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Kamikaze

Original title: Kamikaze 1989
  • 1982
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
919
YOUR RATING
Rainer Werner Fassbinder in Kamikaze (1982)
Trailer for Kamikaze '89
Play trailer1:33
1 Video
31 Photos
Sci-FiThriller

In a totalitarian society of the future, in which the government controls all facets of the press, a homicide detective investigates a string of bombings, and finds out more than he bargaine... Read allIn a totalitarian society of the future, in which the government controls all facets of the press, a homicide detective investigates a string of bombings, and finds out more than he bargained for.In a totalitarian society of the future, in which the government controls all facets of the press, a homicide detective investigates a string of bombings, and finds out more than he bargained for.

  • Director
    • Wolf Gremm
  • Writers
    • Robert Katz
    • Wolf Gremm
    • Per Wahlöö
  • Stars
    • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Günther Kaufmann
    • Boy Gobert
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    919
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wolf Gremm
    • Writers
      • Robert Katz
      • Wolf Gremm
      • Per Wahlöö
    • Stars
      • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
      • Günther Kaufmann
      • Boy Gobert
    • 20User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Kamikaze '89
    Trailer 1:33
    Kamikaze '89

    Photos31

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Polizeileutnant Jansen
    Günther Kaufmann
    Günther Kaufmann
    • MK1 Anton
    Boy Gobert
    Boy Gobert
    • Konzernchef
    Arnold Marquis
    Arnold Marquis
    • Polizeipräsident
    Richy Müller
    Richy Müller
    • Neffe
    Nicole Heesters
    Nicole Heesters
    • Barbara
    Brigitte Mira
    Brigitte Mira
    • Personaldirektorin
    Jörg Holm
    • Vizepräsident
    Hans Wyprächtiger
    • Zerling
    Petra Jokisch
    • Elena Farr
    Andreas Mannkopff
    • Wechselschichtregisseur
    • (as Andreas Mannkopf)
    Ute Koska
    • Polizeiärztin
    • (as Ute Fitz-Koska)
    Frank Ripploh
    • Gangster
    Hans-Eckart Eckhardt
    • Polizist
    • (as Hans-Eckhardt Eckhardt)
    Christoph Baumann
    • Kriminalpolizist
    Juliane Lorenz
    • Krankenschwester
    Christel Harthaus
    • Polizistin
    Franco Nero
    Franco Nero
    • Weiss
    • Director
      • Wolf Gremm
    • Writers
      • Robert Katz
      • Wolf Gremm
      • Per Wahlöö
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    5.8919
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    Featured reviews

    6skepticskeptical

    Low-budget Dystopic Genre

    I see in Kamikaze 1989 both echoes and premonitions of other much more famous films, all with considerably larger budgets. I recognize that this must be because all dystopic fiction commences from the two greats, Orwell's 1984 and Huxley's Brave New World. What subsequent creators have done is to put the pieces together in different orders, but the overarching totalitarian force governing the dystopic world, whether Blade Runner or The Hunger Games, Brazil, Robocop, or this obscure work not by but starring Rainer Werner Fassbinder, who in a bizarre reflection of a recurring trope of the film, himself became at the young age of 37, in the year 1982 (the year of this film's release), "ein unerwarteter Tod" = an unexpected death.

    I am not sure whether this film would have been much better had it had the budget of Blade Runner or The Hunger Games, but I suspect that it would have been. On the other hand, we have grown accustomed to and now expect extremely fast-moving, often frenetic action in dystopic films. The pace here is incredibly slow, as though everyone is on some sort of downers (aside from the contestants in the Laughing Game, who are hooked up to IVs filled with hebephrenia-inducing drugs). Again: Huxley and Orwell already wrote it and others inspired by their works decided to dramatize the essence of dystopia.

    Worth watching once, if only to see how later films may have been influenced by this creation.
    7dromasca

    1989 seen from 1982

    What kind of movie is 'Kamikaze 89'? Science fiction? Dystopia? It is definitely a special film from many points of view. The film is directed by Wolf Gremm (who is also a co-screenwriter), one of the well-known directors of the 'new German cinema' of the 1970s, author of films about inter-war Germany and of thrillers, all of them politically charged. The most important cinematographic personality that appears on the movie poster is however in this case not the director, but the actor who plays the main role. Rainer Werner Fassbinder was one of the leading figures in German cinema of that period. 'Kamikaze 89' was his last appearance on the screen, he died in June 1982, shortly after filming was completed.

    The story takes place in 1989, 1989 as anticipated in 1982, in a future and totalitarian Germany. Fassbinder plays in this film the role of police lieutenant Janssen, called to investigate a suspected bombing, followed by a crime in the corporate headquarters that controls the morale of the population through television entertainment. His mission to solve the crime in the next four days is hampered by the fact that in the utopian society described in the film, officially, there are neither crimes nor suicides. The world of 'Kamikaze 89' is a rosy dystopia, in which the population is kept under control by Big Brother surveillance while the brains are washed and occupied by television shows such as the 'World Laughter Record'. The cynical, alcoholic and disillusioned Janssen may be the right man to solve this case, but as the circle of suspects gets closer to the company's bosses and that mysterious, secret '31st floor' in which the scenarios of future are written, the solving of the crime becomes a danger for the stability of the system.

    The comparison between the future imagined in the literature and the films of anticipation and the reality of the anticipated period is, as always, fascinating. Although the interval is only seven years, the essential changes are those that take place in the social structure. Director Wolf Gremm did not have a budget that would allow him to create spectacular special effects, so he relied more on cultural extrapolations, some subtle, some less subtle. The Internet does not exist yet, and computers are as large as refrigerators and do not have graphical interfaces. Telephony and mobile videophones are controlled by the authorities. The population is fascinated by popular entertainment, and on this topic Gremm was able to correctly anticipate the devastating effect of 'reality show' genre, even if the phenomenon he described will occur one or two decades later than 1989. Electronic music and psychedelic clothing have become an aesthetic norm, and if we look at some societies in Asia today, we see that cultural conformism is not necessarily gray and militarized there. Leopard coats or jackets are police uniforms. The control of populations is facilitated by their addiction to escapist entertainment. The framing of the film in the patterns of the genre of punk anticipation is formally correct, but the stylistic decisions are motivated by a clear and not at all optimistic vision about the future.

    Fassbinder's acting reminded me Orson Welles in the second part of his career. The director who gave the world in his youth the masterpiece 'Citizen Kane' constantly projected for grand plans, but after a few financial failures Hollywood no longer believed in him as a director. The result was that he appeared more as an actor, some of his roles were memorable as he succeeded to be both expressive and 'to melt' in his characters, modeling them according to his personality.

    'Kamikaze 89' anticipates from many points of view the world 30 years later, with the domination of the big global corporations and the popular entertainment and communications as means of leveling the thinking of the population. 1989 however brought something else, the fall of the Iron Curtain followed by the reunification of Germany, historical events that Fassbinder prepared and anticipated artistically and ideologically in other films. Those were the milestones in the evolution towards the world of 'Kamikaze 89'.
    3Billiam-4

    Preposterous sci-fi nonsense

    Preposterous sci-fi nonsense is full of bizarre, outlandish designs (Fassbinder's leopard suit!), bad acting and pseudo-philosophical pretensions plus an illogical plot to boot.

    NB: Among German film buffs bad German movies are rated in "Gremm-Einheiten" (Gremm units).
    vlvetmorning98

    A bizarre journey into the far, far future

    1989, to be precise. As imagined by Germans in 1982. Germany has become the world's foremost economic superpower, suicide is a thing of the past, and everyone does drugs, except there are no nasty side effects anymore. An overweight Rainer Werner Fassbinder mostly scowls his way through a quest to find out who's behind a series of murders that may be linked to a new resistance group. Or something like that. The plot seems secondary to the outrageous costumes (Fassbinder wears leopard tights throughout the whole film) and scenarios (like a police discotheque where you can shoot on firing ranges). It's an ugly film, and a stupid one, too, but it is perversely fascinating, and worth watching once, if only to impress your friends.
    7tom-darwin

    Cheesy & Gaudy on the Outside, Subtle & Complex on the Inside

    A futurism crime thriller was a different venue for Fassbinder, whose stature had grown lately with films in historical settings. Though he didn't direct "Kamikaze," it was helmed by fellow New German filmmaker Gremm & has the moody complexity for which both directors are known, as well as more action. In the near future, West Germany's economy (remember, the fall of Communism was yet unforeseen) has become the world's largest. Virtually all broadcast & print media are controlled by a single, family-run corporation whose head (Gober) styles himself "The Blue Panther" & carefully crafts an elaborate personality cult, including a line of action comics. You still have a lot to learn, Rupert Murdoch. A terrorism campaign against the company by a nebulous entity called "Krysmopompas" (more impressive than "Osama," more intelligent than "Carlos the Jackal") brings on a police investigation headed by the force's most famous detective, Jansen (Fassbinder), who's never failed to solve a case. Clues indicate that someone well-placed in the corporation is responsible, but Jansen soon learns that the company itself is trying desperately to keep secrets. Is Krysmopompas really just an element of the Blue Panther personality cult? The story from Swedish writer Wahloo's novel "Murder on the 31st Floor" is frighteningly accurate in some of its visions, including the rise of cheap, inane reality TV (the marathon laughing contest is a classic) & the creation of euphemistic, self-serving police propaganda machinery (there's no such thing as murder or suicide anymore, only "accidental death"). The props are gleefully, stylishly cheap & cheesy, including Jansen's pajamalike leopard outfit, which might be some sort of uniform (remember Sylvia Anderson's purple wigs in "UFO?"), the burly assassins in black lingerie, the 3-wheeler choppers of the police & the Superman executive phone. However, they're no more outlandish than those of the wildly popular "Mad Max" films (Tina Turner in chain mail, oh, my!). Fassbinder does a remarkable job of projecting an air of old-fashioned, authoritative competence from Jansen through the futuristic absurdity, in contrast to the bland, painted-smile routine of the other cops & the worried urgings of his dying chief (Marquis). His relationship with his temperamental, long-suffering sidekick Anton (Kaufmann, Fassbinder's frequent collaborator & longtime companion) adds a complex human touch to the film. The brilliant Jansen is curtly condescending & critical ("Don't use unnecessary words, MK1 Anton") while the energetic Anton is alternately effusive & sullen. The portrayals of the media executives & personalities are delightfully bizarre & over-the-top, but probably less enjoyable if you don't understand German. The futurism venue was probably a good one for Fassbinder & Gremm (the latter's copious work remains almost unknown in the US) to venture out of the art-house domain of New German Cinema while keeping much of the technique that they had developed. Despite its similarity to "Soylent Green," "Kamikaze" is far less literal & direct but stylish beyond the point of parody. Hardly the most important work of the New Germans, "Kamikaze" is a valuable film in the near-future genre that died out in the 1980s but is about due for a revisit.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was the final acting role for Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
    • Goofs
      The movie claims 27 September 1989 to be a Monday, but that day was a Wednesday (The movie plays in 1989, as the title and a spoken intro make clear. The supposed explosion in the beginning of the movie was planned to take place on September 23, as Jansen points out. The chief of the police then urges Jansen to solve the case within for days, saying "until Monday afternoon," which would be September 27).
    • Quotes

      Policewoman: Suicide

      Polizeileutnant Jansen: It would be the first in four years.

      Policewoman: Sorry, I meant 'premature death.

    • Connections
      Featured in Fassbinder (2015)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 16, 1982 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • West Germany
    • Languages
      • German
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kamikaze 89
    • Filming locations
      • Berlin, Germany
    • Production companies
      • Regina Ziegler Filmproduktion
      • Trio Film
      • Oase Film Essen
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $22,440
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,613
      • Jun 5, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $22,440
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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