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Kaiji: O Melhor Jogador

Título original: Kaiji: Jinsei gyakuten gêmu
  • 2009
  • 2 h 10 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
2,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Kaiji: O Melhor Jogador (2009)
Kaiji Ito (Fujiwara) moves to Japan after graduating from high school. Unable to find a job and frustrated with society at large, Kaiji spends his days gambling, vandalising cars, and drinking. Two years later and his life is no better. A debt collector named Endo arrives to collect payment. She then offers two choices to Kaiji: spend 10 years paying off his loan or board a gambling boat for one night to repay his debt and possibly make a whole lot more. Meanwhile, the unscrupulous Endo is actually conning Kaiji, believing he won't come back from his voyage. Kaiji is then up for the night of his lifeÂ…Â…
Reproduzir trailer1:10
1 vídeo
9 fotos
Drama

Kaiji, um jovem apostador que está constantemente endividado, participa de uma competição de jogo mortal para pagar seus empréstimos.Kaiji, um jovem apostador que está constantemente endividado, participa de uma competição de jogo mortal para pagar seus empréstimos.Kaiji, um jovem apostador que está constantemente endividado, participa de uma competição de jogo mortal para pagar seus empréstimos.

  • Direção
    • Tôya Satô
  • Roteiristas
    • Nobuyuki Fukumoto
    • Mika Ohmori
  • Artistas
    • Tatsuya Fujiwara
    • Yûki Amami
    • Tarô Yamamoto
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,4/10
    2,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Tôya Satô
    • Roteiristas
      • Nobuyuki Fukumoto
      • Mika Ohmori
    • Artistas
      • Tatsuya Fujiwara
      • Yûki Amami
      • Tarô Yamamoto
    • 15Avaliações de usuários
    • 19Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Kaiji
    Trailer 1:10
    Kaiji

    Fotos8

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    Elenco principal21

    Editar
    Tatsuya Fujiwara
    Tatsuya Fujiwara
    • Kaiji Itô
    Yûki Amami
    Yûki Amami
    • Rinko Endô
    Tarô Yamamoto
    Tarô Yamamoto
    • Jôji Funai
    Ken Mitsuishi
    • Kôji Ishida
    Yuriko Yoshitaka
    • Yasuda…
    Masako Motai
    Masako Motai
    • Houseboat Proprietress
    Ken'ichi Matsuyama
    Ken'ichi Matsuyama
    • Makoto Sahara
    Kei Satô
    Kei Satô
    • Kazutaka Okada
    Suzuki Matsuo
    • Tarô Ôtsuki
    Teruyuki Kagawa
    Teruyuki Kagawa
    • Yukio Tonegawa
    Takuma Anzai
    Takuma Anzai
    Bobby
    Nobuyuki Fukumoto
    Nobuyuki Fukumoto
    • Black Suit A
    Yasuhi Nakamura
    • Ôta
    Shogen
    Shogen
    • Majima
    Sôtarô
    Sôtarô
    • Kitami
    Hajime Taniguchi
    Sadayuki Tarumi
    • Direção
      • Tôya Satô
    • Roteiristas
      • Nobuyuki Fukumoto
      • Mika Ohmori
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários15

    6,42.2K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    10george_a_romero

    Brilliant!

    The colourful cast of Death Note (2006) reunite for this inspired manga/anime adaptation. It is a riveting sizzler of a movie made with nerve-jangling Japanese brutality. Kaiji is a down and out thirty-year-old blue-collar loser who has no luck in life. He is bored of his dead-end job at the hypermarket, irritated that pompous and prosperous people drive around in Mercedes and depressed that he never has enough dough to rise above his comatose lifestyle. One day, a debt collector arrives at his flat to offer him the chance to change his empty existence: go on a cruise with other down and outs, gamble, and repay his debts in the ultimate game of deception. If you win, you start your life afresh, if you lose, well, you will never want to fool around with rock-paper-scissors again because Brave Men Road is the only way to escape 15-years of forced underground slave labour.

    Kaiji: The Ultimate Gambler (2009) examines the languor of Japanese consumer culture: work, devour, and squander your verve in an everlasting cycle of mass suppression that upholds the lower-class/upper-class divide. This regimented Metropolis style nightmare comes to fruition in the symbolic utopian underground kingdom that blue-collar slave workers must construct for aristocratic city-dwellers. The languid masses march in union, take showers together and buy beer and munchies with their meagre pay to nullify and distract themselves from their authoritarianism. The moral at the heart of Kaiji is simple: if you want to achieve your dreams in this hum/drum existence, you have to wake up, fight, and live recklessly. Would you be willing to walk across an electrified beam between two skyscrapers to pay off your debts while superficial business executives watch you on television screens? If you want to rise above your own worthless comatose lifestyle, why not take up the challenge, you could win lots of money because that is what Brave Men Road is all about, or is it… Verdict: This riveting Battle Royale intoned masterpiece is made with nail-biting suspense, brain-teasing intelligence and mind-blowing wit:-
    gothic_a666

    Too Rushed

    The problem with this movie is that it has to compact the material of 13 volumes of manga into a 2 hour long movie. The very format forced some of 'Kaiji's strongest points to lose much of its impact, namely the gambling aspect of what is a very brainy and interesting manga. The movie cuts down on the mental gymnastics that make Kaiji able to beat the odds in a believable way. As a result the viewer cannot quite grasp his genius as everything is edited to the point of losing coherence. The manga is plotted in such a way as to cover several arcs, each with its own crazily high stakes and particular flavor. The movie cannot frame a transition of the moments of the narrative without coming undone at the seams.

    Some choices in the adaptation were odd such as changing Endou's gender and changing the order of some events and there are other changes that may seem minor on the surface but end up diluting the tense do-or-die atmosphere that had readers of the manga flipping the pages anxiously and sitting at the edge of their seats. Such as the terrifying ear perforation device or the finger guillotine, both if which are completely absent in the movie.

    Kaiji's inner dialog is hyped mostly as an emotional appeal without the counterbalancing effect of his quick mind. The manga's eponymous hero is known for bursting into tears rather often but he remains a very clever young man whose gambles have plenty of reasoning behind them, the movie shows us only flashes of this. It is also unfortunate that some of the more intense moments of the 'Kaiji' saga take place in material that is not covered by the movie.

    The acting is solid, namely Fujiwara who plays Kaiji flawlessly, a completely different role of Death Note's Light that first introduced me to him. Having a woman playing a loan shark lends itself to romantic vibes but these never materialize.

    Fans of the manga may enjoy seeing Kaiji in 3D but this movie does not match the brilliance of the original work.
    9jonny_

    Entertaining with plenty of twists.

    It's easy to criticise this film for being very over the top and downright outlandish, and that's because it is. It definitely has some overacting and very silly moments or dialogue, does it really hurt this film? No. The entire premise is over the top right off the bat, the film is about a guy playing a casino game (on a boat for some reason, maybe to bypass illegal gambling laws... who knows?) which is basically rock paper scissors to wipe out his debt and if he loses is doomed to pay it off through slave labour. I can't turn around and say "Aw man, they've managed to make this silly!" on top of that it's an adaptation from a manga, a good adaptation as you would expect from a cast reunited from the live action Death Note (that's right they actually had a good one before Netflix).

    This is a very entertaining film and with almost all films you know the hero is going to come out on top, this film is very good at baiting you into thinking he's found a way to basically cheat the system. I like the original idea that there is debt collectors who would victimize people to extort more from them including a sort of underground (ironically) mining operation that pays them a pittance then entices them to give it back in exchange for luxury items.
    choclovesallofyou

    Please, watch the anime or read the original manga

    Generally adaptations from medium to medium in the world of film (i.e video game crossovers, remakes of older movies, cartoon remakes) are poor quality. As the original material adapts to its new format it becomes diluted. The work of the original creator is generally mangled to the point of no return.

    This film is a prime example.

    As far as some of the reviewers above who have made presumptions of Japanese culture portrayed in the film, stating that Japanese people don't 'act' like the characters portrayed in the film, are making ignorant remarks. The original piece of work (either the anime series or the manga) is a psychological thriller, with great attempts made at in-depth analysis of the thought processes of the characters. The commentary made on the greed of society as a whole is invoking.

    Bottom Line: Watch the anime if psychological thrillers are up your alley, its not drawn in typical cheesy anime style, nor is it cliché! Don't watch this film unless you have seen the anime, it will probably be a horrid experience! I recommend both Kaiji and the creator's earlier manga/anime Akagi. Both are extraordinary pieces of work in the otherwise cliché and worn out world of Japanese Animated television series.
    8DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Kaiji The Ultimate Gambler

    This was one of the films that I had to give up on during last year's trip to the Tokyo International Film Festival, not that I thought it was no good – the casting reunion of those from the Death Note films is reason enough to flock to this – but because I had got some faith that it'll make it to Singapore because it should have some appeal given the success of Death Note here, and manga to film adaptations have usually done fairly well. So it made it to our shores, and while I was expecting some serious gambling utilizing the rule book from casino card games, Kaiji: The Ultimate Gambler just lives up to its title, where the stakes are deadly, usually that of life or lifestyle.

    However, the strength of the film is how it metaphorically paints the picture of society with that rich-poor divide, between the elite class and those who are perpetual losers, being dealt the shortest end of the stick in life. It's easy to be on one side of the fence and accuse the other of being stupid, lazy and not worthy of their lot, but put it this way, who doesn't want to be able to live a financially free life with nary a material care since it's all taken care of. One thing in life that's constant, besides change, is that life is never fair, and usually being somebody, or knowing somebody else, may open some doors for you, making it a tad easier to get to one's objectives. The playing field is rarely even, and only made worse if one group decides to exploit the other.

    Tatsuya Fujiwara plays the titular role Kaiji, a down and out young adult who's living his life without much aim, being painted an illusion by Endo (Yuki Amami) who had conned him into boarding a ship, on the hopes that by playing a game onboard would change his debt- ridden life as it is. It's a life-changing experience alright, one that Kaiji soon finds himself stuck in, being held against his wishes but on a principle that he made, and then sucked into an underground social system which is aimed squarely at how we, the workers, get bordered into a routine of work-rest-eat-drink, and a financial system that's basically out to regain every penny of reward given for honest work, and that's in the form of induced consumerism.

    And that's how I suppose the rich and powerful can keep a stranglehold on the common folk, keeping them in despair until they resign to their "fate" that there's no way out of the vicious circle, and to conform and continue in their routine so as to fuel the economy. With each revelation comes Kaiji's resolve to get out of the system, only to find more obstacles in his way, becoming mere pawns of entertainment to the idle rich folks, one of whom is the chairman of a powerful conglomerate known as "Teiai" (or Love Emperor, played by Kei Sato).

    The key entertaining moments in the film are of course the death-defying situations the gamblers are put through, and it turns out more to be like problem-solving coupled with going up against stacked odds. Fans of Kenichi Matsuyama will also be pleased that their idol had gotten a supporting role here looking quite rugged with his unshaven look, and instead of being at loggerheads with Fujiwara's Kaiji, it's a welcome change to see the two actors in roles that require support from each other. Teruyuki Kagawa (of Tokyo Sonata) also shines as the main over-confident villain in the film, whose bright idea it was to capture idling youths and to put them to work as slaves for Teiai, only to find himself setting up an adversary in Kaiji, adding to his reputation of not being well-liked.

    Since it's adapted from the manga, the three key gambling moments were drawn from the books, although they come with minor tweaks to allow for a cinematic interpretation. Amongst the three games of Restricted Rock Paper Scissors, Human Derby and E-Card, which is an interesting game of chance involving Citizen, Emperor and Slave cards, director Toya Sato (who also helmed Gokusen the Movie) should be given credit for crafting the games and heightening tensions in an order of a crescendo befitting of a grand hurrah, striking a balance between the need to entertain, and to tickle that mind of yours in a battle of wits. There's a certain formula employed as well, with everything explained toward the end in a series of flashbacks, so yeah, the answers will be given after you exercised that noodle a little.

    In some ways, the games were played in a fashion similar to how Jigsaw designed his. With the latter, the games serve as a lesson to those who had lived the good life, to teach them to be contented with their lot and not take life for granted. With this, it's in a way to break the barrier of zero confidence amongst those who are deemed losers in life, giving them monetary incentives to participate in death-defying games, in order to make them realize that through hard work and surpassing what is deemed impossible, will the survivors know that reward only comes from performance. Sounds a little like our workfare scheme, minus the death elements.

    Like any manga inspired or movie adapted from graphic novels, the film barely scratched the surface of its rich origin material. As such, do keep your eyes peeled for a sequel currently scheduled for a 2011 debut. Expect more death-defying games, battle of wits, and a caution to those who are too smart for their own good, and if those elements in a film are your cup of tea then you shouldn't miss this!

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Nobuyuki Fukumoto, creator of the "Kaiji" manga on which this film is based, appears in the film as a black-suited man.
    • Citações

      Yukio Tonegawa: A Slave... why? Didn't you swap it before the blood sprayed on it?

      Kaiji Ito: Sorry, but no. All I did was pull the face down Citizen and Slave cards close to me, then put a Citizen card over one, only to pull it back. In other words, I only pretended to swap.

      Rinko Endo: He didn't swap them?

      Yukio Tonegawa: Impossible! HOW COULD THIS BE POSSIBLE? WHY, WHY DIDN'T YOU SWAP THEM?

      Kaiji Ito: That's easy. Because I had faith.

      Yukio Tonegawa: Faith?

      Kaiji Ito: Clearly, you're brilliant. Out of anyone I've ever met, you have the sharpest mind.

      [holds up a blood-stained card]

      Kaiji Ito: A man like you... would never fail to notice this blood. Of course you'd notice. And when you do, you'd be suspicious. You'd scrutinize it, realize it's a scheme and see through my plan.

      [slams the card down on the table]

      Kaiji Ito: YOU HAVE TO, BECAUSE YOU'RE SMART! That's why you'd be suspicious, and would recall how I'd swapped cards on the ship, and that I had the chance here. Then you'd snicker... how foolish I am. You'd be completely convinced. And why not? After all, your opponent is trash compared to someone like you. TRASH! You'd gloat. Because you're superior. NO TRASH HAS EVER COME CLOSE TO BEATING YOU. SO I USED YOUR ARROGANT SUPERIORITY AGAINST YOU! AND THIS PATHETIC SLAVE BEAT YOU!

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      The Nippon Television Network Corporation logo is accompanied by a ghoulish chant of "zawa".
    • Conexões
      Followed by Kaiji 2: Jinsei dakkai gêmu (2011)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      It's All Too Much
      Performed by Yui

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    Perguntas frequentes15

    • How long is Kaiji: The Ultimate Gambler?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 10 de outubro de 2009 (Japão)
    • País de origem
      • Japão
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Idioma
      • Japonês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Kaiji: The Ultimate Gambler
    • Locações de filme
      • Kiryu, Gunma, Japão
    • Empresas de produção
      • Nippon Television Network (NTV)
      • Horipro
      • Toho
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

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    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 24.709.016
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 10 min(130 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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