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Originally Posted by The Game
Wow,man thanks for that list.CC from yesterday coming up!! Awesome,very interesting list,you like practically the same type of films as me,I love action but I love the thought provoking or emotional films too! You know,like a change of pace! I bet everyone else on this thread reads those descriptions and thinks?? ::** ??? ;D Watch these films people,they are great!! Oggie,have you seen a yakuza film called dead or alive? Any other good Yakuza films? Thanks again bro!!
Dead or Alive is awesome! 8)
The part were the mother and daughter get into the car... (don't want to spoil it for anyone) you know which scene I mean, that totally stunned me, haha.
As for other Yakuza films... you should check out "Street Mobster" and "Graveyard of Honour" by Kinji Fukasaku (Battle Royale) first of all... but if you want the definitive Yakuza experience, you have to see "Yakuza Papers" also by Kinji Fukasaku. It is breathtaking!
It is divided into 5 chapters. Originally, each chapter is a seperate movie but now you can buy the limited edition box set (Region 1 only) which comes with some amazing extras, like essays about the Yakuza, documentaries, articles etc... I'm ordering it pretty soon. My cousin already got his and I loved it immediately, hehe. ;D
Here is a bit about it:
In the wake of The Bomb, ex-soldier Shozo Hirono (Bunta Sugawara) joins a Hiroshima yakuza gangthe Japanese equivalent of the Mafiaand then the shootings, slashings, betrayals, and scheming begin.
Premiering a year after The Godfather, The Yakuza Papers also broke box-office records and spawned sequels, but, in contrast, took a ruthlessly de-romanticized view of the underworld. Based on an actual gang boss' memoirs, The Yakuza Papers plunges the audience into a gritty, brutal, violent newsreel of a three-decade struggle for power of Shakespearean complexity, a nihilistic epic unlike any other...
Chapter 1: "Battles Without Honor and Humanity";
In the teeming black markets of postwar Japan, Shozo Hirono (Bunta Sugawara) and his buddies find themselves in a new war between fractious and ambitious yakuza. After joining boss Yamamori, Shozo is drawn into a feud with his sworn brother's family, the Dois. But that's where the chivalry of traditional yakuza film ends and the hypocrisy, betrayal, and assassinations begin. A rare and critical perspective on the history of Japan after World War II, Battles Without Honor & Humanity is a tour-de-force that revolutionized the yakuza genre and launched Kinji Fukasaku and Bunta Sugawara to international stardom.
Chapter 2: "Deadly Fight in Hiroshima";
Repeatedly beat to a pulp by gamblers, cops, and gangsters, lone wolf Shoji Yamanaka (Kinya Kitaoji), finally finds a home as a Muraoka family hit man and falls in love with boss Muraoka's niece. Meanwhile, the ambitions of mad dog Katsutoshi Otomo (Sonny Chiba, Kill Bill) draws our series' hero, Shozo Hirono (Bunta Sugawara), into a new round of bloodshed, culminating with the tragic demise of the young Yamanka.
Chapter 3: "Proxy War";
The successor to Hiroshima's most powerful yakuza family, the Muraokas, is whacked in broad daylight on a busy city street. What unfolds is a yakuza succession crisis, as the weaseley Uchimoto (Takeshi Kato) dithers and the slimy, backstabbing boss Yamamori steps in as the Muraoka's new boss. Bunta Sugawara's would-be independent yakuza, Shozo Hirono, is caught in the middle, having to play powerbroker. But the opposing factions seek support from powerful families in Kobe, making all out war inevitable.
Chapter 4: "Police Tactics";
As Japan gears up for the 1964 Olympic games, the cops start to crack down under pressure from the public and the press, adding a new dimension in the war for power among the yakuza families of Hiroshima. Akira Kobayashi's Takeda tries to keep a lid on things, but hotheaded underlings create chaos, with one boss whacked in neutral territory, and the craven boss, Uchimoto, informing on an assassination attempt by his own minions. While the police round up hundreds of yakuza foot soldiers, Bunta Sugawara's Shozo Hirono plots to finally take out longtime nemesis, boss Yamamori.
Chapter 5: "Final Episode";
In the wake of a big police crackdown, Akira Kobayashi's icily sun-glassed Takeda attempts to transform the Hiroshima yakuza families into a legitimate political organization: The Tensei Coalition. When the young Matsumura ascends to the chairmanship of the coalition, the older, hardened yakuza led by Jo Shishido (Branded to Kill) seize one last opportunity to stir up chaos and bloodshed. Culminating with the arrests, deaths, or retirement of the first postwar yakuza generation, this milestone series draws to an ambivalent close.