      elihu-2

      Renegade Filmmaking

      Born on May 24, 1923, Seijun Suzuki was a trade school drop-out and a soldier before studying film at Kamakura academy. After graduating in 1948, he was employed at Ofuna Studio as an assistant director. He began his full-fledged directing career at Nikkatsu in 1954, where he subsequently made 40 films. Most of these were quickie crime thrillers which were akin to Hollywood B-movies. Within the constricting confines of the mercenary studio system, Suzuki was nonetheless able to find his own unique creative sensibility.

      His earliest films bear a renegade, sensual flair and a vibrant visual style unsurpassed by more recent work in both the West and Asia. Working in Cinemascope, he used the widescreen frame to full effect, composing intricate shots which seem almost three dimensional, due to somewhat elaborate staging and the novel device of using dissolves to show characters and action on the opposite side of the room or space to which the main camera is pointing.

      GATE OF FLESH (1964) exemplifies this. One of Suzuki's most atypical films, it tells the tale of a pimp-less group of hellcat prostitutes trying to survive in the chaotic, crime-ridden arena of post-war Tokyo. Living by a strict code, any of their number can be severely physically punished for sleeping with a man for free. Puffy-cheeked Suzuki regular Jo Shishido plays Shintaro Ibuki, a macho renegade former soldier who deals on the black market and comes to lord it over the band of women. Captivating each of them, he causes a rift among them in which the young novice hooker Maya suffers the most, as she is totally enamored of him. The film is intensely visceral, outrageous, and risque, even today. It must have been positively explosive in 1964, with its sweating, erotically-driven characters, fairly explicit depictions of sex, and savage scenes in which naked women are tied up and whipped by other women. The aggressive sensuality is further enhanced by the Fujicolor processing, which accentuates the reds and greens.

      Due to his interpid nonconformism, Suzuki was fired from Nikkatsu in 1968. Amid shake-ups and financial problems at the studio, the suits decided to jettison him for making "incomprehensible" films. This prompted a massive movement on his behalf organized by his fans of time, who were mostly college students. With their support, as well as that of the Director's Guild of Japan, Suzuki filed a court case for wrongful dismissal. He won the case, but the resulting furor got him blacklisted out of the studio system, and Suzuki was only able to resume making feature films in 1977, albeit independently.
      7mjneu59

      in the rubble of civilization

      Seijun Suzuki's wide screen portrait of post-war Tokyo shows a ruined city reverted back to a primitive state of barbarity, where the only law among the society of pimps, thieves and prostitutes is Survival of the Fittest. Be forewarned: although it may be tame by today's permissive standards the film is still overtly violent, in both content and style. The garish color scheme alone is often more shocking than the animal philosophy of the gang of hookers, whose punishment for compassion among their ranks is an enthusiastic whipping. Suzuki never was the most subtle filmmaker, and the crass, uncensored vitality displayed here approaches low exploitation even while it probes with subtle insight the psychology of a vanquished nation.

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      Handlung

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      • Wissenswertes
        In an interview Seijun answered the question of the uniqueness of this film in relation to other B/Program pictures he made in the time: "The studio wanted to make a skin flick, that's all. We couldn't make a real porno back then, though."
      • Patzer
        A downward shot pans across a crowd following a stretcher. When straight down, you see the shadow of the camera, crane and the camera operator.
      • Zitate

        Sen: As soon as that wound heals, I want you out of here. This place belongs to just us girls.

      • Verbindungen
        Featured in From the Ruins: Making 'Gate of Flesh' (2005)

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      FAQ13

      • How long is Gate of Flesh?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Ändern
      • Erscheinungsdatum
        • 3. Mai 1968 (Westdeutschland)
      • Herkunftsland
        • Japan
      • Sprachen
        • Japanisch
        • Englisch
      • Auch bekannt als
        • Gate of Flesh
      • Drehorte
        • Nikkatsu Studios, Tokio, Japan(Studio)
      • Produktionsfirma
        • Nikkatsu
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      Technische Daten

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      • Laufzeit
        1 Stunde 30 Minuten
      • Sound-Mix
        • Mono
      • Seitenverhältnis
        • 2.35 : 1

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