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Fudoh: The New Generation

Titolo originale: Gokudô sengokushi: Fudô
  • 1996
  • 1h 38min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,0/10
3998
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Fudoh: The New Generation (1996)
Home Video Trailer from Media Blasters
Riproduci trailer1:52
1 video
9 foto
AzioneCommediaCommedia darkCrimineDramma

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaIn order to settle a business dispute, a mob leader murders one of his own teenage sons. The surviving son vows to avenge his brother's death, and organizes his own gang of teenage killers t... Leggi tuttoIn order to settle a business dispute, a mob leader murders one of his own teenage sons. The surviving son vows to avenge his brother's death, and organizes his own gang of teenage killers to destroy his father's organization.In order to settle a business dispute, a mob leader murders one of his own teenage sons. The surviving son vows to avenge his brother's death, and organizes his own gang of teenage killers to destroy his father's organization.

  • Regia
    • Takashi Miike
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Hitoshi Tanimura
    • Toshiyuki Morioka
  • Star
    • Shôsuke Tanihara
    • Miho Nomoto
    • Tamaki Kenmochi
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,0/10
    3998
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Takashi Miike
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Hitoshi Tanimura
      • Toshiyuki Morioka
    • Star
      • Shôsuke Tanihara
      • Miho Nomoto
      • Tamaki Kenmochi
    • 42Recensioni degli utenti
    • 37Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Fudoh: The New Generation
    Trailer 1:52
    Fudoh: The New Generation

    Foto8

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    Interpreti principali35

    Modifica
    Shôsuke Tanihara
    Shôsuke Tanihara
    • Riki Fudoh
    • (as Shosuke Tanihara)
    Miho Nomoto
    Miho Nomoto
    • Mika
    Tamaki Kenmochi
    • Touko Zenzai
    Marie Jinno
    • Jun Minoru
    Kenji Takano
    • Akira Aizone
    Takeshi Caesar
    • Akihiro Gondo
    • (as Caesar Takeshi)
    Satoshi Niizuma
    Rin Sakiyama
    Kenzo Hagiwara
    Gôsen Mikami
      Yûichi Minato
      Katsu Itoh
      Masahiko Sakata
      Jun'ichirô Asano
      Eiichi Furui
      Manzô Shinra
        Ikuo Kono
        Mickey Curtis
        • Yasha Gang Assassin
        • Regia
          • Takashi Miike
        • Sceneggiatura
          • Hitoshi Tanimura
          • Toshiyuki Morioka
        • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
        • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

        Recensioni degli utenti42

        7,03.9K
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        Recensioni in evidenza

        7sonatine-1

        A Great Introduction To The Japanese New Wave

        FUDOH: THE NEW GENERATION is probably the best starting point if someone wants to study the new wave of cinema coming out of Japan. While not as good as RING or as thought provoking as AUDITION or the films of "Beat" Takeshi, FUDOH will best prepare you for the extreme limits of violence and taste common to Japanese cinema. (The Japanese perspective on sex and violence is a mix of Paul Verhoeven and the Farrelly Brothers.)

        FUDOH's sex and violence isn't in unwatchably bad taste. I'd say it's right on the line.

        In the film, a Yukaza father with two sons messes up and must pay a tribute to show loyalty to the other Yakuza families. He does this by killing his oldest son (in a prologue that had me so confused I had to read the video box to follow what was happening.) Ten years later, the youngest son (now the smartest and most popular kid in high school) organizes his friends to take revenge against his father and all the other Yakuza leaders for practicing outdated customs that condone killing one's own family members.

        Like most Japanese films, FUDOH works on two levels. On the surface, it's a violent revenge picture (and this one moves faster than most Japanese films.) The film is also a commentary on the relationships between fathers and sons (while enemies the two show more in common then they'd ever admit), young and old, and the need to question tradition and keep things current.

        Of course most people will walk away from FUDOH talking about the wild sequences of sex and violence. This is the film by Miike Takashi (DEAD OR ALIVE, AUDITION) that put him on the map. (It also got him labeled the Japanese Verhoeven.) Typical of the director's work, FUDOH would most definitely be 'NC-17', with scenes of six-year-olds performing assassinations and a stripper who shoots poison darts from her.you know where. (You have to see it to believe it, and the fact that Takeshi is able to show it without explicit nudity - the girl uses a blowgun-like tube - proves that he does have a threshold of taste.)

        I enjoyed large chunks of FUDOH. It's far superior to the better known DEAD OR ALIVE and more entertaining than AUDITION, although it's nowhere near as mature or thought provoking. It's also worth noting that this film is very Japanese in its behind-the-times attitudes towards females. The sexism is a bit surprising coming from Takashi, since AUDITION (which the director made five years later) is one of the strongest cinematic arguments for a woman's sexual equality that Japan's ever produced.
        9AwesomeWolf

        My introduction to Miike...

        I've mentioned in some of my other reviews ('Ezo Ezo Azaraku II' and 'Mr Vampire') that SBS (a free-to-air Australian channel specializing foreign programs) shows some pretty cool and pretty weird. That being said, I watched this not knowing who Takashi Miike was, and ignoring SBS's usual "warning: this program contains material that may disturb some viewers". That was quite the understatement. I reckon 'Fudoh' could disturb most viewers.

        When Riki Fudoh (Shosuke Tanihara) was a child, he witnessed his father Iwao Fudoh, a yakuza boss, behead Riki's older brother, Ryu. Ryu has committed crimes against the Yakuza and dishonoured his father, and in such a society, it is Iwao's duty to kill him, regardless of Ryu being his first son. Naturally, this has an impact on Riki. Skip to Riki in high-school, and he is now the boss of his own Yakuza gang, with the intent of taking out the older generation of Yakuza, and destroying the old ways. Only in Japan...

        'Fudoh' plays out as quite the violent yakuza drama. It may not have the body-count of a John Woo or Quentin Tarantino movie, but the "controversial violence" of Tarantino's 'Kill Bill' has nothing on this, and I'd be willing that Woo would much prefer to avoid making anything like this. Riki's yakuza gang is made of up teenagers and kids. Very early into the movie, we see some kids (I dare say no older than 8 at the most) pull out their hand-guns and assassinate a rival Yakuza. That I could barely handle, but Miike just goes further and further with some rather unusual acts of violence and very bizarre sex-scenes.

        And even through all that, there is still a plot. 'Fudoh' explores the same theme as 'Battle Royale' - the younger generation of Japanese not understanding, or not willing to understand, the long-lasting feudal traditions in Japanese culture. OK, I'll admit that is how I understood it. Maybe I got it wrong, maybe I was just looking for something that wasn't there, but I'm fairly sure that my interpretation is at least somewhat correct. It is easy to overwhelmed by the action on-screen, and I wouldn't be surprised if some people completely missed any theme and left only with the image of someone's brain stuck to a wall.

        'Fudoh' is a good movie, but not for the faint of heart. Or most people. In fact, it may be best if only shown to fans of the more violent action movies from Asia - 9/10
        DJ Inferno

        Sushi gore

        Director Takashi Miike ("Audition", "Dead or Alive I+II") created a dark vengeance-story that deals with a young guy named Riki Fudoh who takes bitter revenge on the Yakuza for killing his brother. Together with some classmates he starts a merciless crusade against the organized crime... However, without being too sensitive, so faint-hearted persons should stay away from the gross scenes of murder! Acid drinks, beheadings and little kids as contract killers... no doubt, "Fudoh" is bloody entertainment in perfection! It is something like teenagers on a killing spree, but fortunately far beyond political correctness and typical Hollywood-clichés - or could anyone imagine Denise Richards using vaginal firearms?!? (A delicious imagination, by the way...)... Miike´s film ran very successfully at various festivals like in Rotterdam/Netherlands, Toronto/Canada or in Germany. It was a No.1 box-office blockbuster in its home country Japan and everyone who likes violent Asian action movies should give it a fair chance! Recommended!
        10Quinoa1984

        a hilarious, violent romp and a yakuza take on Shakespearian themes, Fudoh is an unlikely Miike classic

        Fudoh: The New Generation was Takashi Miike's first cross-over success in the West (whether in America or just on the festival circuit I can't say), and it's no wonder- it's the perfect calling card, a work of ferocious energy and sincerity with comedy and drama, extreme violence and heart, kitsch and the bizarre. A lot of things that one would expect to find in the given Miike yakuza can be found here in spades: a blood battle involving brothers, the corrupt old incumbent yakuza, the vicious and surreal thugs out to get their just deserts, and of course in style with carefully composed shots and startlingly edited scenes of action, with deliberate scenes of dialog and actors staring at one another. It shouldn't work, but it does, and to a point that had me laughing, gasping, and sure that even if things worked out "alright" (and alright in the sense of a bloody tale of twisted revenge) it would leave a lasting impression, long after seeing nearly a couple dozen other Miike films.

        It's emotional core, for one thing, is exceptional for a Miike film, which helps in springing out the demented comedy, as unlikely as that is. A yakuza kills one of his sons to pay a debt to a gangster- a debt which he crazily relishes as he plants his son's head on the table and laughs maniacally- leaving the living son completely bewildered but swearing on his late brother's honor. Cut to ten years later, as the father barely acknowledges he ever had another son, and Riki Fudoh is now gathering up a small army of outcast teens like him (one girl who can shoot out darts from her privates, little kids with handguns, a big huge lummox who killed his parents, and a hermaphrodite, cause, why the hell not) to get payback by killing off as many yakuza as possible. Crazy? It just might work, after the vicious, grotesque deaths of four council members (the car scene especially is vintage Miike).

        You don't have to be completely queued to the artistic aesthetic Miike had with Gozu, or always have a smile on your face ala Katakuris, but Fudoh marks its place in the upper-level of the director's oeuvre by allowing for the low-budget cast to shine through. This goes for scenes that could, by any other director, be deemed unnecessary or even just cruel (i.e. the death of one of the girls by the hands of the North Korean killer Fudoh Sr hires to kill his son, and the hermaphrodite sex scene). In Miike's hands, he treats them like it SHOULD be considered art, not simply exploitation of genre or going for dopey extremes with exit wounds and vaginas. And it is, for those who want it, a success as a comedy, one that allows you to laugh your head off at the kinds of things that would give the squeamish nightmares for weeks. And for those looking for a work that goes even further than Hamlet, here it is!

        And, of course, where would a great Miike flick be without a sneering Riki Takeuchi? It's a lot of fun and a truly substantial dramatic effort too, and it's not a bad place to go if you're just getting into the director's elephantine body of very contemporary work.
        Rapeman13

        Essential Miike

        Fudoh: The Next Generation is another in a long line of Yakuza films helmed by Takashi Miike. The big difference here is that the principal Yakuza organisation in the film is made up of adolescents and 5-7 year old boys who are just as deadly as their adult rivals.

        The reigning Nio Yakuza clan is made up of five different families, one of the five heads is Iwao Fudoh, and his first lieutenant his oldest son, Ryu. When Ryu orders one of the rival Yasha organisations hit men killed, thus triggering a full scale war between the Yasha and Nio clans, Iwao is asked to make up for his sons mistake and he does so by decapitating him and presenting the head as compensation to the Nio clan.

        Upon hearing a noise Iwao's youngest son Riki, awakes and goes to investigate - he stumbles upon the grisly sight of his father beheading his older brother. Cut to ten years later, Riki is now in high school and running an organisation of his own made up of fellow students and a group of little boys. His anger over the death of his brother has not faded in the least and he has plans to wipe out the other four families in the Nio clan and become boss.

        Fudoh is really a mindblowing spectacle, we are constantly battered with violent and non-PC imagery, beginning with the sight of two five year-old boys coldly assassinating an elderly Yakuza boss. To see young children effortlessly handling 9mm's is somewhat of a shock to our pre-conditioned minds to start with, but when they continue on to calmly blow an old man's brains out you start to get an idea of what is ahead.

        The next slaying involves a poisoned cup of coffee and literally bucketloads of blood. Another features Riki's female friend and classmate Mika, who works on the side at a sleazy strip joint performing her unique act which consists of shooting sharpened darts out of a blowpipe inserted in her vagina and bursting balloons on the other side of the room, though this night, in-between balloons, she shoots a dart right through a Nio leaders head - in one ear and out the other - the dart sinks into the wall with a piece of brain tissue still attached.

        Everything about Fudoh is so over-the-top and insanely exaggerated that you seem not to notice that the likelihood of a group of children being at war with the Yakuza is highly improbable. Midway through the film we are shown the children's training camp where we see the kids merrily playing soccer with their English teachers head, this serves again to reinforce the sense of unreality that's at play here. Although, all hyperbole aside, Fudoh also explores the dysfunctional relationship between father and son, a bond so broken down by betrayal and murder that as the two males sit opposite each other eating dinner in silence, each one is plotting a way to execute the other.

        All in all, if you dig schoolgirl hermaphrodites, friendly giants, lesbian English teachers, vaginal darts and a large helping of blood and black comedy, this a must-see Miike film.

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        Trama

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        • Quiz
          There was 2 Sequels Gokudô sengokushi: Fudô 2 and Gokudô sengokushi: Fudô 3 with Riki Takeuchi repeating his Role as Daigen Nohma. None of the Sequels were released outside of Japan.
        • Citazioni

          Daigen Nohma: Wasn't that a fabulous gift ? Maybe I will join your Team , after you take care whats getting in our way.

          Iwao Fudoh: Right Away. I'll take care of it Right away.

          Daigen Nohma: You Better Think Carefully before taking any Action. It's not gonna be like it was with your older son, your kid is a little tougher than you think. I'm Looking forward to it - The Young Fudoh's Severed Head.

        • Versioni alternative
          UK version is cut by 21 seconds to remove shots of Gondo head-butting and kicking Touko between the legs, and of her wetting herself following the assault.
        • Connessioni
          Followed by Gokudô sengokushi: Fudô 2 (1997)

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        • What are the differences between the British BBFC-18 version and the uncut version?

        Dettagli

        Modifica
        • Data di uscita
          • 12 ottobre 1996 (Giappone)
        • Paese di origine
          • Giappone
        • Lingua
          • Giapponese
        • Celebre anche come
          • Фудо: Новое поколение
        • Luoghi delle riprese
          • Shinjuku, Tokyo, Giappone
        • Aziende produttrici
          • Excellent Film
          • Gaga
        • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

        Botteghino

        Modifica
        • Budget
          • 40.000.000 JPY (previsto)
        Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

        Specifiche tecniche

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        • Tempo di esecuzione
          • 1h 38min(98 min)
        • Colore
          • Color
        • Mix di suoni
          • Mono
        • Proporzioni
          • 1.85 : 1

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