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Onna hissatsu ken: Kiki ippatsu

  • 1974
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
609
YOUR RATING
Onna hissatsu ken: Kiki ippatsu (1974)
ActionCrime

This time Koryu heads to Yokohama in search of a woman named Birei, kidnapped by diamond smugglers who move their hot rocks by surgically implanting them into the nubile buttocks of Chinese ... Read allThis time Koryu heads to Yokohama in search of a woman named Birei, kidnapped by diamond smugglers who move their hot rocks by surgically implanting them into the nubile buttocks of Chinese prostitutes. Koryu's older sister, working as a jewelry designer, is secretly if unhappily... Read allThis time Koryu heads to Yokohama in search of a woman named Birei, kidnapped by diamond smugglers who move their hot rocks by surgically implanting them into the nubile buttocks of Chinese prostitutes. Koryu's older sister, working as a jewelry designer, is secretly if unhappily involved with the gangsters.

  • Director
    • Kazuhiko Yamaguchi
  • Writers
    • Masahiro Kakefuda
    • Norifumi Suzuki
  • Stars
    • Etsuko Shihomi
    • Tamayo Mitsukawa
    • Michiyo Bandô
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    609
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kazuhiko Yamaguchi
    • Writers
      • Masahiro Kakefuda
      • Norifumi Suzuki
    • Stars
      • Etsuko Shihomi
      • Tamayo Mitsukawa
      • Michiyo Bandô
    • 13User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos28

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    Top cast25

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    Etsuko Shihomi
    Etsuko Shihomi
    • Li Hong-Long (Li Koryu)
    Tamayo Mitsukawa
    • Li Bai-Lan (Li Hakuran)
    Michiyo Bandô
    • Kotoe Fujita
    Hisako Tanaka
    • Wang Mei-Li (Oh Birei)
    • (as Hisayo Tanaka)
    Hideo Murota
    • Kazushige Osone
    Kôji Fujiyama
    Kôji Fujiyama
    • Goro Kuroki
    Takashi Hio
    • Kiyoshi Nezu
    • (as Kôji Hio)
    Masashi Ishibashi
    • Inoichiro Honiden
    Kazuyuki Saito
    • Shikajiro Honiden
    Taiko Rin
    • Chozaburo Honiden
    • (as Daikyo Rin)
    Tsutomu Harada
    • Cui Chi-Niu
    • (as Riki Harada)
    Kanya Tsukasa
    • Byakko
    Osamu Kaneda
    Osamu Kaneda
    • Konosuke Mayuzumi
    Rikiya Yasuoka
    Rikiya Yasuoka
    • Genjuro Ranai
    Shunsuke Kariya
    • Hesius
    Madame Joy
    • Mayumi Murakawa
    Shôhei Yamamoto
    • Otohiko Sugano
    Asao Uchida
    • Tetsudo Fujita
    • Director
      • Kazuhiko Yamaguchi
    • Writers
      • Masahiro Kakefuda
      • Norifumi Suzuki
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.6609
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    Featured reviews

    8kluseba

    Funky adventure with sinister antagonists

    Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread is the second film in the martial arts franchise about the empathic, resilient and tough lead character Li Koryu. This time around, the movie doesn't feature actresses or actors from the Street Fighter franchise that helped kickstart this spinoff series that would turn out being as great or even slightly better than the original series. This entry is the franchise's emancipation and easily proves that versatile actress Etsuko Shihomi can stand her ground all alone.

    The story isn't a far call from the first entry but neither this franchise nor Sonny Chiba's Street Fighter films stood for particularly creative plots. Li Koryu is asked to find a former classmate who got kidnapped and is forced to be the mistress of the boss of diamond smugglers who surgically implant the precious stones into the buttocks of Chinese prostitutes. To make matters worse, Li Koryu's own sister is linked to the criminals and forced to betray her sister. Li Koryu however gets assisted by a mysterious stranger who is initially hired as a hitman tasked to kill her but has his own hidden agenda.

    The film is on par with its solid predecessor. The story is entertaining, fast-paced and quirky. The fight scenes involve more hand-held camera sections which adds a new touch to the series. The characters are eccentric, memorable and unique. The locations are fascinating as fight scenes take place on a rolling train, in an abandoned stadium and even on logs on the water. It's the most brutal movie in the franchise that involves some graphic scenes that conveniently spice things up from time to time. The funky soundtrack underlines the film's dynamic touch at the pulse of the wild seventies.

    This movie is entertaining from start to finish and will appeal to anyone who likes contemporary martial arts films or quirky action thrillers from the seventies. The movie has aged rather well thanks to its charismatic protagonist and modern camera techniques. It's one of the few examples when the sequel is as great as its predecessor.
    8GOWBTW

    Interesting

    The sequel to Sister StreetFighter was something I didn't think was possible. If you thought you've seen it all, Think Again! This time without Sonny Chiba, the Sister Street Fighter is out to protect a young child who's mother is involved with a gold smuggler/ drug enforcer. The uncle was a detective who was tending the niece, and is killed by doing it. The Sister Street Fighter leaves Hing Kong with the niece meets up with her friend from class and kick some serious butt at a dock in Japan. Those two ladies make a great team. In the meantime, the big-time villain tries to get some of the greatest fighters to take her out. One fighter has a punch that more lethal than any weapon a skilled fighter will possess. However, his boss' true colors come out when he is double-crossed during the fight against the female fighter. The reunion of mother and daughter was short-lived, but the fight for avenging loved ones went on non-stop. Both fighter take out the greed ladened boss. Paying for his misdeeds straight out! A fine movie, very fun to watch. don't care about the budget, the movie speaks for itself! 3 out of 5 stars!
    5Uriah43

    Similar to Its Predecessor

    While shopping at an open-air market in Hong Kong, a young woman named "Koryu Lee" (Etsuko Shihomi) notices a man being attacked by a group of thugs. Rushing to help him, she succeeds in chasing them away, but not before the man dies in front of her. Just before he dies, he manages to give her some microfilm and, with his last breath, tells her to take it to a professor she knows. Naturally, she seeks him out and learns that her best friend from high school, "Birei Oh" (Hisako Tanaka), has been kidnapped by the same group, and the only clue points directly to a mansion where the owner, a diamond merchant named "Kazushige Osone" (Hideo Murota), has surrounded himself with numerous martial arts experts for protection. While contemplating that information, Koryu then goes to Tokyo to visit her sister, "Byakuren Lee" (Tomayo Mitsukawa), who works as a diamond cutter for a prestigious jewelry store. Although pleased to see her sister, Byakuren becomes noticeably concerned upon hearing the news about Koryu investigating Birei's kidnapping and quickly informs her that she will be gone for the next few days on business, but offers her apartment for Koryu to stay in while she is gone. That night, Koryu is attacked by Osone's henchmen in what will be a series of further attempts on her life. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this film pretty much followed the same general plot as its immediate predecessor, with only a few minor details thrown in to make any distinction between the two. For example, instead of her brother being kidnapped, this film focuses on her high school friend instead. That's probably a good thing, considering that her brother was killed at the end of the first movie anyway. Likewise, instead of illegal drugs, the merchandise being smuggled into Japan happens to be diamonds. Small details like that. That said, if I had to choose between these two films, I would probably give this one the benefit of the doubt, if for no other reason than that it has English subtitles instead of the awkward English dubbing used in the first movie. It's a slight improvement, to be sure, but an improvement nonetheless.
    BrianDanaCamp

    Etsuko Shihomi returns—without Sonny Chiba—in SISTER STREETFIGHTER 2

    SISTER STREETFIGHTER: HANGING BY A THREAD (1974, aka SISTER STREETFIGHTER 2) is a follow-up to SISTER STREETFIGHTER and has Hong Kong resident and martial artist Koryu Lee (Etsuko Shihomi) coming back to Tokyo to track down a female friend, Birei, who's been kidnapped by diamond smugglers. It's an early '70s Japanese martial arts crime film with abundant nudity, bloodshed, torture, outlandish fashions and a peculiar criminal-dominated alternate universe where there are no cops and the gangsters avoid guns but hire martial artists--the more exotic the better--to do their fighting for them. It's all beautifully photographed on dramatic locations and garish sets. One fight takes place amidst empty racetrack stands and another takes place in a railroad yard and has the heroine battle an opponent atop a moving boxcar. There's even a fight among logs floating in the water at one point. As over-the-top as Japanese films sometimes got in the 1970s, they were generally well-produced. My only complaint on that end here is the over-reliance on hand-held cameras in many of the fight scenes.

    The plot doesn't bear up well under scrutiny. There are far too many convenient coincidences and the heroine, Koryu, finds her way to the villains' various lairs way too easily. There are some off-putting moments detailing the surgical removal of diamonds from nude women's rear ends, as well as a brutal torture session directed at Koryu's sister, who just happens to be involved with the diamond gang.

    The real reason for martial fans to watch this, of course, is to see star Etsuko Shihomi giving Hong Kong kung fu divas Angela Mao and Chia Ling (Judy Lee) a run for their money as the most dynamic female martial arts stars of the era. The protégé of Sonny Chiba, who popped up in several of her films, Shihomi fights with similar intensity, concentrating on survival and hitting her targets with damaging blows rather than engaging in the more showy, performance-oriented fighting styles of Hong Kong's female stars. (Granted, Shihomi's best films don't hold a candle to Angela Mao's best films, but that was never exactly Shihomi's fault.) There are some far-fetched moments here, including a fight in mid-air that causes the eyes to roll (literally!), but for the most part, Shihomi takes on all manner of formidable opponents with plausible ferocity.

    Shihomi (who was sometimes billed in American release versions as Sue Shiomi) is aided in the action by Yasuaki Kurata, who takes on the Chiba role here and lends key male support. Kurata made a name for himself in Hong Kong kung fu films, including HEROES OF THE EAST, LEGEND OF A FIGHTER and FIST OF LEGEND, and it's nice to actually see him wreaking havoc in a Japanese martial arts film for a change.

    The film follows the formulaic structure of the first film, changing the endangered sibling from a brother there to a sister here who wasn't even mentioned in the first film. The fights were more frequent and more imaginatively staged in the first film, which also benefited from the presence of Chiba himself in some key fighting sequences. (Chiba, of course, began this whole cycle with his own run of STREETFIGHTER films.) Etsuko and Kurata returned for RETURN OF THE SISTER STREETFIGHTER, which suffered from a lower budget and shorter shooting schedule, resulting in hastily shot action scenes and an even more ludicrous plot.
    7dconner

    Entertaining old-school martial arts

    I just stumbled across this movie on cable (under the title "Sister Street Fighter 2," and I believe the above review by Brian Camp relates to a different movie (or, perhaps, the movies are inconsistently titled in English, which often seems to happen in this genre.) I believe the Camp review relates to "3," as the movie I saw contained different plot elements and action settings, and the one review on "3" mentions the same "surgical removal of smuggled diamonds" bit, which does not appear in this film.

    In this one, the plot concerns gold smugglers and a crime lord named Oh. Koryu travels from Hong Kong to Yokohama to take down the crime ring and save a little girl's mother (Oh's prisoner, mistress, and chemist, an interesting trifecta.) There's a lot of well-executed action, and Etsuko Shihomi has an appealing screen presence. It's especially well-photographed, and looks great in widescreen. The bad guys have a lot of over-the-top color, from a death match to determine which of a dozen or so strange martial artists from around the world (including one who I think is supposed to be a Zulu spearman) will have the right to kill Koryu (wouldn't it be easier to just send *all* of them after her?) But these movies have their own rules. The white-suited, one-handed, wheelchair-bound Oh is a lot of fun, and a rather transparent imitation of *Enter the Dragon*'s Han. You'll never guess the secret of Oh's fake left hand! Or of his wheelchair (though if you're an SCTV fan, you might be able to make a guess!)

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      ONNA HISSATSU KEN series. #2 of 4 films.
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Alternate versions
      The UK release was cut, cuts required to remove potentially indecent images of a child in accordance with the Protection of Children's Act 1978, in order to obtain an 18 classification. An uncut classification was not available.
    • Connections
      Edited into Ninja Theater: Sister Street Fighter (2022)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 7, 1974 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread
    • Production company
      • Toei Tokyo
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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