Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe popular villain/antihero from the classic "Kikaider" TV series stars in his own movie, as a dark defender in a post-apocalyptic future.The popular villain/antihero from the classic "Kikaider" TV series stars in his own movie, as a dark defender in a post-apocalyptic future.The popular villain/antihero from the classic "Kikaider" TV series stars in his own movie, as a dark defender in a post-apocalyptic future.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Kiyohiko Inoue
- Kiyo
- (as Kiyokazu Inoue in English)
Andrew Smith
- Andy
- (as Andy Smith)
Rauf Ahmed
- Rauf
- (as Lough Armid)
Ed Sardi
- Checkpoint Official
- (as Ed Thirdy)
Riichi Seike
- Commander of Heavy Armored Soldier
- (as Toshikazu Seike in English)
Namihei Koshige
- Burglars
- (as Kazuhiro Yokoyama)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Is it advisable to watch a movie, that's based on a TV series, without first watching the TV series? Probably not, of course. But that doesn't mean one can't enjoy the movie on its own merits. 'Mechanical Violator Hakaider' is pretty fun.
It's far from perfect. The dubbed voices and dialogue are unfortunate, and one wishes scenes were a bit more dynamic; in particular, fight choreography and the timing of effects like explosions are questionable at times. The narrative flow feels disjointed, characterized by hard cuts in the editing and equally abrupt insertions of scenes that threaten our engagement.
Still, even without greater context, the plot has a solid foundation, telling as complete a story as it needs to. MVH isn't the first film about rebellion against a dystopian society, but this iteration is sufficiently different. The oppression underpinning Jesus Town is uniquely horrific, exceeding what other tales have conveyed.
It helps that there are some especially impressive visuals on hand. Costume design and set pieces work in tandem to fashion some notably arresting imagery, not least of all in the stark white citadel of the villain. To that end, the climactic fight between Hakaider and Michael is where the greatest effort was clearly placed. It's an unusual but entrancing choice to leave out any music for much of the fight, so that sound effects are more greatly emphasized. When music does pick up partway through, it's a captivating theme that wouldn't sound out of place in the impressive gothic wonderland of the Castlevania universe. And as the set takes further damage, the red interior of the infrastructure - set against the otherwise white room - is frankly beautiful. Honestly, it was a screenshot from this scene that first caught my attention and interest in watching, and I can safely say it was worth it.
For all the outstanding visuals and great ideas herein, I kind of get the notion that 'Mechanical Violator Hakaider' was not fully developed as a screenplay. The emphasis on specific poses and visual cues, to say nothing of the imagery in general, give a sense of a storyboard, or series of comic book panels. This would help to explain the lack of flow between scenes, certainly, with sudden shifts mirroring the division between one static image and another. This style doesn't entirely scuttle our enjoyment, but it does make MVH more difficult to engage with - yet there's no disputing it's an interesting approach.
When all is said and done, I do think this is a movie worth watching, even if one hasn't had any experience with the 'Kikaider' series where Hakaider originates. The picture has plenty of difficulties, and would never be considered an essential piece of cinema. But the story is sufficient, the visuals are outstanding, and the end result is that 'Mechanical Violator Hakaider' is fun and entertaining.
It's far from perfect. The dubbed voices and dialogue are unfortunate, and one wishes scenes were a bit more dynamic; in particular, fight choreography and the timing of effects like explosions are questionable at times. The narrative flow feels disjointed, characterized by hard cuts in the editing and equally abrupt insertions of scenes that threaten our engagement.
Still, even without greater context, the plot has a solid foundation, telling as complete a story as it needs to. MVH isn't the first film about rebellion against a dystopian society, but this iteration is sufficiently different. The oppression underpinning Jesus Town is uniquely horrific, exceeding what other tales have conveyed.
It helps that there are some especially impressive visuals on hand. Costume design and set pieces work in tandem to fashion some notably arresting imagery, not least of all in the stark white citadel of the villain. To that end, the climactic fight between Hakaider and Michael is where the greatest effort was clearly placed. It's an unusual but entrancing choice to leave out any music for much of the fight, so that sound effects are more greatly emphasized. When music does pick up partway through, it's a captivating theme that wouldn't sound out of place in the impressive gothic wonderland of the Castlevania universe. And as the set takes further damage, the red interior of the infrastructure - set against the otherwise white room - is frankly beautiful. Honestly, it was a screenshot from this scene that first caught my attention and interest in watching, and I can safely say it was worth it.
For all the outstanding visuals and great ideas herein, I kind of get the notion that 'Mechanical Violator Hakaider' was not fully developed as a screenplay. The emphasis on specific poses and visual cues, to say nothing of the imagery in general, give a sense of a storyboard, or series of comic book panels. This would help to explain the lack of flow between scenes, certainly, with sudden shifts mirroring the division between one static image and another. This style doesn't entirely scuttle our enjoyment, but it does make MVH more difficult to engage with - yet there's no disputing it's an interesting approach.
When all is said and done, I do think this is a movie worth watching, even if one hasn't had any experience with the 'Kikaider' series where Hakaider originates. The picture has plenty of difficulties, and would never be considered an essential piece of cinema. But the story is sufficient, the visuals are outstanding, and the end result is that 'Mechanical Violator Hakaider' is fun and entertaining.
This is a twisted retelling of biblical prophecy/history from the perspective of Satan.
Jesus is the Tyrannical villain and the Satan/Lucifer character (Hakaider) is the "liberator" of humanity.
In the fashion of very Japanese story telling in this low budget flick is campy, hokey, existential, extremely bizarre with allegorical imagery, explosions and borderline nonsensical action sequences.
If you're into that sort of weirdness you'll probably enjoy it.
I gave it 6 stars just because it was so damned weird to be entertaining...if not downright blasphemous.
Satan truly is at work around the world with his PR teams trying to skew people's opinions of Spiritual battle that surrounds us every day.
Watch this as silly entertainment but don't get confused as to who is the REAL threat to our existence.
Jesus is the Tyrannical villain and the Satan/Lucifer character (Hakaider) is the "liberator" of humanity.
In the fashion of very Japanese story telling in this low budget flick is campy, hokey, existential, extremely bizarre with allegorical imagery, explosions and borderline nonsensical action sequences.
If you're into that sort of weirdness you'll probably enjoy it.
I gave it 6 stars just because it was so damned weird to be entertaining...if not downright blasphemous.
Satan truly is at work around the world with his PR teams trying to skew people's opinions of Spiritual battle that surrounds us every day.
Watch this as silly entertainment but don't get confused as to who is the REAL threat to our existence.
After encountering a group of rebels in the autocratic pseudo-utopia of Jesus Town, a vengeful cyborg battles the forces of the town's angelic/demonic self-righteous despot. I watched English-subbed version of this henshin action-fest 'cold', having no familiarity with the television program on which it was based and found the film visually interesting but a bit boring, the latter due to the overly long and repetitive action set pieces. The perpetually scowling Hakaider was just another in a long line of similar looking über-mecha and there seemed little logic or consistency in his toggling back and forth between wetware and hardware or his resistance/susceptibility to various weapons. There is an interesting 'angel' motif woven through the imagery, both Gurjev, the leader of Jesus Town and Michael, his android head of security have wings (sort of) and clouds of white feathers feature prominently at times. The script and acting are drama-school at best (at least when watched dubbed) but the special effects are well executed although the designs seem derivative, resembling everything from Kamen Rider to Robocop. I especially liked the climactic stop-action work. All-in-all: OK but likely more appealing to fans of the original TV show or of the 'mecha-henshin' genre in general (of which I am not, I am just check-boxing my way through a lengthy list of live-action Japanese sci-fi films).
From the guy that direct Kamen Rider ZO and Kamen Rider J two very entertaining tokusatsu flick that too bad never made into an actual series so I expected nothing more than a cheesy action-fest from Hakaider and after a few up and down moments in the end the movie actually make my day a bit brighter.The plot may utterly horrible and there not much meat in the main character Hakaider beside the usual emotionless and badass attitude of an anti hero plus the horrendious English dubbing only make it more worse that it already is but the movie never bother me one bit cause I'm too busy being in awe about how over the top and fun this movie is with the costume and practical effects.The stop motion fight between Hakaider and the weird robot got me quite confused cause the introduction of it very out of nowhere but apparently Mechanical Violator Hakaider is also a spin off of the metal hero series Kikaider so that may explain something
Ok, I was intrigued by this movie. It just had a cool look, a very manga-esque feel. I really thought there would evolve something special out of this. But it didn't. Actually it became more boring every minute until I thought I'm watching a real crap fest. The visual tricks just don't do it for 80 minutes. And apart from those visuals, there's not anything good to find here.
The music and the topic remind one of "Terminator 2". There's also a little "Mad Max 2" and "Spawn" added for good measure. The sets look very cheap, the acting gets worse once the movie progresses (that asexual king is really embarrassing!) and the pacing is sleep inducing. A little blood helps sustain some interest, but not much. And those dream sequences are way too long and way too empty. All in all, I'd give it a
Rating: 3/10
The music and the topic remind one of "Terminator 2". There's also a little "Mad Max 2" and "Spawn" added for good measure. The sets look very cheap, the acting gets worse once the movie progresses (that asexual king is really embarrassing!) and the pacing is sleep inducing. A little blood helps sustain some interest, but not much. And those dream sequences are way too long and way too empty. All in all, I'd give it a
Rating: 3/10
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesMechanical Violator Hakaider was one of the films that were featured in the 1995 Toei Super Hero Fair, alongside Choriki Sentai Ohranger and Juukou B-Fighter.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosIn the DIrector's Cut, after the Toei logo appears, the camera pans left to the abandoned prison, leading into the prologue.
The theatrical film has the Toei logo appear normally and fade out.
- ConexõesReferenced in Equilibrium (2002)
- Trilhas sonorasWild Side
Performed by MODE
Lyrics by Makoto Asakura
Compsoed & Arranged by Daisuke Asakura
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- How long is Mechanical Violator Hakaider?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Mechanical Violator Hakaider
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 17 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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