Two voyeurs watch a Japanese gangster and his bizarre guests in a hotel room.Two voyeurs watch a Japanese gangster and his bizarre guests in a hotel room.Two voyeurs watch a Japanese gangster and his bizarre guests in a hotel room.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Yôji Tanaka
- Relative
- (as Yoji Tanaka)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I was expecting a livelier affair than this after watching Sharkskin Man, but that didn't stop me enjoying it. The dialogue in the hotel reception, the fabulous peep suite, and the pivotal travel agency, eclipsed the rather predictable goings on in the hotel room itself. Not much happens, but the finer parts of the script, and the absurdity inherent in Captain Banana's dual existence as yakuza boss and superheroic peeper kept me interested. Nowhere near as satisfying as Sharskin Man and Peach Hip Girl, although the anime title sequence is probably worth the price of admission on its own. How long before my rental store has a copy of Trava?
Katsuhito Ishii has his own unique style with live action movies. Unique enough to interest me in seeing his third and fourth films. I can understand why some people think it's all style and no substance, but I'm old enough to remember people saying the same thing about Clockwork Orange and Diva when they were first released. This is a conversational film with a lazy feel about it, but that doesn't prevent it from being amusing, or looking good in a nonchalant absurdist fashion. All ten of the featured actors seem to be enjoying themselves immensely, and the final scene, interwoven with the credits, is sublimely funny. Maybe Ishii's habit of mixing the credits into the finale is his way of making sure that everyone involved actually gets some recognition for their efforts.
Here's hoping that one of the more progressive European distributors will eventually realise that there's a wider audience for Ishii's work outside Japan.
Katsuhito Ishii has his own unique style with live action movies. Unique enough to interest me in seeing his third and fourth films. I can understand why some people think it's all style and no substance, but I'm old enough to remember people saying the same thing about Clockwork Orange and Diva when they were first released. This is a conversational film with a lazy feel about it, but that doesn't prevent it from being amusing, or looking good in a nonchalant absurdist fashion. All ten of the featured actors seem to be enjoying themselves immensely, and the final scene, interwoven with the credits, is sublimely funny. Maybe Ishii's habit of mixing the credits into the finale is his way of making sure that everyone involved actually gets some recognition for their efforts.
Here's hoping that one of the more progressive European distributors will eventually realise that there's a wider audience for Ishii's work outside Japan.
The Japanese company that owns the film has apparently declded to put it on the shelf, so the inevitable DVD (probably without subs, and definitely with Region coding) may be your only chance unless you act quickly. If Cult Cinema is your groove, Party 7 is likely o be your party. In the bowels of a tacky Japanese hotel, Mr Banana -- dressed in a yellow and black hero suit -- is trying to anoint a multiple-convicted peeper into his special world, which has direct view into promising rooms. As the hotel room drama plays out, there's a hood in a pink leather suit who has a suitcase filled with money, a former girlfriend who wants the same money, her trendy camera expert boyfriend out to keep his girlfriend, and a tough but gullible yakuza. Vinyl-suited Mr Banana and his assistant Mr Yellow peep as its all happening. There are flashbacks, extreme humor, and enough bizarre twists to keep anyone guessing. The cast is first-rate, composed mostly of great genre actors. The filmmakers probably weren't making it up as they went along, but Party 7 has that feeling, and it makes for a refreshing change of pace.
Scattershot and hyperactive in a way only Japanese cinema can get away with, Party 7 is an enjoyable frantic mess. After a speedy animated introduction to 7 different characters, we are suddenly thrust into a narrative about some stolen money. As the man hides in a hotel room, he has no idea he is being watched by some professional peepers (one dressed in super-hero garb and calling himself Captain Banana). As people come looking for the money, the hotel room gets crowded, and twists are revealed. It's very claustrophobic, being set in just two rooms, which is painfully awkward given the over-the-top style. The humour is broad and weird. Funny and fun, even though I was disappointed that the image on the DVD case is nowhere to be found in the film :(
It's a wild mad ride. Lots of accusations. Lots of character development. Lots of dishonesty. Lots of coming-to-terms and the truth prevails!
It's got Captain Banana! A peeping juvenile in love with the lead actress! Yakuza! Orphanaged degenerates!
I really loved the slapstick humour; the fast edit and quick zoom and shaky camera (Fukasaku signature closeups) and great angles! The cinematography is divine. It's an extremely quirky and fun movie and not to be taken seriously.
It's just very enjoyable and completely removed from mainstream cinema. I really enjoyed its beauty in the form of adolescent voyerism. How humans just love engrossing in others through staring. It's just quite beautiful yet deemed vulgar in society.
Then it all culminators in a big room fight. It's a really great movie which one shouldn't take too seriously. Loads of great camera angles. Superb directing and acting and cool costumes! I really enjoyed it. It's just a fun low-budget movie from the J-video era and is more polished than most.
Expect low ratings with a subject of this matter like any Japanese quirky b movie. Enjoy the wild ride of J pulp cinema. Watch without predejuice. With an adolescent teenage mind. Let the fun begin! For fans of Sion Sono and Takashi Miike.
It's got Captain Banana! A peeping juvenile in love with the lead actress! Yakuza! Orphanaged degenerates!
I really loved the slapstick humour; the fast edit and quick zoom and shaky camera (Fukasaku signature closeups) and great angles! The cinematography is divine. It's an extremely quirky and fun movie and not to be taken seriously.
It's just very enjoyable and completely removed from mainstream cinema. I really enjoyed its beauty in the form of adolescent voyerism. How humans just love engrossing in others through staring. It's just quite beautiful yet deemed vulgar in society.
Then it all culminators in a big room fight. It's a really great movie which one shouldn't take too seriously. Loads of great camera angles. Superb directing and acting and cool costumes! I really enjoyed it. It's just a fun low-budget movie from the J-video era and is more polished than most.
Expect low ratings with a subject of this matter like any Japanese quirky b movie. Enjoy the wild ride of J pulp cinema. Watch without predejuice. With an adolescent teenage mind. Let the fun begin! For fans of Sion Sono and Takashi Miike.
This is the funniest film I have ever seen. I will say no more, really- preposterous, brilliant, and hilarious. Great work.
The actors dive into the script head first, with absolutely no let up, ever, turning in the best ensemble comedy work I have seen in years. Laugh out loud excellence, Captain Banana is worth the price of admission.
Craig
The actors dive into the script head first, with absolutely no let up, ever, turning in the best ensemble comedy work I have seen in years. Laugh out loud excellence, Captain Banana is worth the price of admission.
Craig
Did you know
- Crazy creditsHyper-kinetic animated credits by Takeshi Koike introduce the colorful main characters.
- ConnectionsReferences Hotel Room (1993)
- How long is Party 7?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Вечеринка на семерых
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 44m(104 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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