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Autant en emporte mon nunchaku

Titre original : Gekitotsu! Satsujin ken
  • 1974
  • 16
  • 1h 31min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
6 k
MA NOTE
Shin'ichi Chiba in Autant en emporte mon nunchaku (1974)
Trailer 1
Lire trailer2:13
1 Video
99+ photos
Arts martiauxActionCriminalitéThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAfter failing to reach a deal with her enemies, a mercenary karateka protects the daughter of a recently-deceased oil tycoon from the evil conglomerate gunning for her inheritance.After failing to reach a deal with her enemies, a mercenary karateka protects the daughter of a recently-deceased oil tycoon from the evil conglomerate gunning for her inheritance.After failing to reach a deal with her enemies, a mercenary karateka protects the daughter of a recently-deceased oil tycoon from the evil conglomerate gunning for her inheritance.

  • Réalisation
    • Shigehiro Ozawa
  • Scénario
    • Kôji Takada
    • Motohiro Torii
    • Steve Autrey
  • Casting principal
    • Shin'ichi Chiba
    • Goichi Yamada
    • Yutaka Nakajima
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Shigehiro Ozawa
    • Scénario
      • Kôji Takada
      • Motohiro Torii
      • Steve Autrey
    • Casting principal
      • Shin'ichi Chiba
      • Goichi Yamada
      • Yutaka Nakajima
    • 71avis d'utilisateurs
    • 72avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    The Street Fighter
    Trailer 2:13
    The Street Fighter

    Photos133

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 125
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux44

    Modifier
    Shin'ichi Chiba
    Shin'ichi Chiba
    • Takuma Tsurugi (Terry)
    • (as Sonny Chiba)
    Goichi Yamada
    • Rakuda Zhang
    • (as Gerald Yamada)
    Yutaka Nakajima
    • Sarai Chuayut
    • (as Doris Nakajima)
    Chiyoko Kazama
    • Yang Gei-Cheun
    Etsuko Shihomi
    Etsuko Shihomi
    • Nachi Shikenbaru
    • (as Sue Shiomi)
    Nobuo Kawai
    • Tetsunosuke Tsuchida
    Akira Shioji
    • Liang Dung-Yat
    Chico Lourant
    • Bondo
    • (as Chico Roland)
    Tony Cetera
    • Abdul Jadot
    Osman Yusuf
    Osman Yusuf
    • King Stone
    • (as Yuseph Osman)
    Jirô Yabuki
    • Gijun Shikenbaru
    • (as Jirô Chiba)
    Minken Karasawa
    • Warden Yamazaki
    Takuzô Kawatani
    • Ôshima
    Kojiro Shirakawa
    • Inspector Chan
    Tetsuo Torisu
    • Detective A
    Hisao Mizoguchi
    • Endoshi - Monkey Boy
    Masataka Iwao
    • Saga
    Takashi Noguchi
    • Yokoyama
    • Réalisation
      • Shigehiro Ozawa
    • Scénario
      • Kôji Takada
      • Motohiro Torii
      • Steve Autrey
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs71

    6,95.9K
    1
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    10

    Avis à la une

    Backlash007

    "Improve your skill, son. Harden your body, become a NUMBER ONE MAN!"

    In a typical action flick, the hero's loved one is murdered, causing the hero to exact his revenge on those responsible. Same boring stuff. Now what if the roles were reversed; what if the hero is the one killing loved ones and the villain is looking for revenge? That's just the start of how The Street Fighter differs from every other martial arts film. The hero is the most evil son of a b*tch in the whole movie, it's great. He breaks every rule in the hero handbook and you still root for him. Sonny Chiba is the title character and he doesn't take sh*t from anyone. Chiba fights everyone, an entire dojo of martial arts students, trained bodyguards, and hired assassins, he even takes on the Yakuza. The characters are superb, mainly the villains. Junjo, the Boss, and even the big, bald wrestler are all great. I absolutely love the blind swordsman. The violence is eye popping, literally. From teeth spittin' to throat rippin', even x-ray bone breaking (which Romeo Must Die would later steal) and a scene that will make every male cringe. And lets not forget the martial arts. Some of the best fighting ever. Chiba is an extraordinary artist. Chiba would play the Street Fighter three more times but this is him at his best. The sequels aren't as good, but still recommended viewing.
    EL BUNCHO

    THE MOVIE THAT GAVE MARTIAL ARTS FLICKS THEIR REPUTATION FOR GORE AND SADISM!!! A MUST-SEE!

    Remember during the height of the martial arts movie boom (roughly 1973-1976) the reputation that chopsocky films had for being replete with misery, violence, gore and degradation of the human spirit? Well, most films in the genre didn't live up to the hype at all. THE STREETFIGHTER, however, set the standard for onscreen insanity, was originally rated X for violence, and has yet to be equalled (well...maybe THE STORY OF RIKI) for sheer, nasty entertainment value.

    Sonny Chiba stars as Terry Tsurugi, an utterly amoral b**tard who is absolutely the last guy you would ever want to face in combat. Bruce Lee's characters had the common decency to simply kill you and move on, whereas Tsurugi would make his punishment of an opponent extremely personal, down to the point of tearing off pieces of their bodies. His fighting style is graceless but effective, and a lot easier for any of us who strove to match the grace of Bruce to appreciate. If you want to see ass-whuppin' administered with balletic grace and artistry, do not see this film. If you want to see a guy mercilessly whip truckloads of ass, then this is the movie for you!

    In a nutshell: Terry tsurugi is a badass-for-hire who will take on any job if his price is met. Plotline #1 has Terry rescuing convicted karate murderer Junjo from his date with the hangman. When Terry relocates Junjo to Hong Kong so the Japanese police won't find him, Junjo's brother and sister show up and tell Terry that they can't afford to pay him the rest of the money they owe for their brother's escape. Tragedy results that will make Junjo Terry's bitterest enemy and will eventually see them in a final showdown where only one will survive.Plotline #2 sees Terry volunteering to bodyguard the heiress to an oil fortune who is being pressured by the Yakuza. Her uncle happens to be a Karate master who is the only man alive that Tsurugi respects, and by working for him, Terry makes an attempt at redeeming himself as a human being (well, sort of...). Terry tries to stay one step ahead of the Yakuza, and his efforts culminate in a literal bloodbath where he takes on about thirty goons and puts much foot to ass.

    The two plotlines overlap wildly and the ass-whuppin' set-pieces are loads of violent fun. Chiba's intense performance is unlike any other character in the history of the genre. Mean, violent and downright reprehensible, THE STREETFIGHTER is a unique milestone in the martial arts movie genre. HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION.
    7sc8031

    Sonny Chiba plays Sonny Chiba in "Sonny Chi... I mean, "The Streetfighter"!

    The Streetfighter remains one of the defining films of the Japanese martial arts, "grindhouse", "chop-socky" era from the 1970s. It's one of the titles that made Sonny Chiba famous and features really impressive high-level karate.

    But the film isn't light-hearted, nor is it made humorous by its dub (as is the case with the contemporary Shaw Bros. films of the time). It is violent, gritty, misogynistic, and a bit racist. It explores gritty underworld elements: drug trafficking, sex slavery, contract killing, etc.

    The plot revolves around Terry, an underground mercenary in modern Japan, who is forced into a life of crime (presumably) for being half-Chinese in a racist, conservative society. He is offered a job to rescue a wealthy oil baron's daughter-heiress after she is kidnapped by Yakuza. The way the events transpire and the plot develops is actually pretty solid for a "B" movie, and here Street Fighter stands far above its sequels or genre contemporaries.

    Terry as a character is complex and depressing. He is angry and violent and completely unsympathetic to others, but he is the one we are supposed to connect with. Many people who cross his path are perhaps more upstanding people but are killed either because they are in the way of his contract jobs or because they are not as equally driven by hatred.

    Sure, maybe it's a character study or a commentary on Japanese society in post-World War II. But that's only in hind-sight and even if so, it's just icing. The premise of the movie is to create a situation for Sonny Chiba to kill a bunch of violent criminals while on commission. But this is okay, because the acting is good, the martial arts are real good, the music is catchy funk-inspired rock and enka from the '70s, and the plot maintains your attention throughout.
    8bergma15@msu.edu

    Become a number one man!

    Streetfighter is a show case for the karate talents of Sonny Chiba. Chiba plays Terry Tsurugi, a man who was orphaned when his Japanese father was executed in China during World War II. Terry is now back in Japan and kicking ass for a living. He's the best of the best in Japan and is hired to help get a criminal on death row out of prison. He manages to do this using an ancient technique (yeah, I know, they all use some ancient technique). Sonny then ends up killing the guy's brother due to an argument over payment and getting his sister sold into prostitution.

    After this Sonny is propositioned by the Yakuza to kidnap a girl who is an oil heiress. Sonny jumps sides and starts working for her protectors after a show down with her uncle, the leader of a karate school. This flick is packed with violence galore. Sonny does some pretty cool stuff, and amazingly, the whole plot manages to come together at the end. There are also a few one liners that are pretty cool.

    This is the flick that made me a Sonny Chiba fan.
    -6

    I despise people who don't keep their promises!

    It's not the best martial arts film ever made, (that title, in my opinion, belongs to Enter The Dragon) but it definitely holds its own, especially when you compare it to the millions of crappy, overdubbed Kung Fu movies out there. What I liked best about the film was Tsurugi's in-it-for-the-money attitude. Aside from maybe Ratnose (did anyone else detect the slightest hint of sexual tension between Rat & Terry, or am I crazy?), Tsurugi cares about no one. He is, after all, "a number one man!" I know this bad anti-hero thing has been done to death, but Sonny Chiba is the best at what he does: whuppin' ass & lookin' cool.

    The thing I didn't care too much for was Tsurugi's seeming ability to teleport wherever he needed to go. (Hong Kong! Tokyo! Jupiter!) Other than that minor inconsistency (remember, inconsistency is what makes a movie good, sometimes) I enjoyed this movie.

    Centres d’intérêt connexes

    Bruce Lee in Opération Dragon (1973)
    Arts martiaux
    Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
    Action
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Criminalité
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      First film to ever get an X rating for violence in the US. American newspaper ads carried the quote "NOTICE: The MPAA has rated this film unsuitable for viewers under the age of 17 because of its extraordinary fight sequences."
    • Gaffes
      Near the end of the movie, on the ocean liner, Terry is fighting three men in a hallway and some equipment is visible at the bottom of the screen.
    • Citations

      Terry's Father: Listen my son, TRUST NO ONE! You can count on no one but YOURSELF. Improve your skills, son, harden your body, become a NUMBER ONE MAN! Do not ever let ANYONE beat you!

    • Versions alternatives
      Originally rated X in the theaters, The Street Fighter was chopped up for the New Line Video re-release giving it an R-rating and a running time of 75 minutes. Unrated and uncut version subsequently released runs 91 minutes and includes all scenes of martial arts violence and gore that was cut.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Autant en emporte mon nunchaku (1974)

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    FAQ14

    • How long is The Street Fighter?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 avril 1977 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Site officiel
      • Watch on Pave TV
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Chiba ti-mal'la
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Toei-Kyoto Studios, Kyoto, Japon
    • Société de production
      • Toei Company
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 31min(91 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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