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Sono otoko, kyôbô ni tsuki (1989)

Sono otoko, kyôbô ni tsuki (1989)

GENRESAction,Crime,Drama,Thriller
LANGJapanese
ACTOR
Takeshi KitanoMaiko KawakamiMakoto AshikawaShirô Sano
DIRECTOR
Takeshi Kitano

SYNOPSICS

Sono otoko, kyôbô ni tsuki (1989) is a Japanese movie. Takeshi Kitano has directed this movie. Takeshi Kitano,Maiko Kawakami,Makoto Ashikawa,Shirô Sano are the starring of this movie. It was released in 1989. Sono otoko, kyôbô ni tsuki (1989) is considered one of the best Action,Crime,Drama,Thriller movie in India and around the world.

Detective Azuma is a Dirty-Harry style rogue cop who often uses violence and unethical methods to get results. While investigating a series of drug-related homicides, Azuma discovers that his friend and colleague, Iwaki, is supplying drugs from within the police force. After Iwaki is murdered and Azuma's sister is kidnapped, he breaks all the rules to dish out his particular form of justice.

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Sono otoko, kyôbô ni tsuki (1989) Reviews

  • Masterful exploration of nihilistic violence

    contronatura2000-02-20

    A shallow description would refer to this as a Japanese version of Dirty Harry. And it does bear some resemblance to that film, but while Dirty Harry broke the rules in order to get a criminal at any cost, Kitano's character Azuma seems to seek vengeance due not only to his lust for revenge but because he's psychotic. There's a sense that Azuma won't rest until he gets his man not out of duty but out of madness. Kitano gives what might be his best performance in this film; he is absolutely riveting. And the film itself is beautifully shot, and the score is especially good. But the best part of this is perhaps the end - the film ends on a perfectly cynical note that couldn't be topped. Seek this out.

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  • Early Kitano classic

    FilmFlaneur2002-03-21

    When, in 1988, director Kinji Fukasaka walked off ‘Violent Cop/Sono Otoko, Kyobo ni Tsuki' at short notice, TV chat show host, author, actor and comedian Takeshi Kitano stepped in to take over. Few expected much out of the ordinary. What audiences saw instead was the unheralded arrival of a major talent. Yakuza flick auteur Fukasaka had already lined up the script, and the project was well underway when Kitano (nicknamed ‘Beat') assumed creative control. Hence the final film, although clearly part of the director's oeuvre, lacks some elements making his later work so distinctive. But here already are the moments of stillness and sudden violence, the therapeutic view of the sea, the touches of surreality, as well as the shambling tension of Kitano's own presence which have since marked him out as one of Japan's leading directors. Outside of tinkering with the finished result, Kitano had little to say about Hisashi Nozawa's script with which he was working. After this experience, the director took to frequently writing his own films, notably ‘Sonatine' (1993), ‘Hana-bi' (1997) and the American set ‘Brother' (2000). In his first film he was confronted with a story that had vague echoes of such tough police procedural thrillers as ‘Dirty Harry' (1971) as well as being predicated around the Nipponese Yakuzi revenge drama. Police Detective Azume (Kitano) is the morose, violent cop of the title, who became a detective `through friends', constantly in trouble with his superiors for roughing up suspects. Like Siegal's Inspector Harry Callahan, at times he is virtually indistinguishable from the crooks he persecutes. `We sell guns' he jokes convincingly at one point to a bar girl who as asked what he and his partner do for a living. Even the dialogue supports an analogy: `Write a mitigating statement' demands Azuma's boss. `The usual'. `I want some drugs' says someone later on: `What sort?' `The usual'. Like Siegal's anti-hero, too, his life is subject to personal trauma: Dirty Harry's wife was killed leaving him an embittered loner, while Azume's sister is mentally deficient. (This seam of personal grief also informs the later ‘Hana-bi', where, again playing a police inspector Kitano learns his wife is terminally ill). There's another resemblance to ‘Dirty Harry' in that Callahan has his ‘double' in the killer he so obsessively hunts as Azume's brutality and callousness is mirrored by the yakuza assassin Kiyohiro. Although sworn to each other's destruction, the fate of each is inexorably intertwined, and their moralities blur. Loyalties are no clearer elsewhere. Azuma discovers that his friend and colleague, Iwaki, is supplying drugs from within the police force. Helped in his investigation, he has a new partner, Kikuchi, to whom he acts disdainfully, borrowing money and offering little advice or friendship (in the Dirty Harry films there are a stream of ‘partners' Inspector Callahan rejects and abuses.) By the end of this film however, Kikuchi steps neatly into the shoes left by the deceased Iwaki, and the film ends on the busy typewriter in the new drug baron's office. Business is carrying on as normal after the `craziness' of the Azume-Kiyohiro feud, and the struggle between cop and gangster has been a temporary, personal aberration. As can be deduced from this description, none of the plot is particularly fresh. What makes the film remarkable is Kitano's handling of the material and his own impact as an actor on screen. Some viewers have identified an alleged ‘dullness' in the film, better viewed as Kitano's distinctive way of distributing tension. For instance Azuma and Kiyohiro stare at each other, at length and in silence, three times during the course of the film. In each case one or both of the characters is presumed close to the point of death. Such contemplation in extremis is hardly a dull moment, more a reflection of the personal honour at stake and of the gravity of the encounter. When violence does erupt, it is explosive and sudden – made more so by the mute suspense of the preceding scenes. Whether sudden and unexpected (the schoolgirl's head struck by a stray bullet as Azuma and Kiyohiro struggle in the street), or extended and moody (the struggle between the cop and the escaping drug dealer armed with a baseball bat), Kitano's presentation is stylised and arranged. Its another hallmark of a director whose formalism can be seen as one characteristic of the best Japanese cinema. Previously only familiar to western audiences through ‘Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence' (1983), Kitano the actor often has a glum determination about him, entirely in line with the roles he sets himself to play. For home audiences, more used to seeing him as a TV host, the effect of his cop film must have been disturbing, to say the least. (Azume's coldness is cracked only one occasion, when he is taunted into rage about his sister, as even the death of Iwaki has no visible effect on him.) The effect must be roughly akin to seeing UK's Noel Edmonds or USA's David Letterman playing ‘Popeye' Doyle. Arguably, the violence of ‘Violent Cop' is on viewer preconceptions as much as the criminal fraternity. Recommended.

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  • Uncompromising, Relentless, Ultraviolent Cop - Kitano's Brilliant Debut Is Dirtier Than Harry Ever Was

    Witchfinder-General-6662009-01-02

    There is no doubt in my mind that Takeshi Kitano is one of the greatest cinematic geniuses alive, and his nihilistic 1989 directorial debut is a fantastic proof for that. "Sono otoko, kyôbô ni tsuki" aka. "Violent Cop" is one of the rawest, most uncompromising cop films ever made, and, at the same time, arguably one of the most promising debut films ever delivered. Due to its 'unorthodox cop' premise, the film is often compared to films like the "Dirty Harry" series or "Bad Lieutennant". The stone-faced and irascible copper Azuma (brilliant performance by director Kitano, under his acting name 'Beat Takeshi'), is ten times dirtier than Harry ever was and incomparably more ruthless than the Baddest New York Lieutennant. Azuma could even give the ultra-unorthodox coppers in 70s Italian Poliziotteschi flicks a lesson in police violence. At least most violent cops in 70s exploitation cinema did what they did to protect society from scumbags, whilst Azuma does it out of anger, and he does not even bother asking questions before beating confessions out of criminals. Honestly, "Violent Cop" beats everything in the copper-flick field in its incredibly nihilistic premise, and yet it finds the time for slower moments, and Kitano's typically absurd and ingeniously black humor. Detective Azuma (Kitano), and irascible homicide detective hates the criminal as he hates the crime, and he does not attempt to hide this attitude. His unorthodox methods, which include the severe beating of suspects, have caused him trouble with his superiors in the past, but Azuma does not seem to care. When ruthless Yakuza gangsters make things personal, they have to realize that they might have made an enemy whose relentlessness easily equals theirs... I would love to further discuss the film's ingenious plot, but I do not want to spoil anything, as every true film lover should be able to experience the greatness of "Violent Cop". Unlike Kitano's other films, for which Kitano himself wrote the stories, this film is an adaptation of a novel by Hiashi Nozawa. Kitano's work, however, is ingenious, as screenwriter, director and leading man of this film. There is no other director who is capable of combining brutal nihilistic violence, tragedy and (black) comedy as effectively as Kitano does. Asked about the violence in his films in an interview, Kitano himself has once stated that nobody could possibly want to reproduce the violence seen in his films, simply because it is painful to look at. And it is true, hardly another director makes the pain caused by the violence as obvious as Kitano does. Kitano has a unique stamina when showing violence, which makes the viewer almost feel the pain. I don't want to spoil anything by giving an example - see this film and know what I am talking about. At the same time Kitano always has moments that are absurdly comical. As all Kitano protagonists, Azuma, even though an irascible and violent man, has a very odd sense of humor. His response to a barmaid's question what he does for a living is just one example for that. Also in a typical Kitano-manner, the film takes the time for slower parts in-between, like Azuma crossing a bridge for example. Kitano is as great as leading man as he is as director here. His stoic performance as Azuma is brilliant. The stone-faced copper always has a poker face, but it is nonetheless obvious that he is boiling in fury - how many other actors could be predestined for a role like this as Kitano is. No one, in my opinion. It is Kitano's performance which carries this film, and yet the other performances are also excellent. Hakuryu is particularly excellent as a sadistic Yakuza hit-man. Maiko Kawakami is also very convincing as Azuma's mentally disturbed sister. The rest of the cast includes several great character actors who have since become regulars in Kitano's films, such as Ittoku Kishihe as a Yakuza boss or Makoto Ashikawa as Azuma's young colleague. Lovers of Italian cult-cinema, by the way will be delighted to see a scene in which Kitano brilliantly pays tribute to Sergio Martino's Giallo "La Coda Dello Scorpione" (1971). "Violent Cop" is greatly shot and accompanied by an insanely brilliant score. Kitano's use of music in his films is another part of his brilliance, and really has to be experienced instead of explained. All said, "Violent Cop" is a unique cinematic experience that must not be missed. Ultraviolent, nihilistic, sometimes slow in detail and more often fast and incredibly raw, brutal, sometimes tragic and sometimes oddly comical, this is the uncompromising masterpiece that marks the beginning in the cinematic career of one of today's most brilliant filmmakers. And, apart from his unmatched 1997 masterpiece "Hana-Bi" (aka. "Fireworks"), Kitano's debut still ranks among his greatest accomplishments. A true must!

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  • The Trapped Knife

    robotman-12001-06-29

    Kitano cripples the senses and jars the nerves in his films. This is a movie about a two-fisted cop whose blunt face and cliff's edge personality drive every scene, even the ones Kitano is not in. Kitano's character is not reacting to a violent world, but infecting it with his own brand of violence. The "violent cop" has lost his hope, therefore he fears nothing. Kitano as director gives us a real world of humor and interaction. Events happen, there's no plot. Every scene has this pulse that is raging, the characters even when still seem kinetic as sprinters. Punches, kicks, and bullets explode bodies. Kitano's character clashes with a psychotic hit man, but it is Kitano's cop who is out of control, unstoppable in his desire to inflict justice as he sees it. There's scenes which cannot be forgotten: Kitano's cop interrogates a punk drug dealer in a club rest room. These two actors go through a scene in which Kitano slaps this man over and over until he talks. The difference is that Kitano is really slapping this actor, and slapping living hell out of him. Cringe-worthy, and up there with one of the other scenes that illustrates what a hard man Kitano is: stabbed with a knife, Kitano grips the blade as it comes out of him, clinching his fist down on it so he cannot be stabbed again. Blood pours out from between his fingers, he cannot let it go because his fist and knife are one; Kitano understands the brutality of the fight, the reality of two men trying to kill each other, no quips, no words, no yells or curses, just blood and rage; cut to the bone, it's the way the whole film makes you feel. As far as the recent BROTHER is concerned, it makes perfect sense for Kitano to use similar themes seen in his earlier films. BROTHER is Kitano's first real attack on American audiences. They, en mass, haven't seen his stuff, and if Kitano's going over old ground, he's doing it in HIS style. Better a retread Kitano than most of Hollywood's slobbering star-cramped idiocy.

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  • Another Kitano-masterpiece!

    DJ Inferno2002-02-17

    Yes, it´s true: all the real great movies of the 1990s seem to be produced in the land of the rising sun! This dark cop thriller is no exclusion, because "Violent Cop" is suspense-packed, dramatic, sinister - and the actors don´t say a word too much! The dark poetry often reminded me on the films of Paul Schrader or Abel Ferrera as well as the visual brilliance and the excellent cinematography this Japanese gem contains! And, of course, main actor Takeshi Kitano is the new God of Eastern cinema! Masterpieces like "Brother" or "Hana Bi" blew my mind, and his performance of the emotional broken cop is powerful and amazing! A highly recommended film!!!

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