Cityonfire.com’s ‘Black Coal, Thin Ice’ Blu-ray Giveaway – WINNERS ANNOUNCED!

Black Coal, Thin Ice | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Black Coal, Thin Ice | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Cityonfire.com and Well Go USA are giving away 3 Blu-ray copies of Black Coal, Thin Ice (read our review) to three lucky Cityonfire visitors. To enter, simply add a comment to this post and describe, in your own words, this video (Warning: Explicit Content).

We will be selecting a winner at random. Be sure to include your email address in the appropriate field so we can contact you for your home address. Additionally, you must ‘Like Us‘ on cityonfire.com’s Facebook by clicking here.

The Blu-ray & DVD for Black Coal, Thin Ice will be officially released on September 29, 2015. We will announce the 3 winners on that day.

CONTEST DISCLAIMER: You must enter by September 29, 2015 to qualify. U.S. residents only please. We sincerely apologize to our non-U.S. visitors. Winners must respond with their mailing address within 48 hours, otherwise you will automatically be disqualified. No exceptions. Contest is subject to change without notice.

WINNERS: Ben, Nadine M., and Ian J.

Posted in News | Tagged |

Jason Statham hits the small screen with ‘Viva La Madness’

"The Mechanic" Japanese Theatrical Poster

"The Mechanic" Japanese Theatrical Poster

Jason Statham is coming straight to your living room! In 2013, Statham (Crank 2) acquired rights to J.J. Connolly’s novel Viva La Madness (follow-up to Layer Cake). The project, which was expected to be a motion picture starring Statham, remained in limbo for nearly 2 years; but as of today, THR announced that Viva will now be a TV series. Statham is still the star (filling in Daniel Craig’s shoes). No network is currently attached.

So what can we expect from it? Here’s the rub, via Amazon: Viva la Madness moves to international crime with trans-Atlantic drug deals, money laundering and high-tech electronic fraud, portrayed with the same uncanny believability. The anonymous hero of Layer Cake is pulled back into the drug game before he can escape to a sunny retirement.

Expect more updates from Viva La Madness in the future!

Posted in News |

Undeclared War (1990) Review

"Undeclared War" Chinese DVD Cover

“Undeclared War” Chinese DVD Cover

Director: Ringo Lam
Cast: Danny Lee Sau Yin, Tommy Wong Kwong Leung, Peter Liapis, Vernon Wells, Olivia Hussey, Rosamund Kwan, Louis Roth, Dean Harrington, Victor Hon Kwan, Mars, Jonathan Isgar, Brad Kerner, Mark King, Jameson Lam
Running Time: 103 min.

By Paul Bramhall

In 1990 it seemed Ringo Lam could do no wrong. Having established himself as a director of realistic and gritty action thrillers with his …on Fire series (City on Fire and Prison on Fire were both released in 1987, followed by School on Fire in 1988), the production company Cinema City decided to put their money where their mouth is. Armed with a sizable budget, Lam was tasked with helming the action movie Undeclared War, with the intention of breaking the international market.

Shot almost entirely in English, on release the movie tanked both critically and financially. Much like Kirk Wong’s Taking Manhattan made a couple of years later, it seemed Hong Kong audiences simply weren’t ready to go and watch a local movie where they’d have to read subtitles, and the result was a box office bomb. Internationally it didn’t fare any better. Up against action flicks like Die Hard 2, what was considered a big budget production in Hong Kong still didn’t stand a chance when compared alongside Hollywood blockbusters in the same vein.

The result was Undeclared War quickly became forgotten, destined to become an entry in Lam’s filmography that would either be overlooked or glazed over whenever discussing his work. Watching the movie 25 years on from when it was first released though, it’s fair to say that there’s a lot to enjoy. The grittiness that Lam had become known for is arguably present and accounted for, while the flair for action that he’d cement with Full Contact in 1992, is here clearly a work in progress, but still solid nevertheless.

Despite having a cast which has many central characters played by gweilos, a fact which hardly inspires confidence from a 1990 Hong Kong movie, surprisingly all involved turn in serviceable performances. Beginning in Warsaw, a CIA agent played by Peter Lapis witnesses the brutal murder of the U.S. ambassador, including his wife and child, at the hands of a terrorist played by Vernon Wells. Many will probably recognize Wells as the apocalyptic gang leader pursuing Mel Gibson from Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior. The Australian actor also famously played Bennett, the memorable villain from the Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle Commando. After tracking Wells to Hong Kong, Lapis is reigned in by the local law enforcement, played by Danny Lee, of The Killer and Tiger on the Beat 2 fame (which was made the same year). Eventually of course, Lapis and Lee end up putting aside their differences and team up to take Wells down.

There are plenty of other familiar faces in the mix as well, from Rosamund Kwan, playing a news reporter and Lee’s girlfriend, to Mars, here in a rare bad guy role playing one of Wells’ lackeys. It’s a mix that almost certainly shouldn’t come together, but perhaps due to having a talent like Lam in the directors chair, and a script that avoids being hokey, Undeclared War succeeds at being a tight little action flick. It may not be the big budget effort it was aiming to be, but with expectations lowered, it’s definitely a unique entry into the genre and keeps up a brisk pace throughout.

The script was penned by multiple writers, and amongst them is Louis Roth, who is probably the reason why the English lines hold together so well. Roth is one of those actors who’s in the background of so many Hong Kong movies of the era, perhaps most famously as the customer on the receiving end of Chow Yun Fat’s “You don’t like my rice!?” line from A Better Tomorrow 2. Here he also takes on the role of a character vital to the plot, however I’m sure his biggest contribution, considering what many English language exchanges are like in HK movies of the era, must be his work on the dialogue. Both Danny Lee and Rosamund Kwan’s lines are almost all in English, and they deliver them with aplomb, with no unintentional moments of humor in sight.

For fans of Hong Kong action and Lam’s realistically gritty style of film making, both are present and accounted for, although perhaps in a different way than audiences at the time were hoping for. The assassination of the U.S. ambassador takes place before the movies title has even appeared on screen, and throws in machine gun totting nuns, explosions, and a helicopter for good measure. The type of blood squib in use also has a unique look to it, similar to the style used in Johnnie To movies like Exiled, when someone gets shot a cloud of red mist erupts from the victim. It’s just as unrealistic as the gallons of blood erupting from a gun shot wound, but it’s definitely visually arresting, and gives the violence a different feel from many movies of the same elk.

Lapis also shows a welcome abandon in his action scenes, seemingly not afraid to get thrown around and take some falls. An exciting foot chase that has him in pursuit of Wells ultimately ends up in a confrontation with Mars, which has them falling down stairs and going at each other on a bridge with anything they can get their hands on. Another scene has him get into a fight with Lee, which sees the both of them scrapping it out in a brawl on the street that doesn’t pull any punches. In many ways it’s Lapis’ lack of gracefulness which makes the action more exciting, as it makes it more relatable, especially in a speed boat chase sequence were you can see he’s visibly clinging on for dear life.

The fact that Lee and Lapis spend almost half of the movie locking heads with each other also makes the respect that eventually forms between them seem more believable. They both bring a down to earth type quality to their characters, and by the time they team up, a lot of their banter is genuinely funny and believable. What’s especially refreshing about Undeclared War is the way Lapis is the butt of many HK situational jokes. In an era where we’ve seen Jackie Chan play the fish-out-of-water in an endless stream of Hollywood movies, whether it be paired with Chris Rock, Owen Wilson, or whoever else, it’s nice to see a movie that puts the shoe on the other foot. Lee is the one calling the shots as the Hong Kong local, and Lapis is the American on foreign soil who has to try and fit in, and it remains that way throughout.

In fact the whole movie does well to play off the tensions between the local HK police force, the British authorities in charge, and the American CIA trying to call the shots. The political subtexts and character relationships aside though, Undeclared War was made as an action flick, and on that basis it delivers. During its 103 minute run time there should be enough gun shots, grenades, explosions, and chase sequences to keep any fan of Hong Kong cinema happy. It may not be Ringo Lam’s best work, and there are a couple of glaring plot holes (look out for Lee getting shot in the arm, then in the next scene miraculously seeming to be completely fine!), but for a slice of HK action from the territories golden era, you can do a lot worse.

Paul Bramhall’s Rating: 7/10

Posted in All, Chinese, News, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , , , , , |

The Eliminators/The Dungeonmaster | Blu-ray (Shout! Factory)

The Eliminators & The Dungeonmaster | Blu-ray (Shout! Factory)

The Eliminators & The Dungeonmaster | Blu-ray (Shout! Factory)

RELEASE DATE: December 15, 2015

Shout! Factory presents the Blu-ray Double Feature for 1986’s The Eliminators and 1984’s The Dungeonmaster (aka Ragewar).

In The Eliminators (watch the trailer), a former pilot (Andrew Prine) rebels against his creator, teaming up with a scientist, a pet robot Spot, a riverboat guide, and a martial arts warrior (Hong Kong’s Conan Lee). In The Dungeonmaster (watch the trailer), a demonic wizard challenges a computer programmer to a battle of technology vs. sorcery!

Pre-order The Eliminators/The Dungeonmaster from Amazon.com today!

Posted in DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Two-Face, move over… Takeshi Kitano kills in ‘Mozu’!

"Mozu" Japanese Theatrical Poster

"Mozu" Japanese Theatrical Poster

No plot description is needed for Mozu, the latest Japanese crime-thriller from Eiichiro Hasumi (Assassination Classroom). The film’s trailer speaks for itself – it’s loud, brutal, action packed and Takeshi Kitano (Beyond Outrage) plays the villain – sold yet?

Mozu also stars Hidetoshi Nishijima (Casshern), Teruyuki Kagawa (20th Century Boys: Chapter 1: The Beginning of the End), Yusuke Iseya (Sukiyaki Western Django) and Tori Matsuzaka (Gatchaman).

According to FCS, Mozu hits the screens in Japan on November 7. Given Kitano’s international star-power, we’re pretty sure a North American distributor has their eyes on this one. Don’t miss the trailer!

Posted in News |

1st trailer for ‘Navy Seals vs. Zombies’ with Michael Dudikoff!

"Navy Seals vs. Zombies" Poster

"Navy Seals vs. Zombies" Poster

Whether you want another zombie flick or not, here’s the scoop on Navy Seals vs. Zombies, the upcoming directorial debut of NASCAR driver/stuntman Stanton Barrett, whose stunt credits include Looper and Terminator Genisys.

A city is under siege by hordes of fast moving, flesh eating undead. The infection is spreading. Urban warfare has been unleashed. With no cure in sight and time running out, can an elite unit of badass warriors now survive their most horrific mission of all? Ed Quinn (Revenge), Michael Dudikoff (American Ninja), pro wrestling champion Chad Gunner Lail, Molly Hagan (iZombie), Olympian Lolo Jones and NBA legend Rick Fox star in this explosive military shocker filmed with the participation of former U.S. Navy SEALS.

UpdatesNavy Seals vs. Zombies is coming to Blu-ray & DVD on October 6, 2015 (pre-order today). And of course, don’t miss the film’s new trailer!

Posted in News |

The Golden Cane Warrior | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

The Golden Cane Warrior | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

The Golden Cane Warrior | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

RELEASE DATE: November 3, 2015

Well Go USA presents the Blu-rayDVD for the Indonesian Wu Xia epic, The Golden Cane Warrior, featuring martial arts choreography by Hong Kong’s Hung Yan Yan (Shaolin, Coweb, Time & Tide).

The film stars some of Indonesia’s most popular talents, including Christine Hakim, Nicholas Saputra, Reza Rahadian, Slamet Rahardjo, Prisia Nasution, Eva Celia and Tara Basro. | Watch the trailer.

Pre-order The Golden Cane Warrior from Amazon.com today!

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Has ‘The Raid 2’ director popped his ‘Blister’?

"The Raid" Japanese Theatrical Poster

“The Raid” Japanese Theatrical Poster

Back in March of 2014, director Gareth Evans (The Raid 2) told Crave: “I don’t have any plans to do The Raid 3 within the next two or three years so I’m going to take a break from that franchise for a bit… I want to do some some things outside of Indonesia for like two films, then come back to Indonesia and shoot The Raid 3. I have another one I want to shoot with him first. Still in the action genre and it’s something that [Uwais] needs to train for for a fair amount of time.”

There’s a possibility that Evans is talking about Blister, a film with Raid 2 stars Iko Uwais and Yayan Ruhian, that’s apparently in pre-production phase, as hinted by his latest tweet.

Evans describes Blister as his take on “the contemporary American gangster story with echoes of The Wild Bunch.” This remark should come as no surprise, since Evans expressed his love for the Sam Peckinpah classic in our interview with him back in December of 2013: “Peckinpah invented action cinema, the editing style, cinematography, fluidity – everything I’ve stolen has been from him,” said Evans. Along with Wild Bunch, Evans cites Jackie Chan’s Armor of God and John Woo’s Hard Boiled as the three movies that have have influenced him the most.

Updates: In a November (2016) interview with Impact’s Mike Leeder, here’s what Evans said about this project: Blister is very much something I want to revisit – sometimes you need certain elements to line up just right – especially for a project as ambitious as that one and unfortunately (despite the best intentions of everyone involved) it didn’t quite come through. We prepped that film pretty thoroughly so I do hope, further down the line, it will become a reality. We had far too much killer material for it to end up sitting on a shelf.

Posted in News |

Kickboxer | aka Once Upon a Chinese Hero (1993) Review

"Kickboxer" Chinese Theatrical Poster

“Kickboxer” Chinese Theatrical Poster

Director: Wu Ma
Cast: Yuen Biao, Shirley Lui Sau Ling, Yuen Wah, Yen Shi Kwan, Sheila Chan Suk Lan, Wu Ma, Gam Sap Yee, Chen Shan, Tai Bo, Anthony Carpio, Chu Tau, Louis Roth, Yuen Mao, Corey Yuen, Max Kasimsky, Leung Kwan-Keung
Running Time: 92 min.

By Paul Bramhall

There aren’t many people out there who would disagree that Jet Li being cast as Wong Fei Hung was an inspired choice. In 1991 director Tsui Hark revived the Wong Fei Hung character with Once Upon a Time in China, and Li went on to play Hung in 3 official sequels and 1 unofficial entry into the series. However something always bothered me about Once Upon a Time in China, and that was the fact that it had one of the greatest kung fu stars in the history of the genre, Yuen Biao, in merely a supporting role. The star of such classics as Prodigal Son and Righting Wrongs in a supporting role!? It just didn’t seem right.

For fans of Biao, it must have come as a great relief that just a couple of years later, Kick Boxer was released. Made almost as if to specifically alleviate the frustrations of those who wanted to see him front and center in a Wong Fei Hung tale, the production brings with it plenty of familiar faces from Once Upon a Time in China. Wu Ma steps into the directors chair as well as co-starring, the villain from Once Upon a Time in China, Yen Shi Kwan, here plays an incorruptible police captain, and Anthony Carpio takes on assistant action direction duties on top of appearing in front of camera.

Biao produced the movie (even having his Yuen Biao Films logo in the opening credits), and here plays a mischievous rascal called Lau Zhai, who’s trying to be taken on as a student of Wong Fei Hung. In 1993 the prospect of anyone other than Jet Li playing Fei Hung would be considered preposterous, so the script wisely sidesteps the whole issue, by having the character be absent from proceedings due to ‘traveling in Asia’. Biao and his friend, played by Wu Ma, have been in Hong Kong where they’ve picked up some herbs for the Po Chi Lam clinic. However unbeknownst to them, opium has been hidden in the packages they’re carrying, which ultimately leads to Biao being framed, and subsequently embarking on a mission to clear his name and redeem his reputation.

Both Wu Ma and Biao’s careers were often wildly uneven during the 90’s. While Ma continued to act in several movies per year, his directorial efforts around the same period, namely the likes of Exorcist Master and Circus Kids (which also featured Biao), were only average at best. Biao on the other hand seemed to be having a go at everything, from new wave wuxia like The Sword Stained with Royal Blood, to Filipino action cheapies like Tough Beauty and Sloppy Slop, to trying his hand at directing with A Kid from Tibet. As uneven as a lot of their output was though, for Kick Boxer their collaboration was one that would reap rewards for fans of Biao in action.

Apart from the cast members already mentioned, Kick Boxer deserves extra points for its villains, which come in the form of Yuen Wah and Chang Shan. The prospect of seeing Biao face off against either of them would be enough to warrant a watch, however with both of them onboard, expectations are understandably raised. Biao and Wah faced off against each other several times over the years, from Eastern Condors to The Iceman Cometh, and Biao must have recognized how much he works well paired with Wah, as he also brought him on board for The Kid from Tibet. Kick Boxer sadly marked the last time they’d go at it, so in many ways acts as a footnote to one of Hong Kong cinemas greatest kung fu pairings.

Everyone in the cast performs well though, especially Yen Shi Kwan as the gold shoe wearing police officer. Shi Kwan has one of the most recognizable faces in kung fu cinema, usually playing a memorable villain whether it be in old school classics like The Master Strikes, to new wave classics like Iron Monkey, also made in 1993. In Kick Boxer he gets to take a break from playing the villain, taking on the role of an upright police captain, and father to a female newspaper editor that Biao takes a liking to. Notably he’s also an asthmatic, which could well be a nod to Lam Ching Ying’s character in The Prodigal Son. Unfortunately playing a good guy doesn’t mean he gets any less of a painful demise, with a confrontation against Wah ending on a particularly cruel note.

While Kick Boxer clearly doesn’t have the same budget behind it as the likes of Once Upon a Time in China, it more than makes up for it with the action and creativity on display. At one point Biao and Shi Kwan engage in a game of chess on a human sized playing board, which sees them flipping and kicking chess pieces at each other set to an electric guitar rendition of the famous Wong Fei Hung theme. It’s random, but it keeps things entertaining. The movie also utilizes the bullet point of view shot that Ringo Lam created for his movie Full Contact, made the year prior, only instead of it being Chow Yun Fat against Simon Yam, its Yuen Wah against Yuen Biao. It’s these small touches and flourishes that help to elevate Kick Boxer above many of the similarly themed new wave movies that were coming out around the same time.

Of course the most important part in any kung fu movie starring Yuen Biao is how the action measures up. Thankfully he gets plenty of opportunities to shine, from an initial fight on a cruise liner against a group of angry waiters, to the finale, which sees him go on a one man rampage in the mansion where Wah resides. His physical dexterity is on display front and center, throwing out some kicks which seem to come from impossible angles. The promise of having Yuen Wah and Chang Shan as the villains also isn’t squandered when, having disposed of several of their lackeys, Biao gets to first take on Shan, decked in a sharp black suit and armed with a dagger, and then Wah.

Both fights feature some painful looking falls, and Wah’s fight in particular is entertaining, as every time he strikes a pose it’s accompanied by the sound effect of an eagles cry. Like any new wave movie of the era, there is wirework, however it’s used sparingly, and mostly to enhance impacts. Biao choreographed the action himself, along with another of the Seven Little Fortunes, Yuen Mao, who worked with Biao again on Circus Kids. It would have been great to see a series of Lau Zhai movies, but it apparently wasn’t to be. Biao wouldn’t take on action director duties again until several years later, and he never really went back to the type of mischievous character with a heart of gold that he portrayed so well in the likes of Prodigal Son and Dreadnaught.

As it stands though, Kick Boxer is a worthy entry into both Biao’s filmography and as a new wave kung fu movie. With the recent reboot of Wong Fei Hung in 2014’s Rise of the Legend, which seemed to do away with everything that makes these tales so entertaining in the first place, Kick Boxer is well worth seeking out as a reminder of why Hong Kong cinema was so great.

Paul Bramhall’s Rating: 7.5/10

Posted in All, Chinese, News, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , , |

Gosei Sentai Dairanger: The Complete Series | DVD (Shout! Factory)

Gosei Sentai Dairanger: The Complete Series | DVD (Shout! Factory)

Gosei Sentai Dairanger: The Complete Series | DVD (Shout! Factory)

RELEASE DATE: November 10, 2015

Shout! Factory presents the Gosei Sentai Dairanger: The Complete Series. Produced by Toei and Bandai, Super Sentai Zyuranger aired in Japan on February 19, 1993 to February 11, 1994, with a total of 50 episodes. It was later adapted into the 2nd Season of American TV’s Power Rangers series!

For the first time, Shout! Factory is delivering the entire Gosei Sentai Dairanger series in its original Japanese language, uncut and subtitled, in this 10-disc DVD set! The series stars Keiichi Wada, Tatsuya Nōmi, Ei Hamura, Keisuke Tsuchiya, Natsuki Takahashi and Hisashi Sakai. Watch the TV show’s original opening.

Pre-order Gosei Sentai Dairanger: The Complete Series from Amazon.com today!

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Donate to see Cynthia Rothrock in an uncensored ‘Bitchfight’

"No Retreat, No Surrender 2" American VHS Cover

"No Retreat, No Surrender 2" American VHS Cover

Action star Cynthia Rothrock (Shanghai Express) is reuniting with her No Retreat, No Surrender II co-star, Max Thayer, for a Grindhouse-style, Tarantino-esque martial arts flick titled Bitchfight, directed by UK filmmaker and cult movie historian, Dean Meadows.

According to a press release (via FCS), “Bitchfight harks back to the glory days of the 80’s and early 90’s when video stores where lined with low budget action classics from the likes of Golan/Globus, Roger Corman and Cirio Santiago.”

Meadows stated, “We’re making this movie for all those fans who remember the excitement of going into the video store and anticipating the next release from companies such as Cannon, you know the old-school stuff starring guys like Chuck Norris, Michael Dudikoff and Steve James…”

Bitchfight is set to start shooting in the Spring of 2015. Stay tuned!

Update: The filmmakers have unveiled a 30-day Kickstarter campaign in which supporters will gain access to an exclusive, uncut version of the film. This raw and uncensored cut will feature 25 minutes of footage not available anywhere else!

Posted in News |

Well Go USA brings home Indonesia’s ‘Golden Cane Warrior’!

"Golden Cane Warrior" Theatrical Poster

"Golden Cane Warrior" Theatrical Poster

This November, Well Go USA is bringing home Ifa Isfansyah’s The Golden Cane Warrior, an Indonesian Wu Xia epic, featuring martial arts choreography by Hong Kong’s Hung Yan Yan (Shaolin, Coweb, Time & Tide).

The film stars some of Indonesia’s most popular talents, including Christine Hakim, Nicholas Saputra, Reza Rahadian, Slamet Rahardjo, Prisia Nasution, Eva Celia and Tara Basro.

Official Plot: The Golden Cane: a relic of incomparable force, coveted by all. And with it, the training of a technique so unrivaled, it vanquishes all who dare oppose its power.

As Master Cempaka and her four disciples – orphans of her enemies, now heirs to the Cane – prepare for the new warrior guardian to ascend, an act of villainous betrayal threatens to destroy the clan and destabilize the realm. Their only hope to restore order lies in finding the elusive White Dragon, the only remaining pupil still equipped to unlock the mysteries of the Golden Cane.

The Golden Cane Warrior doesn’t hit shelves until November 3, 2015, but it’s currently available for pre-order on Blu-ray & DVD. If you haven’t already, check out the film’s trailer!

Posted in News |

Northern Limit Line | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Northern Limit Line | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

Northern Limit Line | Blu-ray & DVD (Well Go USA)

RELEASE DATE: October 20, 2015

Well Go USA presents the Blu-ray & DVD for Kim Hak-Soon’s Northern Limit Line (aka Battle of Yeonpyeong). This box office hit stars Kim Moo-Yul, Jin Goo, Lee Hyun-Woo, Lee Wan and Lee Chung-Ah.

June 29th, 2002. As the citizens of South Korea celebrate the FIFA World Cup, the North Korean navy sends two patrol boats to a disputed border in the Yellow Sea. The surprise attack on Battleship 357, now remembered as the Battle of Yeonpyeong, honors the men who bravely fought for freedom – on the Northern Limit Line. | Watch the trailer.

Pre-order Northern Limit Line from Amazon.com today!

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

Stray Cat Rock: Beat ’71 (1971) Review‏

"Stray Cat Rock: Beat '71" Japanese Theatrical Poster

"Stray Cat Rock: Beat '71" Japanese Theatrical Poster

AKA: Alleycat Rock: Crazy Riders ’71
Director: Toshiya Fujita
Writer: Tatsuya Asai, Hideichi Nagahara
Cast: Meiko Kaji, Takeo Chii, Tatsuya Fuji, Yoshio Harada, Takeo Chii, Yoshio Inaba, Bunjaku Han, Michiko Tsukasa
Running Time: 87 min.

By Kyle Warner

Director Toshiya Fujita returns to the Stray Cat Rock series for the fifth and final installment, Stray Cat Rock: Beat ’71 (aka Stray Cat Rock: Crazy Rider ’71). While I thought that the previous film signaled that the series was running out of steam, Fujita successfully livens things up and lets the series go out with a bang (literally and otherwise).

In Stray Cat Rock: Wild Jumbo, Fujita broke away from the delinquent girl gang stuff that the series is generally known for, and he moves even further away from that sort of movie with Beat ’71. The final Stray Cat Rock film isn’t about cool, good-looking young people hanging out in clubs and getting into altercations with their rivals, instead it’s about homeless hippies and a society that doesn’t see a use for them.

Meiko Kaji plays Furiko, a hippie that lives with her friends in a broken down bus. She’s in love with Ryumei (Takeo Chii), a rich young man that’s given up his life of luxury for love. However, Ryumei’s dad doesn’t accept this, so he sends a biker gang to retrieve Ryumei and get him away from Furiko. Ryumei kills one of the bikers but he is abducted anyway – and what’s worse, Furiko is blamed for the biker’s murder. It’s not long before the hopelessly romantic Furiko breaks out of prison, skips town, and tracks down her lover. Her hippie friends hear about her escape and are originally against chasing after her, but when one of their own dies while masturbating with a jackhammer, they figure ‘what the hell?’ and begin a road trip to find their fugitive friend.

This is such a fun, weird movie. Easily one of my favorites of the series. Fujita’s style is very carefree and he encouraged improvisation from his actors. You can tell that the cast is having a good time. And though there are many laugh out loud moments to the film, Beat ’71 is not without its dramatic tension and political commentary.

When the hippies arrive in town looking for their friend, they’re met with general hostility by the townsfolk who just want them to leave. The hippies go to a grocery store and are told that they can’t buy anything. To which the hippies smile and say that they weren’t planning to pay anyway, they’re just taking what they want. By the end of the film, the bad guys and general townsfolk alike have all taken up arms and rallied against the hippies who refuse to leave their town.

Perhaps the most amusing part surrounding the hippie lifestyle comes early in the film when a magazine writer and photographer go to the hippie bus for interviews and photos. The hippies do their best to play the part that society expects from them, sniffing glue, playing with guns, and engaging in group sex for their guest’s entertainment. After they’ve been paid, the hippies drop the act and return to their usual activities.

Beat ’71 brings back many familiar Stray Cat Rock faces for the finale film. Takeo Chii, previously seen in Wild Jumbo, convincing plays Ryumei as a man lost between two worlds. Chii’s Wild Jumbo co-star Soichiro Maeno has a small part as a bad guy. Eiji Go once again plays the leader of an evil biker gang. Rikiya Yasuoka, the ‘cross-breed’ hero of Sex Hunter, makes a cameo appearance as a biker. And Bunjaku Han, who only missed out on one of the Stray Cat Rock films, also appears in a small role.

If there’s one major thing to hold against Beat ’71, it’s that it almost completely wastes series star Meiko Kaji. In the original film, Delinquent Girl Boss, Kaji was not the lead but she was definitely the most interesting performer of the cast. In Beat ’71 she’s relegated to a supporting part despite her star billing. Once her character Furiko busts out of jail and goes in search of Ryumei, she’s only seen sporadically until the finale. In her absence, the hippies take over the film, particularly the leaders of the troupe played by series regular Tatsuya Fuji and newcomer Yoshio Harada. Fuji and Harada are good enough to hold the film together while Kaji isn’t around, but the series star is missed.

Yoshio Harada’s one of my favorite actors and it was cool to see him in this, one of his earliest film roles. In his youth Harada was known for playing antiheroes and was one of Japanese cinema’s best tough guy leading men in the 70s and 80s. Later in his career, Harada became more of a character actor and would impress in both dramatic and comedic roles in films like Rokuro Mochizuki’s Onibi: The Fire Within, Hirokazu Koreeda’s Still Walking, and Katsuhito Ishii’s Party 7. If Harada had been around about ten to fifteen years earlier his name might be mentioned in the same breath as Toshiro Mifune, Tatsuya Nakadai, and Shintaro Katsu. Alas, he was a generation behind those cinema giants and entered film during the 70s, just as the studio system started to die, with the Japanese film industry never fully recovering. In Harada’s own words, “I got on the last carriage of the last train.” Still, Harada gave us many great films, and his presence is very welcome in the Stray Cat Rock series. In his role as the hippie leader Piranha, Harada showcases a bit of everything he’d come to be known for, including great comedic timing and a cool tough guy swagger.

Stray Cat Rock: Beat ’71 was more than just the end of a series. Nikkatsu, the studio behind Stray Cat Rock and many of Japan’s most popular action movies, would soon shift towards producing pink films in order to stay afloat. Many actors that Nikkatsu had long been grooming quickly jumped ship, including Meiko Kaji. Beat ’71 and other films made by the studio around the same time mark the end of an era.

I’ve really enjoyed my time with the Stray Cat Rock series and I’m kind of sad that I’ve now reached the end. I’m trying to think of another series that’s like this one and I just can’t at the moment. It’s a strange series of films. They use many of the same actors from film to film, but never playing the same characters. Sometimes a Stray Cat Rock film is a gritty crime drama, other times it’s a youth comedy. One film deals with the subject of racism, another film has a dude dying from sexual excitement while using a jackhammer. And though the films are often funny and wildly different, they all invariably end in shocking, downbeat fashion. The Stray Cat Rock series is part Nikkatsu action movie, part Easy Rider, part counterculture comedy, and 100% 1970s.

Beat ’71 may not be the most polished of the bunch but it is one of the funniest. In general, Yasuharu Hasebe’s entries are the more dramatic and thought-provoking, but I think I’ll return to Fujita’s films more often. Wild Jumbo and Beat ’71 are cool, fun, and wild. I’m giving this film – and this series – a strong recommendation to fans of Japanese cinema.

Kyle Warner’s Rating: 7.5/10

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Van Damme’s next film: ‘Bourne Identity’ with humor?

"Pound of Flesh" Japanese Theatrical Poster

"Pound of Flesh" Japanese Theatrical Poster

Did Jason Statham’s role in Spy give Jean-Claude Van Damme (Pound of Flesh) inspiration for an upcoming film? Possibly. In a recent interview with TOD, the action star teased a project he’s currently working on: “Right now, I’m working on a lighter project where I play an actor who’s a spy… it will be a bit like The Bourne Identity with a touch of comedy.”

This won’t be the first time Van Damme is venturing into comedy. This year, he appeared in the Chinese superhero parody film, Jian Bing Man. In 2013, he starred alongside Adam Brody, Kristen Schaal and Rob Huebel in Welcome to the Jungle.  2011 gave him a bit role in the French film Beur sur la ville, not to mention voice work in Kung Fu Panda 2 that same year.

Since it may be a while until the new spy comedy comes to fruition, what’s next for Van Damme? In early 2016, you can catch him in Kickboxer: Vengeance with Alain Moussi, Dave Bautista, Georges St. Pierre, Gina Carano and the late Darren Shahlavi. According to sources, his long-awaited thriller, Full Love (aka Eagle Path), will also be released in 2016. Stay tuned!

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