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Gothic & Lolita Psycho

Original title: Gosurori shokeinin
  • 2010
  • TV-14
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
978
YOUR RATING
Gothic & Lolita Psycho (2010)
ActionHorror

After her mother is murdered, a girl dresses-to-kill as a Gothic Lolita. Using a deadly umbrella, she seeks revenge by slicing and dicing the wacky assassins responsible.After her mother is murdered, a girl dresses-to-kill as a Gothic Lolita. Using a deadly umbrella, she seeks revenge by slicing and dicing the wacky assassins responsible.After her mother is murdered, a girl dresses-to-kill as a Gothic Lolita. Using a deadly umbrella, she seeks revenge by slicing and dicing the wacky assassins responsible.

  • Director
    • Gô Ohara
  • Writer
    • Hisakatsu Kuroki
  • Stars
    • Rina Akiyama
    • Ruito Aoyagi
    • Asami
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    978
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gô Ohara
    • Writer
      • Hisakatsu Kuroki
    • Stars
      • Rina Akiyama
      • Ruito Aoyagi
      • Asami
    • 14User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos37

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    Top cast41

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    Rina Akiyama
    • Yuki
    Ruito Aoyagi
    • Masato (Viscous Gentleman)
    Asami
    Asami
    • Shimada's Girlfriend
    Yukihide Benny
    • Shimada (Gambler)
    • (as Yukihide Benii)
    Jonny Caines
    Jonny Caines
    • Kamikaze Member #5
    Eric Daniel
    • Kamikaze Member #4
    Carl Fortin
    • Kamikaze Member #6
    Satoshi Hakuzen
    • Nightwatch (Injured Salarie Man)
    Kyo Hirayama
    • Casino Customer #6
    Mayumi Ido
    • Dancer #3
    Yukiha Iguchi
    • Dancer #5
    Aya Ikeda
    • School Girl #2
    Kenshin Iwakura
    • Casino Assistant #1
    Ikuo Iwasa
    • Casino Customer #2
    Yui Iwata
    • School Girl #1
    Aiko Kataoka
    • Dancer #6
    Hiroyuki Kawahara
    • Casino Customer #5
    Masahumi Kikukawa
    • Casino Customer #9
    • Director
      • Gô Ohara
    • Writer
      • Hisakatsu Kuroki
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.3978
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    Featured reviews

    billcr12

    Fun Japanese Revenge Film

    Gothic And Lolita Psycho is a fun, comic book style action revenge film(sort of a low-rent Kill Bill without Tarantino's genius, of course; but if you feel like killing an hour and a half with a cute actress(Rina Akiyama-voted best butt in Japan a few years ago) this Japanese revenge blood and dismemberment fest is a thrill a minute.

    After witnessing her mother's killing, Yuki(Akiyama) spends her time seeking revenge on the bad guys with well choreographed fight scenes and a cool black leather outfit. The only disappointment is no nudity, only much blood spouting from necks, arms & legs and every imaginable body part. Someone should have advised director Go Ohara of Ms. Akiyama,s best asset(pun intended); even so the ride is worth it.
    9selfdestructo

    About as kick-ass a female heroine as I've seen

    Slight exaggeration there, but I thoroughly enjoyed Yuki's (Rina Akiyama) fight scenes and crazy gadgets her father builds for her (plus her boots are amazing), all in her hell-bent quest to bring down every person in the gang responsible for killing her mother.

    Psycho Gothic Lolita is real light on plot (I've already covered it above, and I don't even think they explain why all these characters wanted her mother dead... though she was some sort of a demon?), but real heavy on style and entertainment value. There was a whole wave of these crazy female-led Japanese gore movies, and while there are certainly better ones out there (Noboru Iguchi is a genius), I would still recommend this one.

    Only in Japan. The array of wacky characters, clever action, and oddball turns of events are a few of the things that make these movies great. The array of out-there characters she has to terminate, and the gory fights that ensue make for an entertaining evening. I think my favorite character was the psychic professor, whose sole ability is... to blow up young ladies' skirts. Which he also pulls on Lolita herself. Again, only in Japan! Another showdown is her against this whole bizarre "Kamikaze" gang, who choreograph their name(!), and she rescues this poor hapless beating victim... Only it turns out she chased off the gang to get revenge on that guy.

    If your into revenge flicks, with a thoroughly badass female protagonist, and don't mind a complete lack of plot or character development, I would consider this movie a blast.
    6I_Ailurophile

    For better and for worse, it's exactly the genre romp it wants to be

    Sometimes you're in the mood for a high quality film, and sometimes you're in the mood for a genre romp. True, these can be surprisingly good, too, but compelling storytelling and solid film-making run secondary to just having a good time - or more generally, doing whatever you want and just running with it. So the opening scenes gives us a self-proclaimed gambling den where anything goes in terms of recreation and entertainment, from group dancing to murder; hyper-stylized and outrageous set pieces, props, weapons, blood and viscera, cinematography, editing, sound effects, music, writing, direction, and acting; and our first peek at our protagonist, a young woman who dresses like, well, a psycho gothic Lolita and and wields a weaponized umbrella (see also: The Penguin, a mainstay of Batman's rogues gallery). The action sequences are wild, the scene writing is forthright and emphatic, and the dialogue and characters all but cartoonish as writer Kuroki Hisakatsu and director Ohara Go take their cues from the most outlandish, impulsive, self-indulgenet excess of Quentin Tarantino, Zack Snyder, Miike Takashi, Tsukamoto Shinya, live-action manga adaptations, U. S. comic books, exploitation flicks, and sci-fi, action, and/or horror B-movies from the 90s onward. I'm not saying that any of the contributions that comprise the whole that is 'Psycho gothic Lolita' are not well done such as they are; I am saying that this is unyielding extravagant, immoderate bluster, rounded out with no small amount of juvenile puerility, that is an exercise in purely intemperate wish fulfillment, an often fatuous assault on the senses, and a test of our will as viewers.

    The cast gleefully overact - star Akiyama Rina least of all, incredibly - but one can't say that they aren't committed to the bit. The practical effects are commonly even more overcooked than the computer-generated imagery, but the stunts, effects, and choreography do indeed look surprisingly good such as they are (including the inevitable geysers of blood). The editing and cinematography are grossly overzealous as they kind of flail about, chop up scenes, and employ raucous energy and rampant flair in place of ideal visualization of Ye Olde Ultraviolence, but this is what Ohara and Ito Nobuhisa intended, and they do it quite capably. The music compares with the melodramatic themes of the average anime and videogame, but it's duly tasteful complement. The sets, costume design, and hair and makeup, like the scene writing and narrative, are inspired by the unfocused, immature imaginations of twelve-year old comic book nerds, but fine work went into the visual elements in and of themselves, and as writer Kuroki and filmmaker Ohara's obvious intent was unabashed giddy schlock, well, these aspects serve their purpose. Same goes for the plot, straightforward and unsophisticated as it may be. Childish, simple-minded intended humor and frivolity fall terribly flat in this blast of action-horror, but they do accentuate the nature of the feature in its fun-loving flippancy And so on, and so on - 'Psycho gothic Lolita' may be overdone, tiresome, and even obnoxious, some creative decisions may be questionable, and it may struggle to provide any but a baseline level of entertainment, but it's not poorly made.

    We can make all these judgments within even the opening scene, by the way, and as the minutes tick by, those judgments continue to hold true. Even when a moment is superficially quieter, or seemingly offers a smidgen of respite from the ruckus, there is not actually any sense of dynamics by which the most emotive or meaningful beats, scenes, or instances of acting might flourish. Likewise, the near-constant violence and prioritization of style never have the opportunity to particularly make a mark. It's pretty much go, go, go as soon as this picture begins, and we can either strap ourselves in for the ride, or just decline to get on board in the first place. Now, in fairness, there are some odds and ends that represent a little spark of brilliance beyond the core nonsense that tends to evoke a sadly even-keeled non-reaction. The character of Lady Elle leans even more heavily into the unmitigated bombast, a psychopathic killer written and designed from the ground up to be both endearingly kawaii and altogether absurd, and it's a real credit to Momose Misaki that she so enthusiastically embraces that tenor. In turn, the scenes with Momose and Lady Elle are genuinely funny in some measure, and as far as I'm concerned a definite highlight of these ninety minutes. Filling the lead role of Yuki, Akiyama has some chance to demonstrate earnest acting abilities amidst all the ridiculousness, and I think she does so. (And, okay, likewise for her co-stars, every now and then.) There are some nice little touches here and there, however preposterous, that are satisfying on some visceral level, such as during the showdown between Yuki and her final target. And I can't say I didn't enjoy myself as the runtime flies by: the title knows exactly what it is, to the point that it doesn't especially bother with explanations of this or that, and to some extent one has to admire the gumption that it took to make something so brazenly, flagrantly over the top.

    I guess I just wish that the same care had been applied more evenly throughout the length, for I'm fully of the mind that 'Psycho gothic Lolita' is at its best in the latter half - when Lady Elle is introduced, and final villain Masato. I recognize the skill, intelligence, and hard work that went into this, and what it needed above all was for someone to just tell Kuroki and Ohara "no" every once in a while. If the extreme decadence and dizzying exorbitance were reined in just a tad the end result would surely have been stronger, with more lasting value. Case in point, when within about the last ten minutes we do learn more about Yuki, and the individuals she is eliminating, the story is honestly enriched and made more engaging. Would that the accompanying special makeup, costume design, digital wizardry, and otherwise execution of the beat weren't as wholly, inordinately wacky as all else herein, if not even more so. Ultimately I do like this film, and if it's a total lark one wants, that's just what you'll get; it's just that I would like it more had some greater degree of mindful restraint and judicious application been demonstrated in any capacity.
    4trashgang

    the same as all the others with Asami

    What can I tell about this flick. It's a typical Japanese flick but in the new way. This one do has a story but there isn't that much going on except a few flash backs and a lot of fighting scenes. The credits on the sleeve did mention the new attraction Asami but she's maybe for 2 minutes in this flick. On the other hand they tease you with Rina Akiyama who has won the Best Buttocks Award 2007. Guess she asks to much to show it.

    I found it an average flick with the last fight having something special. Suddenly the flick moves into some kind of possessed flick with devils and monsters. Still, it's full of sputtering wounds, Japanese style. No nudity whatsoever. I have seen so many of those kind of flicks the last months with humour and gore that I can't tell which one was different from the other one. Only for the lovers of the new Japanese horror but for me, old school was much better.

    Gore 3/5 Nudity 0/5 Effects 2/5 Story 2/5 Comedy 0/5
    6TooKakkoiiforYou_321

    Wanna-be Iguchi/Nishimura flick without the chops of neither of those two

    Fun, but not mindblowing. The only really noteworthy villain of all is Elle, very tongue-in-cheek parody of anime girls/J-Pop idol culture which will make you laugh a lot. The ending is interesting too, with an unexpected twist with potentials in regards to its development. Other than that, the gore is very restricted and the fight scenes are at 50% of capacity of what you would expect from the aforementioned directors, especially Iguchi. That said, I don't get those that made connections with Kill Bill in the reviews. Only because of the Eyepatch of Elle? Really? Complete and utter nonsense. This has nothing to do with Kill Bill in the slightest. This is your typical revenge manga/anime thing with the protagonist fighting her way through different bosses, there's not an inch of Kill Bill here. Without mentioning Kill Bill was "inspired" by Japanese revenge flicks in the first place...

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Goofs
      When Yuki is trying to keep the guillotine from falling by holding the rope. The end of the rope keeps changing between being tied to her chest and hanging free.
    • Connections
      Spoofed in Girl Blood Sport (2019)

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    FAQ13

    • How long is Psycho Gothic Lolita?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 4, 2010 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Psycho Gothic Lolita
    • Production companies
      • DHE Corporation
      • Ohara Bros. Co.
      • Pony Canyon
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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