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Your brain is a swimming pool, and 78-year-old director, Suzuki Seijun, wants to jump in and splash around. PISTOL OPERA is the legendary Seijun's first movie in ten years, an all-female remake of his classic BRANDED TO KILL (1967) - the movie that got him fired from Nikkatsu studios because it MADE...NO... SENSE!!!! The blacklisted bad boy of the 60's studio system, who made jaw-dropping head trips lightly disguised as gangster flicks, most people thought Suzuki Seijun would never make another movie. And for almost ten years he hasn't. But here he is again, ready to latch onto your skull and gum away at your optic nerve. Stray
Cat is the #3 killer in the Killer's Guild, sort of a business association
for assassins. Ranked from 1 to 100, Guild members spend all their time
jockeying for better ratings and thinking up cool names for themselves
like "Painless Surgeon" and "Hundred Eyes". But
someone in the elite Top Ten is angling for the coveted #1 spot and
paranoia chokes the world like thick yellow fog as swimming pools and
Kabuki theaters turn into career opportunities for a cast of unhinged,
drama queens with guns. Jo Shishido's chipmunk-cheeked #3 killer from
BRANDED TO KILL is back, his addiction to randy sex and freshly-steamed
rice still going strong. Played here by Mikijiro Hira, the old #3 limps
around on his crutches, the honorary mascot of the Killer's Guild, given
the affectionate ranking of #0. (Jo Shishido was approached to reprise
his character, Director Seijun says, "...but somehow it didn't
happen. You should ask the producer about that.") But his jet set
cool has been rendered obsolete by the bevy of cold-blooded women and
psycho killers on psychotronic display in PISTOL OPERA.
Like a reproach
to the stark, all-male black and white world of BRANDED TO KILL, PISTOL
OPERA explodes in glorious, giddy Technicolor. This time, women are
the center of the world, with the men relegated to the role of cannon
fodder. Drunk on style, PISTOL OPERA is eye-blistering nonsense, telepathically
broadcast straight outta Suzuki's brainpan like be-bop delirium. As
the director says, " When you become over 60, everything you It's the movie that answer the eternal question: why do we have eyes? To watch PISTOL OPERA, of course. >
Links to every article
ever written about Suzuki Seijun. A heavy yellow design that makes your
eyes hurt. Photos of the Jo Shishido action figure. .45 Calibre Samurai
is like the Giving Tree. >
Read Midnight Eye's
interview with Suzuki Seijun >
See their review
of PISTOL OPERA >
Official PISTOL OPERA
website: http://
www.shochiku.co.jp/pistolopera |
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