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Philosophy of a Knife

  • Video
  • 2008
  • Not Rated
  • 4 Std. 26 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,4/10
1785
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Philosophy of a Knife (2008)
Splatter-HorrorDramaHorror

Eine Doku über die unfassbar grausamen Experimente an Menschen, durchgeführt von der japanischen Einheit 731 im Zweiten Weltkrieg, welche die gesamte menschenverachtende Realität der japanis... Alles lesenEine Doku über die unfassbar grausamen Experimente an Menschen, durchgeführt von der japanischen Einheit 731 im Zweiten Weltkrieg, welche die gesamte menschenverachtende Realität der japanischen Kriegsverbrechen aufdeckt.Eine Doku über die unfassbar grausamen Experimente an Menschen, durchgeführt von der japanischen Einheit 731 im Zweiten Weltkrieg, welche die gesamte menschenverachtende Realität der japanischen Kriegsverbrechen aufdeckt.

  • Regie
    • Andrey Iskanov
  • Drehbuch
    • Andrey Iskanov
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Tetsuro Sakagami
    • Tomoya Okamoto
    • Yukari Fujimoto
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    4,4/10
    1785
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Andrey Iskanov
    • Drehbuch
      • Andrey Iskanov
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Tetsuro Sakagami
      • Tomoya Okamoto
      • Yukari Fujimoto
    • 33Benutzerrezensionen
    • 12Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos4

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    Topbesetzung25

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    Tetsuro Sakagami
    • The Officer #1
    Tomoya Okamoto
    • The Officer #2
    Yukari Fujimoto
    • The Female Nurse #1
    Manoush
    • The Female Nurse #1
    • (Synchronisation)
    Yumiko Fujiwara
    • The Female Nurse #2
    Masaki Kitagava
    • The Female Nurse #3
    Reiko Niakawa
    • The Female Nurse #4
    Elena Romanova Probatova
    • The Favorite Girl
    • (as Elena Probatova)
    Tatyana Kopeykina
    • The Blond Girl with Toy Bear
    Veronika Leonova
    • The Brunette Girl
    Irina Nikitina
    • The Pregnant Girl
    Dmitriy Skripnik
    • The Captured Airplane Pilot
    Alyona Strebkova
    • The Dental Torture Girl
    Vladimir Volodin
    • The Syphilis Experiment Man
    Irina Zenkina
    • The Syphilis Experiment Girl
    Svyatoslav Iliyasov
    • The Male Nurse
    Anna Subbotina
    • The Insect Experiment Girl
    • (as Anna Subotina)
    Artem Seleznyov
    • The Frostbite Experiment Man
    • Regie
      • Andrey Iskanov
    • Drehbuch
      • Andrey Iskanov
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen33

    4,41.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    1anniemaychaplin

    you're better off gnawing your own appendages for better a quality entertainment and insight into the Japanese war atrociousness.

    I am going to say now, as someone who disliked 'The Human Centipede' for the intended purpose and found it bad enough to be funny, you are better off watching that.

    The movie is shot most probably on a DSLR in black and white. The conversion into black and white was unbearably Grey with obnoxious 'old film' effects. Overall the filming is very amateur, shaky and melodramatic. While there is a small handful of clever and interesting shots and overlays, most of them look pretentious and try-hard. Think 16 year old girl film project and windows movie maker.

    The prisoners are all white females obviously cast from America's next top model, and a couple of Russian men. This is largely historically inaccurate considering in real life most of the prisoners were Chinese or Korean of all ages, not just a bunch of white hipsters. AND FOR GOD'S SAKE WHO THE F**K THOUGHT PUTTING MASCARA ON PRISONERS WAS A GOOD IDEA?

    The acting itself was overall tacky and cringey to watch. The Asian nurse was the only decent actress, even then, her face is covered with a medical mask most of the time, and her makeup is far too modern, she has ipod headphones dangling out of her pocket in one scene, which is laughable. The cast of prisoners are healthy, white, middle class, attractive, plump, groomed and moody-teenage looking, this would be fine.. if you know.. they weren't supposed to be starving, suffering and psychologically disturbed war prisoners. It is beyond me why the producer thought he wanted the prisoners to look so prime and polished, I'm astounded to think that anyone with half a brain would think to have actresses with long brushed and shiny hair, perfect makeup (with absolutely no attempt in making them look tired or haggard)and plump curvy figures, cast in a film about some of the most malnourished and tormented prisoners of all time. The Asian male doctor looks like he's just stepped out of a Korean boy band, they could have at the very least styled his hair to look 1940's. Why is he wearing eyeliner?!

    The entire cast are unconvincing and substandard actors. As a very squeamish person, i didn't even flinch. The gore was well produced in places, but the actors couldn't carry it. Screams of what was supposed to be agony looked like dodgy orgasms in some sort of soviet bdsm porn. The prisoners are calm and serene being led around. There is no kicking, struggle or fuss, not even the guards restraining them as they lead them to the operating room. They just lay down on the operating table compliantly, which is ridiculous.

    There is a rape scene in the film that is just completely ridiculous and had me laughing at how poorly acted it was.

    The whole film is poorly written and very historically inaccurate, therefore making it very difficult to believe. There is no way in hell a Japanese war doctor is going to flirt with a prisoner, i felt this was some sort of mockery , and absolutely out of place. I can see the director trying to write in some romance to make the movie ever-so-slightly less dull, but it was just utterly disrespectful to the rape victims of the real unit 713 and to a degree racially insensitive and ignorant of the well documented historic Japanese attitudes to foreigners. Other historic inaccuracies included sedation. The real Unit 713 preformed abortions and vivisection's without anesthetic, painkillers or any sort of sedation, this not only would have been much more interesting to see on screen, but made a world of difference in historical accuracy. Operations were also preformed laughably, doctors removing all sorts of organs like picking tomatoes out of a salad, while patients in pristine makeup look barely phased but let out the occasional girlish scream. Not even a drip of sweat on their faces or their lipstick smudging.

    Props used, such as a toy baby are again laughable.

    The only positive thing i can comment on is the well made opening credits and mixing of archive footage to trendy music.

    The film is a massive waste of time overall, and you're better off gnawing your own appendages for better a quality entertainment and insight into the Japanese war atrociousness.
    Dethcharm

    You Are There...

    PHILOSOPHY OF A KNIFE is not a horror / splatter / gore film. It is not meant to be enjoyed, or viewed as entertainment. It's not meant as pure exploitation, either. KNIFE is a documentary of sorts, by Director Andrey Iskanov, about the notorious UNIT 731 and the inhuman experiments conducted there during WW II.

    The horrific, insanely extreme sequences are reenactments, much like in any other documentary. The difference being, of course, that Iskanov recreates the atrocities in as viciously realistic detail as possible. He intends for us to go along with these prisoners / test subjects for every excruciatingly long second of their hideous deaths. We are supposed to experience every bit of the terror, anguish, and torture of this mindless experimentation. All without hope of reprieve or possibility of escape. We are there for the deadening monotony of systematic mass murder.

    This, as Iskanov drives home, is a slaughterhouse for human beings. He wants witnesses present for one of the darkest, most heart-destroying times in history. He makes a convincing case that man is capable of anything.

    Anything.

    One of the more chilling aspects of the film is the voice-over narration by Manoush, portraying a nurse at UNIT 731. Her words make it absolutely clear that in order to play a part in acts such as these, she had to forfeit her very soul.

    This movie contains ultra-graphic scenes of human vivisection, mutilation, and other horrors that only a true sadistic psychopath could "enjoy". Rating this ten stars because I "love it" would be absurd and insane. No, the rating is high because it does exactly what it sets out to do. It takes us to this inconceivably terrible place, and makes us not only watch, but feel what is happening there. It does this in spite of its many flaws and budgetary constraints.

    Not all stories have happy endings -or beginnings or middles- and exist simply because someone believed they had to be told...
    3BA_Harrison

    Tries way too hard.

    Watching Philosophy of a Knife, it seems to me as though writer/director Andrey Iskanov considered T.F. Mou's 1988 Unit 731 shocker Man Behind The Sun to be A) not harrowing enough, and B) not nearly long enough: his film tackles the same harsh subject matter but in even more detail, and clocks in at over four hours. Not a film for the casual viewer, then.

    A documentary consisting of genuine archive material, interview footage, and gory re-enactments of assorted atrocities, Philosophy delves into a world of callous, inhuman horror: the hideous experiments carried out on WWII prisoners in Unit 731, a Japanese biological and chemical warfare research complex. The film is, at turns, distressing, boring, and laughable: the historical imagery effectively drives home the depravity of war, the interview scenes, monotonous voiceover and interminable shots of heavy snowfall are sleep-inducing, and the splatter is way too excessive to be taken seriously.

    Whereas, in reality, 731's unfortunate victims were primarily Chinese, here they are mostly pretty young caucasian women with far too much mascara and not enough pubic hair (was the 'landing strip' a thing back then?). The scientists carry out their grisly experiments with gusto, covering the walls and themselves in gore in the process, but the special effects aren't convincing enough to rival Mou's movie in terms of nastiness (Man Behind The Sun featured genuine autopsy footage and was rumoured to have used a real cadaver in its decompression chamber scene; Iskanov gives us rubbery prosthetic body parts and watery blood).

    Amongst the 'so extreme they're actually funny' scenes, we get the removal of a fetus, extraction of teeth, the rape of a young woman by a man with syphilis, plague victims, frostbite experiments, face removal, phosphor burns, exposure to x-rays, gassing, and assorted clumsy vivisection. There's also a lot of nudity from both sexes, the most graphic moment featuring a large cockroach and a woman's nether regions.

    With the film stretched out over such a long time (it's split into two halves, both of which are longer than most documentaries), and with risible attempts at art-house pretentiousness amidst all of the bodily fluids, the film is often gruelling for the wrong reasons. Man Behind The Sun remains the better and more disturbing movie by a long chalk.

    I imagine, however, that no film will ever come close to capturing the real horror of Unit 731.
    1frequency-2

    See something else on Unit 731

    This epic is 4 hours long. Much of that 4 hours is the exterior of a building which may or may not be the one in question.

    In a prologue the director and I think one of the producers tell us, among other things, that they "did not research" a lot of the facts.

    But they say their work is based on facts and that the movie is supposed to be about death and war....

    There is a fair amount of interesting stuff in the movie, enough for maybe 90 minutes. But not 4 hours. I think they wanted to give the viewer some sense of ennui by showing the building the falling snow from this angle, from that angle, from another angle...all with no narration over and over. It seemed like about 2 minutes of story and 5 minutes of exterior of building in the falling snow for 4 hours.

    I may be exaggerating, but not much. As for the story....

    Those who know about Unit 731 may be offended by this film as an effort to cash in on a grisly reputation. Others may be offended by it's portrayal of one American and several Russians as the victims of Unit 731. I am pretty sure the majority of victims were a very diverse group consisting of P.O.W.s from all who fought against Japan, Chinese locals and even Japanese criminals. Pregnant women as well as children were also prey to the heinous Japanese "doctors" of Unit 731.

    Regardless, the whole thing to me comes off as lame bondage/torture-porn. That you MIGHT get some idea of a story out of if you take notes when they are actually speaking. Even if you are looking for Bondage/toture-porn keep the remote handy, you have a lot of the building in the falling snow from this angle, from that angle, from another angle...all with no narration over and over to fast forward through.
    8meode

    Impressive and Disturbing....Very Disturbing

    I love Andrey Iskanov's other works such as Nails and Visions of Suffering and find Philosophy of a Knife along the same lines. While yes this movie is disturbing, graphic and based on real events I am amazed at the backlash the movie and Andrey have gotten.

    Unlike other reviewers I knew what this movie was about going in. Yes there was a documentary aspect to it, part documentary and some historical footage which I thought helped connect the film as a whole, ramming it home even more that this was based on a true story. I am not sure what kind of movie others were expecting. Maybe they did not listen to the beginning interview or have not heard about Unit 731 before, or even seen Andrey's other works. I find the attack on actors and special effects ludicrous. How do you expect people to act in this scenario? Most of the special effects were very good in my opinion. There were some that could have been done better but that is the way it is and to me has no relevance to the movie as a whole. This movie was made in a certain style and is not your Hollywood pumped out generic horror crap or cookie cutter work. One reviewer even said it was a horrible movie because the actress had a Brazilian which apparently the character would not have at the time. Out of everything that is going on in that movie, the pain, cruelty, and deadening of humanity he focuses on that... I would go ahead and watch and listen to the quick interview at the beginning of the movie which answers all the questions other posters are missing. Yes it's not for everyone and for me its even hard to say I enjoyed it because it was very disturbing. My rant is over...

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    • Wissenswertes
      The film contains about 13,000 special sound effects most part of which is never used twice.
    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in Horrible Reviews: Most Disturbing Movies pt. 7.2: Philosophy Of A Knife, The Poughkeepsie Tapes and more... (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Forgive Me
      Lyrics by Andrey Iskanov

      Music by Alexander Shevchenko

      Performed by Alexander Shevchenko (feat. Manoush)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 8. Juli 2008 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Russland
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Russisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Философия ножа
    • Drehorte
      • Buenos Aires, Bundesdistrikt, Argentinien
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 4 Std. 26 Min.(266 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Stereo

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