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Branded to Kill

Originaltitel: Koroshi no rakuin
  • 1967
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 31 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
10.788
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Annu Mari, Mariko Ogawa, and Jô Shishido in Branded to Kill (1967)
After a badly done assignment, a hitman finds himself in conflict with his organization, and one mysterious and dangerous fellow-hitman in particular.
trailer wiedergeben3:09
1 Video
78 Fotos
AktionDramaKriminalitätThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAfter a botched assignment, a rice-fetishizing hitman finds himself in conflict with his organization, and one mysterious, dangerous fellow-hitman in particular.After a botched assignment, a rice-fetishizing hitman finds himself in conflict with his organization, and one mysterious, dangerous fellow-hitman in particular.After a botched assignment, a rice-fetishizing hitman finds himself in conflict with his organization, and one mysterious, dangerous fellow-hitman in particular.

  • Regie
    • Seijun Suzuki
  • Drehbuch
    • Seijun Suzuki
    • Atsushi Yamatoya
    • Takeo Kimura
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jô Shishido
    • Mariko Ogawa
    • Annu Mari
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    10.788
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Seijun Suzuki
    • Drehbuch
      • Seijun Suzuki
      • Atsushi Yamatoya
      • Takeo Kimura
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jô Shishido
      • Mariko Ogawa
      • Annu Mari
    • 60Benutzerrezensionen
    • 103Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 wins total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:09
    Trailer

    Fotos78

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    Topbesetzung27

    Ändern
    Jô Shishido
    Jô Shishido
    • Gorô Hanada
    • (as Joe Shishido)
    Mariko Ogawa
    • Mami Hanada
    Annu Mari
    Annu Mari
    • Misako Nakajô
    • (as Anne Mari)
    Kôji Nanbara
    Kôji Nanbara
    • No. 1
    Isao Tamagawa
    • Michihiko Yabuhara
    Hiroshi Minami
    • Gihei Kasuga
    Hiroshi Chô
    • Bartender
    Atsushi Yamatoya
    • No. 4
    Takashi Nomura
    • Boy
    Tokuhei Miyahara
    • Junior Officer
    Hiroshi Midorikawa
    • Jeweller
    Akira Hisamatsu
    • Ophthalmologist
    • (as Kôsuke Hisamatsu)
    Iwae Arai
    • Man with Artificial Eyes
    Yû Izumi
    • Cook
    Kyôji Mizuki
    • Jeweller
    Kôji Seyama
    • Restaurant Guest
    • (as Takashi Seyama)
    Masaaki Honme
    • Hitman
    Mitsuru Sawa
    • Hitman
    • Regie
      • Seijun Suzuki
    • Drehbuch
      • Seijun Suzuki
      • Atsushi Yamatoya
      • Takeo Kimura
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen60

    7,210.7K
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    9Ham_and_Egger

    Trapped in a dead-end job? No hope for advancement? At least you're not addicted to the smell of rice.

    Rice-sniffing, #3 Killer, dead butterflies, snuff films. Where to start? 'Koroshi no rakuin' is a surreal, Kafkaesque, timewarp of a film masquerading as a stylish 60's hit-man movie. Nikkatsu Studios fired Seijun Suzuki over this film's "incomprehensibility."

    Suzuki is an auteur of the highest magnitude, nobody has ever used a widescreen, black and white, "Nikkatsu Scope" frame quite like him. The dense and beautifully chaotic images are overwhelming on your first viewing, it's the sort of movie that shows you something new every time you watch it.

    Essentially Hanado Goro (Jo Shisido) is the yakuza's #3 Killer, but he desperately wants to be #1. As might be expected, being a hired gun is a stressful life and Hanado takes the edge off with lots of sex and the smell of boiling rice. The sex gets him embroiled in some sort of a plot and he finds himself getting much better acquainted with #1 Killer than he'd ever wanted to be.

    Time backs up, swirls around, restarts, slows down. Major themes include, but are not limited to: ambition, lust, rivalry, bureaucracy, addiction, loss of self-control. There's a certain parallel in that with this picture Suzuki derailed his own career as a "salary man" making Nikkatsu yakuza flicks, many of Hanado's thoughts and impulses must have been the director's own.
    chaos-rampant

    Suzuki dispenses with narrative convention in this acid-jazz noir-ish nightmare

    Much has been made of how weird and off-beat Branded to Kill is. However it is important to consider it as part of Suzuki's progression through film-making. Before you can break the rules, you have to master them. Suzuki did so in several of his earlier pictures, from Underworld Beauty to Tattooed Life. And every time he was called to deliver a run of the mill yakuza flick, he infused it with his personal style. More and more he fractured the visual language of cinema every time, until he got rid of it or transformed it into a psychotic beast for Branded to Kill, revealing what lies beneath.

    A plot synopsis would read something like this: Jo Shishido is killer Number #3 with ambitions of becoming Number #1. Who is Number #1? Does he even exist? That is until he's called to transport a client safely. The borders between realism and surrealism blur hopelessly at that point and what follows is a nightmarish concoction of beautiful set-pieces that lead up to his final confrontation with Number #1.

    Saying that Branded to Kill is weird is an understatement. In turns fascinating, confusing, nonsensical, surrealist, psychotic, thrilling, poetic, nightmarish, confusing, tiring, mind-numbing and exhilarating, it defies description as much as it defies sense. The boundaries of time, space and logic are blurred and all you can do is experience the ride. It doesn't try to make much sense and apparently Suzuki made it up as he went along. The result was to be fired by Nikkatsu Studios for delivering a picture that "made no sense". I don't blame them really. Studios are businesses and Branded to Kill is not a movie with massive appeal. Ahead of its time in that aspect.

    Filmed in beautiful black and white, with a languid jazzy score and a film-noir ambiance, Branded to Kill will certainly appeal to people with strange tastes. Don't go in expecting a yakuza action flick (although there are several gunfights and enough action to go along) or you'll be sorely disappointed. As an indication of the uncharted territories Branded to Kill's treads, I'll guesstimate that fans of Eraserhead-era Lynch, Koji Wakamatsu and Singapore Sling's style will appreciate it. I can't say "like it", because ultimately that's between the viewer and Branded to Kill to sort. Either way, it has to be experienced at least once. Just sit back and let the surreal absurdity of it all wash over you...
    9Pycal

    A work of art by master director Seijun Suzuki

    Branded to Kill is by far Suzuki's best film. It is my personal favorite crime film. Joe Shishido in his role as Hanada Goro, with his dark black sunglasses and Mauser M712 is one of the coolest characters ever created. The movie has everything, violence, shootouts, car chases, sex, and much much more. The film would likely have been shot in color, however Seijun Suzuki was prohibited from shooting in color due his wild use of colors in past films. The film is still a work of art, and looks beautiful in black and white. The best way I can describe this film is maybe a cross between Alfred Hitchcock and Sergio Leone. An excellent crime thriller not to be missed.
    6mbhgkmsgg

    Branded to Kill

    Branded to Kill is a wonderfully peculiar Japanese hit-man film. Not only has it worked as an inspiration for many directors, but it's also an experience that, I feel, everyone should get to have. While it didn't work for me as well as I had hoped, it is so unique that it's hard not to like it.

    Branded to Kill starts off great. The little information it gives isn't enough to have a good idea of what's going on, and the early intensity and pace shrouded in mystery work wonderfully. While it is clear from the very beginning that this isn't going to be your typical crime flick, the film takes its time to really get going with the peculiarities. At first, it feels like any old hit-man movie, and I found those moments to be the most effective. That's not to say that the movie doesn't have great moments throughout, it's just that it doesn't deliver them as effectively as it did in the beginning, but more on that later. The film starts with a fast-paced action sequence that introduces us to the main character, the No. 3 hit-man in Japan. As we get to know him, we learn that he isn't what you would call a typical hit-man. He is, for example, obsessed with the smell of cooked rice, one of his many quirks. As we get to know him, we also get an idea of what Branded to Kill is really going to be like.

    While, at first, it might seem that there is nothing peculiar going on, the movie quickly throws that presumption out the window. As more characters are introduced, and as the story progresses, it becomes evidently clear that there is much more there than first meets the eye. And although these oddities are what make this film what it is, and the thing that lifted it into the cult following it has, I found them to be the downfall of it, as well. While the many curiosities, like No. 3's fetish of cooked rice, or the jazz soundtrack, or even the very open and aggressive portrayal of erotica work well and give the film an edge that others like it don't have, they, unfortunately, make it also feel unfocused. I feel that there is a limit to how much you can play with things that normally wouldn't belong to such a film, and still get away with. In the case of Branded to Kill, that line was crossed, at least as far as my enjoyment went. The resulting product, while certainly interesting and unique, lacked focus and coherency.

    However, while most of the film felt lacklustre, thankfully it found its stride towards the end. Indeed, as good as the beginning was, I think that the ending was even better. It's filled with tension and uncertainty, and quite frankly, it feels like the movie finally found the mood it was trying to achieve from the very get-go. As such, I find it very unfortunate that the rest of the film wasn't able to find its tempo and flow. It felt like there were so many ideas that were crammed into Branded to Kill that it would've been nearly impossible to create a film that felt complete, especially when you consider the short runtime. Apart from the beginning and the end, the rest felt like a series of mini-movies each with their own idea. Accordingly, it was difficult to fall into the film and let it take me for a ride. I was constantly thrown out of the idea and scene just as I was getting settled into it. While this approach might've worked had there been a clearer narrative between each scene, the sheer number of ideas and stories being told made it difficult to appreciate them.

    The more I think about, the more I feel like Branded to Kill just wasn't for me. While I appreciate the efforts it took to experiment, I found myself wishing for a clearer narrative. However, there is no denying the uniqueness it has. Although I won't be watching it again any time soon, I'm glad that I have seen it. It's clear why it has inspired so many directors, and why it has garnered such a large cult following around the world.
    J. Spurlin

    Dazzling if disorienting crime film packed with goofy quirks - just don't try to make sense of it

    The number-three-ranked hit-man (who makes these rankings?), with a fetish for sniffing boiling rice, fumbles his latest job, which puts him into conflict with a mysterious woman whose death wish inspires her to surround herself with dead butterflies and dead birds. Worse danger comes from his own treacherous wife and finally with the number-one-ranked hit-man, known only as a phantom to those who fear his unseen presence. Number One proves to be a nut, willing to go to great lengths to torment his victim, even sleep in the same bed with him. He's also so dedicated to his job that he'll urinate on himself rather than take his eyes off his victim by going to the toilet.

    I'm getting used to the idea of a certain type of crime film that is so densely plotted you never quite know what's going on and are forced to give up on it in order to enjoy the picture. American films of this type, such as "The Maltese Falcon," are usually so deftly put together that you don't realize you haven't followed everything until you stop to think about it. Other countries produce films that require a bit more patience. I recently watched the French gangster pic, "Le Doulos" (1962), and learned early to resign myself to semi-confusion.

    This film, from the nutty Japanese director, Seijun Suzuki, requires a extra level of resignation. Often I couldn't tell what was happening from shot to shot. Suzuki's disorienting style is sometimes marvelous and sometimes irritating; but I can't say I was ever bored. Many of the effects in this sex-and-violence-packed film are dazzling. I especially liked how the femme fatale, in her early close-ups, is perpetually drenched by a downpour whether she's out in the rain or not.

    I enjoyed this film, but any viewer can be forgiven for giving up on it and saying, "I don't get it." There's no deep meaning to get. You either abandon yourself to the goofy entertainment being offered, or you don't.

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      When Nikkatsu studio executives saw the finished product, they thought it was too terrible to be released, so they shelved it. Seijun Suzuki along with others in the film business, film critics, and students protested in unfairness since, by contract, Nikkatsu was supposed to release the finished film theatrically. It went to court, with a ruling in favor of the director. Nikkatsu had to pay for damages and have the film released. Suzuki's contract with Nikkatsu was terminated, and with the bad reputation, was unable to work on a feature film for the next 10 years.
    • Zitate

      Misako Nakajô: My dream is to die.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Seijun Suzuki | TCM (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Koroshi no buruusu (Killing Blues)
      Lyrics by Hachiro Guryu (Yasuaki Hangai, Takeo Kimura, Yutaka Okada, Chûsei Sone, Seijun Suzuki, Yôzô Tanaka, Seiichiro Yamaguchi and Atsushi Yamatoya)

      Music by Kagehisa Kusui

      Sung by Atsushi Yamatoya

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 15. Februar 2007 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Sprachen
      • Japanisch
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Beruf: Mörder
    • Drehorte
      • Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Nikkatsu
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 31 Min.(91 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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