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IMDbPro

L'extase des anges

Original title: Tenshi no kôkotsu
  • 1972
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
L'extase des anges (1972)
ActionDramaMysteryRomance

A revolutionary faction steals some hand bombs. While escaping, several soldiers are killed. The movement's highest authority deems October unfit and sends the leader of another faction to t... Read allA revolutionary faction steals some hand bombs. While escaping, several soldiers are killed. The movement's highest authority deems October unfit and sends the leader of another faction to take the remaining bombs.A revolutionary faction steals some hand bombs. While escaping, several soldiers are killed. The movement's highest authority deems October unfit and sends the leader of another faction to take the remaining bombs.

  • Director
    • Kôji Wakamatsu
  • Writer
    • Masao Adachi
  • Stars
    • Ken Yoshizawa
    • Rie Yokoyama
    • Yuki Aresa
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kôji Wakamatsu
    • Writer
      • Masao Adachi
    • Stars
      • Ken Yoshizawa
      • Rie Yokoyama
      • Yuki Aresa
    • 13User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos18

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Ken Yoshizawa
    • October
    Rie Yokoyama
    Rie Yokoyama
    • Friday
    Yuki Aresa
    • Autumn
    Tatsuhiko Honda
    • Monday
    Tomoo Oh'izumi
    • Tuesday
    Hiroyuki Saegusa
    • Wednesday
    Shôichi Oyamada
    • Thursday
    Kôzaburô Onogawa
    • Saturday
    Shinsuke Wajima
    • Sunday
    Kiyoshi Yoshida
    • Winter
    Susumu Iwabuchi
    • February
    Shin'ichi Matsushima
    • September
    Hidekatsu Shibata
    • November
    Masao Adachi
    • The February Army #1
    Tetsurô Nunokawa
    • The February Army #2
    Tsuguto Watanabe
    • The February Army #3
    Gorô Kobata
    • The February Army #4
    Gina Jinno
    • Girl
    • Director
      • Kôji Wakamatsu
    • Writer
      • Masao Adachi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.21.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10MAdams15023

    Too Cool For Words!

    Do you like hot chicks? Do you like it when they take their clothes off? Do you like it when they speak a language you don't understand? I DO! This is my new favorite movie. It also has a PLOT. I give it a 4 out of 10!
    3kingpelvis

    Sex and violence... should be fun viewing but...

    Having greatly enjoyed Wakamatsu's earlier film Go, Go Second Time Virgin, I was very excited to come across this one. The excitement was however short lived. Or should I say endless because that is about how long this movie seems. Rarely have I looked at the counter on my VCR more often to see how much more I would have to endure.

    It was much the same feeling as when after seeing Godard's wonderfully early new wave movies, I was subjected to La Chinoise or Pierrot Le Fou. Actually Ecstacy of the Angels seem very much inspired by this more avant-garde side of Godard's film-making. But without the originality.

    There is plenty of sex and violence here, and layers and layers of what is most likely satire on political idealism and the media's exploitation of sex and violence. And possibly even sex and violence in cinema itself. A film mocking film maybe. There is that term yet again: Sex and violence. Usually a safe recipe for good entertainment, be it in celluloid or newsprint form. But the problem here is that the message is lost in all the boring scenes and purposely stiff dialog. You will quickly lose track of who belongs to which revolutionary faction. You are probably supposed to. Is the movie supposed to show us how predictable and repetitious our lust for sex and violence is? Because it's all the same here. Every scene is just more of the same. Tedious repetition. Maybe that is the message. Is that why all the characters are named after seasons and weekdays? Possibly.

    Whatever it is, it all seems rather outdated and unoriginal now. It's just plain boring. Maybe it wasn't in Japan in 1972.

    You do sort of get a picture of the screenplay being written on a roll of toilet paper by a couple of drunk pretentious intellectuals looking for an excuse to get some young actresses to take their clothes off. Which would in that case be the one side of this movie that would seem perfectly reasonable to me. I'm sure there is an intellectual masterpiece in there somewhere. A deeper meaning. But life is just to short to look for it. I simply cannot bear to watch this one again.
    10rev-johndoe

    A work of true art

    This is an excellent film, flawed in the sense that certain aspects of the fictional revolutionary group appear quite caricatured at times but viewed in relation with director Koji Wakamatsu's newest film "United Red Army" it can be seen to draw a surprisingly accurate picture of the revolutionary nihilism of the Japanese student activists of the time. Other reviewers have compared the film to Godard's early work such as La Chinoise and admittedly the artistic style is quite similar though less refined, and far from being less politically aware than Godard, Wakamatsu was actually much more realistically cynical in his portrait of armed student activist cells whereas Godard's revolutionary themed films displayed a certain hopeful naiveté in the potential of a largely dogmatic and authoritarian movement which was strongly criticized by his contemporaries in the Situationist International. The writer of this film Masao Adachi was certainly not a pretentious intellectual out to exploit sex and revolutionary pop aesthetic as some critics have inferred here; a closer look at his personal history shows that shortly after writing the screenplay he actually moved to Lebanon to join the real life armed revolutionary group the Japanese Red Army where he remained a committed activist for 28 years up until his arrest in the year 2000. As such the film can be a unique and telling account of his own mentality and the personal motivations which led to joining the JRA, as well as his prior knowledge of the less-than-ideal dynamics of the lifestyle he would be choosing. One must keep in mind that at the time Wakamatsu was expected by producers to be making films in the 'pink' genre which would explain the gratuitous sex scenes that could be seen as offensive or pointless to some but the unique beauty of the film far outweigh it's occasional rough edges. Highly recommended, though not for casual viewers of film "for entertainment's sake" alone.
    7christopher-underwood

    this, almost Godard like, movie so full of vitality......

    I found I liked this a little less than I did when first seen on video a few years ago. Perhaps it just shows what effect 9/11 and subsequent worldwide terrorist activities have had on our psyche. This remains a well put together, exciting and amusing tale of confused young fighters (for they know not what) on the streets of Tokyo late 60's. The pace and style of Wakamatsu's film making is infectious but the pain of events and concerns for safety have made it much more difficult to be sympathetic to lost youth taking it out on innocent people. It's a shame because this, almost Godard like, movie so full of vitality, could inspire many to take up the making of movies but instead one is now frightened that the vulnerable might be encouraged in their cowardliness to take out others for a bit of glory. A sad reflection of the times we find ourselves in. Good film though!
    10libertyvalance

    A violent, anarchist film about lost ideals.

    Koji Wakamatsu's treatment of this story is, compared to big budget filming, what guerilla warfare is to a full blown World War. Imagine seeing a hysterical comedy about idealistic terrorists betrayed by their leaders as written by Jean-Luc Godard, produced by David Lynch and directed by Gregg Araki: that gets you somewhere in the neighbourhood of what this picture is like. Untroubled by storytelling conventions Wakamatsu lets the thin thread that holds all scenes more or less together snap halfway through the film. His scenes of bloodcurdling violence are thrown at you with the gusto of a rabid modern painter. Visually brilliant and wonderfully over the top with some poignantly funny touches, this ranks as one of the most enthralling political nightmares ever printed on celluloid.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This film was released in a time of violent social turmoil for Japan. ATG, the film's distributor, got cold feet when a rash of Christmas tree bombing, similar to the one in the movie, started to plague the streets of Tokyo. The film was quickly withdrawn from distribution and briefly re-released in the art theater circuit.
    • Goofs
      While the revolutionaries enter the base, a sign reading "weapon wearhouse" instead of "weapon warehouse" is clearly visible for several seconds.
    • Connections
      Edited into Gli ultimi giorni dell'umanità (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      Koko wa Quiet Front Line
      Music by Michio Akiyama

      Lyrics by Masao Adachi

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 11, 1972 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Ecstasy of the Angels
    • Production companies
      • Art Theatre Guild (ATG)
      • Wakamatsu Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $585
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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