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I'd heard about "Battle Royale" in the underground film circuit, and
this Japanese thriller has become an instant cult classic amidst the
masses of true movie fans. Violent, disturbing, and controversial, this
is one hard to find movie, but it's worth it once you find it. You can't
get it at a chain store. Adapted from the novel written by Koushon
Takami, In the not too distant future, kids basically rule over the
adults, terrorizing them and banding together to rebel against them. One
day on a field trip, a group of students, oblivious to what is
happening, awake in a classroom, when their teacher who quit after being
cut by one of them appears. Confused and frightened, they're
surrounded by armed guards and soldiers and discover they're being
trapped in a game. The game is really a secret law that has 42 students
captured and collared and they're pitted against one another on an
island where they must kill one another in three days. The last person
who survives, wins. They're given weapons each lethal in its own way;
some are very useful (crossbow, shotgun), and some basically useless
(binoculars, pot lid), but the real weapons are the students.
What we witness in the film is disturbing
and frightening as we see the instant collapse of a band of students who
basically stick together in their taunting of their teacher. While they
are like a pact of 42, they also turn against each other instantly and
the game triggers that; friends who vow to stick together, turn on each
other within moments, loners and elitists become lethal psychopathic
killers, and groups of friends who bond and form brotherhoods instantly
collapse and turn on each other after paranoia strikes, all underlying
sub-conscious
impulses that were probably there from the get go, and it's used against
them in the worst ways, their own violent behavior is put upon one
another. |
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The best plot devices in the film are two
moles that are set to play in the game for their own reasons while their
teacher watches, monitors them by the collars (which are weapons in
themselves), and taunts them. This is probably one of the most
disturbing films I've seen in years, but it's also one of the most
entertaining; this action thriller is very compelling and original with
a cast of children brutally murdering one another, and the murders are
very graphic and hard to watch. The action is actually very good as well
with some exciting scenes that will have you on edge, like the sequences
when the players confront one another friendly-like (did I just use that
word?), and you're tense, because you're not sure if they're really
being friendly, or because they're trying to slither their way to
survival. One really great character is Mitsuko
(Kou Shibaski), one of my favorites, a sexy elitist who manages to
become the deadliest player in the game, and boy does she put up a
fight, there is also Takako Chigusa, another very deadly female
character, she's played by Chiaki Kuriyami whom many Tarantino fans will
remember from "Kill Bill" as the lethal Gogo Yubari.
The acting is very well done here by the
cast all around; there are characters we root for,
characters we sympathize for, characters we hate, and characters we
laugh at, and they're all given very heartbreaking back stories. There
are the truly lethal moles in the game whom I just enjoyed watching as
they hunted the players down with ease, and of course Teacher Kitano
played by Takeshi Kitano (who starred in the latest incarnation of "Zatoichi:
the blind swordsman"); here he's a very lethal cold adversary to the
students, and an unflinching menace, taunting them and pitting them
against one another, there's also of course, Kiriyama ( Masanobu Ando),
my favorite character, is one of the best characters here and becomes a
very lethal villain who I just dug. That dude was just a stone cold
bad-ass. All the while, the film remains
incomplete leading into the sequel, but I just loved this film, not only
for its disturbing imagery, but the fact it takes a one note concept and
makes a truly intricate symbolic and very entertaining thriller. I loved
it.
For all of its appeal and excitement, "Battle Royale" is pretty sloppy
when it comes to the script. Some of the dialogue can be very corny.
Though, it's of the Asian sensibility, it's understandable, I found much
of the dialogue to be silly including one of the characters dying words:
"I think you're cool". Yikes, that's cheesy. Nonetheless, the dialogue
is almost at rapid pace, and some of it is non-existent, but when it's
cheesy, it's really cheesy. Not to mention, there are plenty of big plot
holes here that I just did not understand for the life of me. For
example the scene with the character Chigusa jogging in the woods, was
that a dream? I was wondering, and then it seemed to be reality, but I
was never sure. And then I realized Chigusa has a jogging suit. Where'd
she get it? And why is she jogging so freely in the forest when there's
a hunt on?
Plus, there are two moles in the game,
two of whom I won't heavily hint at, but what I don't understand is, how
are they still in the game? The rules are the last person survives,
there are two, so did they kill all the players before and get spared?
Or are they meant to kill the players, and never really be touched?
There's not a lot of emphasis on the core characters. Though many are
supposed to die, a little focus on them would have made their deaths
harder to watch, but I felt, even with the bits of back story, so
incomplete when it came to knowing which characters were the primary
ones. I never felt really bad when one of the characters died, which
would have had more of an impact, had the writers achieved the purpose
for them.
Then there is also the teacher's subplot
which felt very tacked on and forced just for the purposes of eating
time in the story, and for building a back story for the climax which I
wasn't pleased with. Great enemy, but shabby characterization all
around. The ending was possibly the worst with the writers who seemed to
have no idea how to end it. I was hoping they'd do like Monty Python and
have the actors just walk off the scene, because the ending goes on too
long as does the confrontation with the teacher which was unfortunately
campy and very silly.
Disturbing, gory, shocking, and very original, "Battle Royale" is one of
the best films I've seen in years. With a plot out of "Lord of the
Flies" and "The Most Dangerous Game", "Battle Royale" is an exciting
tense action thriller that you can't miss.
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