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IMDbPro

Dead or Alive 2

Original title: Dead or Alive 2: Tôbôsha
  • 2000
  • 12
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
Dead or Alive 2 (2000)
Dark ComedyActionComedyCrimeDramaThriller

Two contract killers cross paths in the middle of the same job and realize they are childhood friends.Two contract killers cross paths in the middle of the same job and realize they are childhood friends.Two contract killers cross paths in the middle of the same job and realize they are childhood friends.

  • Director
    • Takashi Miike
  • Writer
    • Masa Nakamura
  • Stars
    • Shô Aikawa
    • Riki Takeuchi
    • Noriko Aota
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    4.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Takashi Miike
    • Writer
      • Masa Nakamura
    • Stars
      • Shô Aikawa
      • Riki Takeuchi
      • Noriko Aota
    • 28User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos24

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    Top cast16

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    Shô Aikawa
    Shô Aikawa
    • Mizuki Okamoto
    • (as Show Aikawa)
    Riki Takeuchi
    Riki Takeuchi
    • Shûichi Sawada
    Noriko Aota
    • Chieko
    Edison Chen
    Edison Chen
    • Boo
    Ken'ichi Endô
    Ken'ichi Endô
    • Kôhei
    Hiroko Isayama
    • Woman in Black Hat
    Masato
    • Hoo
    Yûichi Minato
    • Head of Orphanage
    Manzô Shinra
    • Big bro.Toshi
    Tomorô Taguchi
    Tomorô Taguchi
    • Man with Telescope
    Teah
    • Woo
    Tôru Tezuka
    • Teru - Informant
    Shin'ya Tsukamoto
    Shin'ya Tsukamoto
    • Magician Higashino
    Yoshiyuki Yamaguchi
    • Jirô - Hung Like a Horse
    Ichi Ômiya
      Ren Ôsugi
      Ren Ôsugi
      • Mizuki's Stepfather
      • Director
        • Takashi Miike
      • Writer
        • Masa Nakamura
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews28

      6.74.2K
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      Featured reviews

      8christopher-underwood

      mysterious with magic acts and surreal moments

      In no way, other than name, is this a sequel to the previous years, Dead or Alive. We have the same two main actors but here, Sho Aikawa and Riki Takeuchi play different characters who come together after a big gangland hit to, basically, reminisce about their childhood together. There is fierce violence but this has gentle and reflective periods, that reminds one more of Takeshi Kitano's Sonatine than the more usual Miike product. Indeed, whilst this is not easy to follow, with its flashbacks and incomplete tales, it is further made mysterious with magic acts and surreal moments. Nevertheless a likeable film with amazing visuals, just not all of exploding body parts.
      9djores

      Can he do that?

      Miike's fans are usually disappointed by this movie for it certainly lacks in violence and entertainment value. However it more than makes up in subtlety - it's nuanced to the point of lyricism. Who would expect that Miike can spin a tale of a quest for the lost innocence of childhood (soccer games in the rain, sharing bowls of noodles on the ferry, full turtle/lion costumes for a kindergarten play) and still sell it as a sequel to the yakuza audience? Yes, you could read it as cheesy and boring, but then again you could say the same about that other "angel" movie - 'Wings of Desire'. The two characters follow the 'given a second chance at life' path, blazing a trail of "benevolent" executions that add up to nothing. If 'DOA' is the incessant present (with its avalanche of impressions updated at a rate high above the processing limit), and 'DOA Final' is the ironic future of Malthusian power politics, then 'DOA2' is the trip in the past at an impossibly high cost.
      7scobbah

      Quite different venture from Miike

      Dead Or Alive 2 isn't the regular sequel one might expect it to be. Remember, we're dealing with Miike here-and-frankly, this is so weird that it's hard to really claim it to be a sequel at all. The two main characters from the first piece are being kept here and they both make a great performance here.

      The story itself is being brought to life by two contract killers who happen to stumble on each other, who turn out to be friends from childhood. Miike ventures into a quite different visual plot, following both the actual Yakuza violence taking place in Tokyo whilst the story's two protagonists are residing on an island in the countryside where they were brought up. I guess I have to see it one more time to really make up my mind about things, but the first impression was neat, as always with Miike. The landscapes and views being exposed in this film is simply amazing and while the thrills of violence aren't numbering as much as in its prequel, there's a good weight put here to comedy and humor instead. Thumbs up. Can't wait to see the final in the trilogy.
      8Quinoa1984

      a crime film that focuses more on the personal side of the hit-man, of innocence shattered, and the possibility for redemption

      Takashi Miike's Dead or Alive 2: Birds is loaded with allegory and symbolism, some that works (like having feathers continually popping up from time to time in the midst of murders, or the sometimes mentioned comet representing wonder in the unknown) and some that doesn't (the re-appearances of the wings on the backs of Mizuki and Shu, and the over-usage of archive clips of impoverished people in Africa to emphasize the two hit men's end goal to donate all their money to that). But at the core Miike has a very thematically rich film, where the insanity, shame and/or brutality of bloodshed and violence and death are contrasted with what comes before people go down the path of crime- childhood.

      It's maybe that one is given sight to bloody scenes in person as a child, as Mizuki does when he sees his step-father dying on the bathroom floor dialing on the phone (one of the great images in the film). Or it's just that there doesn't seem to be much of a choice, or out of convenience, it's hard to say. Miike isn't out for easy answers anyway, but after a sort of bizarre meditation on the loss of the innocence we all have in youth, and how it can become uglier and without meaning. It's also, on top of this, a very good story of friendship and ties that bind that friendship going beyond professional duty or consequence.

      Mizuki and Shu, played by Riki Takeuchi and Sho Aikawa, also from the first DOA (however not connected by character or plot, only in part by mood), are hit men for a hire, and Mizuki, who hasn't seen Shu in many years, witnesses him kill a bunch of gangsters that he was supposed to fire on with a sniper. He follows him, and it leads the both of them, as they're in hiding for suspected/actual murders and money stolen, to the island of their youth. We see flashbacks of said childhood, of fun playing on the beach (a sweet gag, uncommon for Miike, is when one of the kids is buried in the sand and the other kids run away), but also the pain of separating and finding violence among them, like with Mizuki. Nostalgia comes back tenfold, as they reunite with another old friend, and Miike actually crafts sentimental scenes in this middle chunk that work, somehow, because they don't feel very cheap. Then, as if trying to cleanse themselves of their old crime-syndicate ways, they work at a playground helping out kids, and they even put on a demented play involving goofy innuendo with Cinderella and various animals.

      This play scene is juxtaposed with the sprawling yakuza/triad warfare that breaks out back at home, and it's here that Miike has not only, for my money, the best sequence of the film, but one of his best sequences to date. The play Mizuzki, Shu and the others put on is immature and a little crude, but shown to be all the more innocent and playful when compared to the manic, multiple murders that occur between the two gangs, as bullets fly, blood flows, and bodies contort all over the place as neither side really comes out victorious, or with many members left. It's Miike leashing out his wicked, no-holds-barred style, but also the goodness on the other side of the coin, and it doesn't get much better for a fan like myself. On the other hand, Dead or Alive 2, following this sequence, gets weirder by the minute, and sometimes not always for the best. With the focused narrative flow given for the Mizuki/Shu story, where they decide to come back to the mainland and keep going with their killings for money in un-selfish reasons, there's another subplot involving, I'd guess, the other killers out to kill them. But it comes off muddled, and even with Miike going for enjoyably crazy images like a midget walking on stilts, or the fate of a character named Jiro, it suddenly felt as if Miike was getting off track of what was working best.

      But if anything, DOA 2 tops the first one by delivering the goods on substance just as well as the style. Miike is always out for experimentation, with his editing and transitions and usage of a symbolic inter-title "Where are you Going". And isn't above getting some touching last scenes with Mizuki and Shu on the boat (Takeuchi, by the way, is one of Miike's best actors), even if it feels very sudden, that could be forced by another director but through him feel compassionate to their doom. While Miike and his screenwriter don't quite get deep enough to make this a great film about lifelong criminal friends, and he's still into getting laughs out of depraved acts of violence and bizarre sex (i.e. that giant penis in a couple of scenes), it's surely one of the better yakuza movies I've yet to see to go past its limitations and make it a movie where the main characters aren't just cardboard cut-outs meant for shouting dialog and dying at a clip.
      8movieman_kev

      Best of the trilogy

      Two hit men (Riki Takeuchi and Sho Aikawa) cross paths while pulling off a job. They decide to run a playground and reminisce about their shared childhood. Quite a bit lighter in tone than the original "Dead or Alive" which the sequel has (apart from the same two lead actors) nothing in common with. When I say 'lighter in tone', I of course mean for a Takashi Miike film. This movie is more about the wonders and joys of children growing up, not yet jaded by how the world really is. Fans of Miike's bizarreness won't be disappointed with it either. I myself like this film more then the first one and is superbly acted.

      My Grade: B+

      DVD Extras: Theatrical Trailer; and Trailers for "Dead or Alive" "Dead or Alive Final", "Sharkskin and Peach Hip Girl" and "Junk Food"

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Connections
        Edited into Dead or Alive 3 (2002)

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • January 21, 2004 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Language
        • Japanese
      • Also known as
        • Dead or Alive II
      • Production companies
        • Toei Video Company
        • Excellent Film
        • Daiei
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Gross worldwide
        • $96
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 1h 37m(97 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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