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IMDbPro

Visez cette voiture de police

Original title: 'Jûsangô taihisen' yori: Sono gosôsha o nerae
  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Visez cette voiture de police (1960)
ActionCrimeMystery

A prison truck is assaulted and the two convicts inside are murdered. The prison guard on duty gets suspended for negligence and takes it upon himself to track down the killers.A prison truck is assaulted and the two convicts inside are murdered. The prison guard on duty gets suspended for negligence and takes it upon himself to track down the killers.A prison truck is assaulted and the two convicts inside are murdered. The prison guard on duty gets suspended for negligence and takes it upon himself to track down the killers.

  • Director
    • Seijun Suzuki
  • Writers
    • Kazuo Shimada
    • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
  • Stars
    • Michitarô Mizushima
    • Misako Watanabe
    • Shôichi Ozawa
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Seijun Suzuki
    • Writers
      • Kazuo Shimada
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • Stars
      • Michitarô Mizushima
      • Misako Watanabe
      • Shôichi Ozawa
    • 18User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos41

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    Top cast30

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    Michitarô Mizushima
    Michitarô Mizushima
    • Daijirô Tamon
    Misako Watanabe
    Misako Watanabe
    • Yûko Hamajima
    Shôichi Ozawa
    • Gorô Kashima
    Shinsuke Ashida
    Shinsuke Ashida
    • Jûbei Hamajima
    Mari Shiraki
    Mari Shiraki
    • Tsunako Andô
    Tôru Abe
    Tôru Abe
    • Akabori
    Ryôhei Uchida
    Ryôhei Uchida
    • Kuji
    Akira Hisamatsu
    • Masaki
    Saburô Hiromatsu
    • Ôta
    Tatsuo Matsushita
    Tatsuo Matsushita
    • Captain Takamura
    Reiko Arai
    • Osen
    Kotoe Hatsui
    Kotoe Hatsui
    • Concierge of Gorô's apartment
    Hiroshi Chô
    • Yuhata
    Tomio Aoki
    Tomio Aoki
    • Clerk of Inn
    Norikatsu Hanamura
    • Yamaoka
    Keisuke Noro
    • Manager of strip theater
    Kaoru Yamamoto
    Kyôko Natsu
    • Shôko
    • Director
      • Seijun Suzuki
    • Writers
      • Kazuo Shimada
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.61.4K
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    Featured reviews

    6gbill-74877

    An absurdity set to jazz music

    Great opening, but got messy quickly, and ultimately was an unsatisfying 79 minutes. The frumpled lead character (48 year old Michitaro Mizushima) reminded me a little of Glenn Ford in The Big Heat and the befuddling, often nonsensical plot reminded me of The Big Sleep, but Seijun Suzuki's work lacks the star power and atmosphere of those films. Questions piled up for me as I watched, and not just about the sequence of events from one scene to the next, but about basic character motivations for pretty much all of these people. The grand reveal of Akiba near the end was silly and a letdown too.

    I never began actively disliking it though, because I never really knew what Suzuki was going to put on the screen next. There's a topless stripper shot in the chest with an arrow, and a James Bond like escape from an attempted execution (when of course a simple bullet would have made so much more sense). One of the mysterious young women being tracked down loves American rock 'n' roll, and has a gang of teenage friends pile out of car to protect her. There are several murders, but the main character believes in the goodness in people, and improbably the beautiful young femme fatale (Misako Watanabe) softens and falls in love with him. It's an absurdity set to a jazzy soundtrack and doesn't really work, but somehow held my interest. You can do better though.
    6Jeremy_Urquhart

    It's good, but it doesn't quite live up to its great title

    Film 3/5 in the Nikkatsu Noir boxset I'm working through, and I'd rank this behind Rusty Knife (film 2/5), but ahead of I Am Waiting (film 1/5).

    I'll give it this: Take Aim at the Police Van has a great title and a great opening- both work well to get you hooked early to the simple premise (prison guard is partially blamed for deaths that weren't his fault, so he goes looking for the real killers himself) that soon balloons out and gets very complicated.

    While some of the complexity and mystery is intentional, given the main character doesn't really know what's going on much of the time, I think it may have left the audience in the dark just a little too much. You could say that about a lot of classic noir, though- I think it's The Maltese Falcon where the writer even admitted he didn't really understand 100% of the plot.

    (EDIT: legend actually goes that it was The Big Sleep where the screenwriters were confused by what they were writing. Do remember Maltese Falcon also having a confusing plot, for what it's worth)

    But in any event, it stays entertaining because of the fast (if almost a little too quick) pace, the stylish direction, and some exciting sequences. Plus the mystery is a pretty decent one.

    It all makes for an overall solid watch.
    7masonfisk

    GOOD ACTIONER FOR THE TIME...!

    A 1960 police actioner from writer/director Seijin Suzuki (Branded to Kill/Tokyo Drifter) about a disgraced prison guard, Michitaro Mizushima, who loses some of his charges during a shootout during a nighttime transfer. Taking the law into his own hands but also at some point in the story cops are brought in, Mizushima tracks down the players behind the act siding up to the moll of one of the crooks in the hopes of getting back some dignity he suffered from the escape. As per Noir Alley's host Eddie Muller, the film was a revelation to Japanese audiences, especially the younger sect, which embraced the film embarrassing the honchos at the film studio but now 64 years after the fact the film is fine but ultimately safe when a lot of the gunfights which may've lit a fire under the viewing public butts now feel like so much uncontrolled chaos but the throughline of the plot is solid enough though.
    7DanTheMan2150AD

    Shootin Vans & Chewing Bubble Gum

    An exceptionally well-shot if bitterly average and utterly bewildering mystery, Take Aim at the Police Van marks the very early days for Seijun Suzuki, far less abstract than what I've heard about his more well-known works. He's shooting to a formula but delivering where it matters, be it the woman killed by an arrow to the boob or the faceless gunman who lovingly strokes his rifle's stock before sticking his bubblegum atop its scope. It's a film I wish was slightly more cohesive (and less jazzy) than it is but Police Van benefits from the endless swagger of its lead and fun filmmaking flourishes to stop it from being a frustrating or bad time. A testament to how artists pumping out quickie exploitation movies can often work in truths about their times that prestige filmmakers can't.
    6jordondave-28085

    Director Seijun Suzuki has done better

    (1960) Take Aim At The Police Van/ 'Jûsangô taihisen' yori: Sono gosôsha o nerae (In Japanese with English subtitles) CRIME DRAMA/ MYSTERY/ ACTION

    The set up regards a prison guard, Daijirô Tamon (Michitarô Mizushima) getting suspended for six months as a result of failing to protect two prisoners. He then goes on an odyssey to find out why. First he would interview another former inmate prisoner who was also there by the name of Gorô Kashima (Shôichi Ozawa), as Tamon realizes he scribbled something onto the window on the bus they both riding on before the other two inmates were executed. And he tries to follow him after seeing the name Aki written on a piece of paper. Leading him to uncover two objectives which is to find out who was that lady he had seen on the fateful night during the bus ride and the identity of Aki who we find out is actually Akiba.

    Despite it's short running time of less than a hour and a half, this was quite boring until it got to the very end with the gun shootings to be quite relative.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      A trail of gasoline poured on the ground as depicted here, would burn at only about three miles per hour, or about the pace of a brisk walk. This velocity was tested on Trail Blazers (2007).
    • Goofs
      In the opening scenes, the prisoner's handcuffs are so loose that he could easily slip his hand through.
    • Connections
      Featured in Best in Action: 1960 (2018)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 27, 1960 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Take Aim at the Police Van
    • Production company
      • Nikkatsu
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 19 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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