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The Guys from Paradise - Die Hölle von Manila

Originaltitel: Tengoku kara kita otoko-tachi
  • 2000
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 54 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,5/10
411
IHRE BEWERTUNG
The Guys from Paradise - Die Hölle von Manila (2000)
DramaKriminalität

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuSet in the Philippines, Takashi Miike's "The Guys from Paradise" weaves together the stories of several real-life criminal cases. Young up-and-coming salary man Kohei Hayakawa is sent to Par... Alles lesenSet in the Philippines, Takashi Miike's "The Guys from Paradise" weaves together the stories of several real-life criminal cases. Young up-and-coming salary man Kohei Hayakawa is sent to Paradise prison on false drug charges, and assumes his lawyers will clear up this misundersta... Alles lesenSet in the Philippines, Takashi Miike's "The Guys from Paradise" weaves together the stories of several real-life criminal cases. Young up-and-coming salary man Kohei Hayakawa is sent to Paradise prison on false drug charges, and assumes his lawyers will clear up this misunderstanding fairly quickly. However, he soon comes to the realization that his innocence means l... Alles lesen

  • Regie
    • Takashi Miike
  • Drehbuch
    • Yôji Hayashi
    • Izô Hashimoto
    • Itaru Era
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Kôji Kikkawa
    • Tsutomu Yamazaki
    • Ken'ichi Endô
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,5/10
    411
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Takashi Miike
    • Drehbuch
      • Yôji Hayashi
      • Izô Hashimoto
      • Itaru Era
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Kôji Kikkawa
      • Tsutomu Yamazaki
      • Ken'ichi Endô
    • 6Benutzerrezensionen
    • 4Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 3 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Fotos

    Topbesetzung13

    Ändern
    Kôji Kikkawa
    • Kôhei Hayasaka
    Tsutomu Yamazaki
    Tsutomu Yamazaki
    • Katsuaki Yoshida
    Ken'ichi Endô
    Ken'ichi Endô
    • Toshiyuki Umino
    Kaei Okina
    • Jun Sakamoto
    • (as Hua Rong Weng)
    Kenji Mizuhashi
    • Filipintaro
    Kazuhiko Kanayama
    • Koji Sugimori
    Nene Ôtsuka
    • Namie Mishima
    • (as Nene Ohtsuka)
    Mai Oikawa
    • Miyuki Hayasaka
    Monsour Del Rosario
    Monsour Del Rosario
    Toshiyuki Kitami
    Mitsuhiro Oikawa
    Hideo Sako
    Naoto Takenaka
    Naoto Takenaka
    • Regie
      • Takashi Miike
    • Drehbuch
      • Yôji Hayashi
      • Izô Hashimoto
      • Itaru Era
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen6

    6,5411
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10zeleny

    A Warm-Hearted Miike Movie?

    Falsely charged with heroin possession and unceremoniously traded in by his fiancée, slick yuppie Kohei Hayakawa (Koji Kikkawa) finds himself a stranger in Paradise of a very wrong kind. Stranger yet, in the fullness of time this Phillipines prison camp becomes his dwelling of choice. But the film belongs to Tsutomu Yamazaki, best known thanks to Juzo Itami as the swaggering trucker Goro in Tampopo and the master tax cheat Gondo in Marusa no onna, who stays in character as the would-be crook Katsuaki Yoshida come into his own in the jailhouse, to trade his insider survival skills for Hayakawa's business acumen. The political subtext contrasts the élite position of the stiffly crooked Japanese with the vibrant corruption of neighboring Asian cultures. While lacking the moral rigor of Audition and the manic intensity of Ichi the Killer, this film will reward the viewers with what may be the most life-affirming message delivered by Takashi Miike to date.
    10simon_booth

    Miike is still the man

    A Japanese businessman is arrested in the Phillipines for possession of heroin, and promptly delivered to a Filipino prison. Inside, he hooks up with the small Japanese community there, a bunch of colourful characters who stick together. He finds that the prison is rife with corruption, and that with money a person can do pretty much anything he wants - including leave, if he so desires. The leader of the Japanese group takes him under his wing, as he needs somebody who looks like a businessman to represent him in his many deals outside the prison. As time goes on, we learn more about the characters and the dynamics of the prison society, until an external influence brings disruption and forces the characters to go on the run.

    I didn't enjoy the last two Takashi Miike movies I watched (Graveyard Of Honour and Shinjuku Triad Society) all that much, and wondered if I was perhaps "Miike'd out". Well, if I was then it was only a brief phase, and I suspect it was actually that those were two of his weaker films. GUYS FROM PARADISE is a great film, and re-affirms my belief that Takashi Miike may be the planet's greatest living director.

    The film is on the less extreme end of Miike's range, with none of the outrageous elements or extreme violence that shock and disturb or excite many viewers. It's a well crafted character-driven drama, though there are still quite a few moments that show Miike's unique touch (most notably the ending). This probably means that it will find less acclaim/notoriety than films such as FUDOH or ICHI THE KILLER, but it's another piece of evidence that shows there is a lot more to Miike than shock tactics. The film features really individual characters that are very well developed, a well crafted story and excellent direction that pulls the whole thing together beautifully. It's a fairly slow film, though there are moments of action and excitement to satisfy the impatient.

    Miike loves to explore other cultures in his films, showing a world-awareness that isn't often found in Japanese cinema. When he takes his Japanese cast to the Phillipines it's in no way to belittle the Filipino people or culture, just to absorb some of it in the atmosphere of the film. The Japanese characters are no better or worse than the others, they're just the outsiders. Speaking of the cast, everybody does a great job with their characters - the acting throughout is top-notch.

    In GUYS FROM PARADISE Miike's direction is pretty restrained, letting the story and characters take front stage rather than his own techniques, but he still manages to create a film that feels uniquely Miike-like. The closest films to it are probably Rainy Dog, Blues Harp and perhaps Bird People From China (all Miike films, of course). Those that only know Miike from his splatter-fests may be surprised at how mature this film is, but anybody that's experienced a broad range of his insanely prolific output will find further confirmation of his extraordinary film-making talent.

    Recommended!
    7StainBoy

    The Actor from Paradise

    Kenichi Endo is quickly becoming one of my favorite actors. I have seen him in several Miike films by now (including Visitor Q, DOA2, The Happiness of the Katakuris, and Sabu), and his role in The Guys from Paradise is one of the best. I don't have to tell anyone here how great Takashi Miike is (or, if I do, he's brilliant, of course). His directing almost never fails. The Guys is a good movie with a likable cast and script. The passing viewer may find it only mildly enjoyable, but fans of Japanese movies, and especially Miike movies, should find a lot in it. Especially in the scenes with Mr. Endo, who is one of the finest actors in movies today.
    9squelcho

    Manilla sky.

    This is one of my favourite Miike movies. Much as I love the OTT manga style, and the deadly serious yakuza movies, I've also been well impressed by the "normal" movies he's made. Critics who claim that he's manically weird and/or depraved are probably missing the comedy aspects of his crazier work. You could always wait ten years for Tintin Quarantino to do a washed out compilation hack job if you find Miike's sensibilities so abhorrent. For those capable of reading subtitles and chewing gum simultaneously, there's no need to wait that long.

    Guys From Paradise is far from violent, almost obscenely decent, and wholly lacking in explosions and gratuitous gore. There's a couple of comedy masturbation scenes to frighten your granny, but apart from that it's the script and the performances which drive the movie and hold the interest.

    It's a fine ensemble piece about differing perceptions of corruption and criminality, and nobody puts a foot wrong in nearly two hours. Some of the photography is nonchalantly extraordinary, and I too get the feeling that Miike respects the people and culture when he shoots outside Japan. One particular shot of Manilla at dusk from a decrepit shanty scrapyard is pure poetry. Great cinematography that never steals the thunder from the script.

    As mentioned in other reviews, this makes a fine companion piece to Blues Harp and Bird People in China, and it makes a mockery of the claims that he's only good with shock tactics. If Miike is brutal, then this is a brutally uplifting, life affirming gem of a movie.
    chaos-rampant

    Miike trying to put the lid on his gonzo, ultraviolent side

    That director Takashi Miike is known in the west mostly for his ultraviolent shockfests and cartoonish yakuza flicks says more about western audiences (or distributors as the case may be) than the director. For every ICHI THE KILLER in his ouevre there is a BIRD PEOPLE IN CHINA and GUYS OF PARADISE is closer to the latter than the first. Neatly sandwiched between the comic-book absurdity of CITY OF LOST SOULS and the summer-afternoon nostalgia of DEAD OR ALIVE 2: BIRDS, the movie walks the proverbial tightrope between the absurd and the dramatic, mostly leaning towards the latter, with hearty doses of black comedy thrown in for good measure.

    Following the misadventures of a timid Japanese business man in the Phillipines, arrested and thrown in prison for smuggling heroin where he starts dealing drugs for another inmate in cahoots with the prison warden, the movie stacks a series of tragicomic episodes of the appalling conditions of prison life, weaving together the lives of six Japanese inmates (the titular Guys from Paradise) as they bide their time in the hot, damp purgatory of Manila, dealing drugs, squabbling with each other and dodging the occasional hired assassin.

    The tone is a bit inconsistent, as though Miike wants to make a poignant dramedy but in the same time can't help himself indulging his crazier side. Between a woman hiding jewelry in her nether parts, a yakuza boss merrily imbibing his bodily fluids, a man getting shot full of holes and still able to walk around for a couple of minutes and say "I love you" in broken English, the movie threatens to turn into FUDOH any moment.

    Miike mostly succeeds in keeping a lid on all-out madness, while still managing to squeeze a handful of beautiful moments out of his material. Exchanging the frenetic editing of his yakuza flicks for a sombre approach and a slow-burn pace, Miike uses quirky editing tricks mixed with long static shots to mirror the two-pronged seriocomic nature of the movie, which is filmed in drab, washed-out tones but makes great use of the vivid Phillipinese locations. All in all, this is not quite the Miike casual viewers might expect, but longtime fans will appreciate this other, more contemplative side.

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 16. Juni 2001 (Japan)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Philippinen
      • Japan
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Japanisch
      • Philippinisch
      • Tagalog
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Guys from Paradise
    • Drehorte
      • Philippinen
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Asahi National Broadcasting Company
      • Excellent Film
      • Hammers
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 54 Min.(114 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color

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