Prolific director Takashi Miike (AUDITION) keeps finding new ways to test the boundaries of on-screen violence. ICHI THE KILLER is a masterful piece of filmmaking, simultaneously funny and horrific, but it's only for viewers with strong stomachs. One character, Kakihara (Japanese indie film heartthrob Tadanobu Asano), a masochistic yakuza lieutenant, has slits in his cheeks through which he blows cigarette smoke and gleefully hacks off his own tongue to apologize for his impudence. Then there's eponymous assassin (Nao Omori), a painfully shy but sadistic young voyeur who wears a leather superhero outfit to work. Manipulated by the cagey and mysterious Jijii (English translation: "Gramps," Shinya Tsukamoto), Ichi lashes out and massacres those Jijii deems bullies, and basically anyone else who upsets his frail psyche. Jijii uses the demented lad to start a bloody war between rival yakuza factions. Miike's film is full of grotesquely over-the-top violent set pieces, including flying entrails, graphic mutilations, and even a severed human face splattered against a wall and slowly sliding to the ground. It's all captured with kinetic camerawork and hyperactive editing. It's not for everyone, but bolder viewers will find it uniquely entertaining.
Theatrical Release: FEBRUARY 23, 2002 (NY)
Blu-ray Disc Features:
Full Frame - 1.33
Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
Dolby Surround - Japanese, English
Subtitles - English - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Featurette: Featuring Horror Film Director Eli Roth
Behind the Scenes: Making Of
Trailers: Original Theatrical Trailer
Audio Commentary: Takashi Miike - Director; Hideo Yamamoto - Source Writer/Artist
Text/Photo Galleries:
Stills/Photos
Distributor Notes: When a yakuza boss is murdered and his money is stolen, both truth and revenge are brutally sought. Leading the charge is Kakihara (Tadanobu Asano), the bleach-blonde pain junky whose interrogation methods are fetishistically sadistic. As the layers of the sordid tale are peeled back, it appears that someone is trying to turn rival gangs against each other. The centerpiece of this strategy is Ichi the Killer (Nao Omori), a mysterious and completely unhinged master of slaughter. When the final showdown comes, it's a psychologically cataclysmic event. This one-of-a-kind, over-the-top, stomach-churning, live-action cartoon from Takashi Miike (VISITOR Q, IZO) remains an extreme and influential modern classic.
Source: Media Blasters
Executive Producer
Albert Yeung: Executive Producer, ICHI THE KILLER (2002)
Executive Producer
Sumiji Miyake: Executive Producer, ICHI THE KILLER (2002)
Source Writer
Hideo Yamamoto: Cinematographer
Director of Photography
Hideo Yamamoto: Cinematographer
Review 1:
"...Takashi's kinetic direction and stylish visual flair are humorous and diverting..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.64 07/01/2003
Review 2:
"...This demented butcher shop of a movie takes Asian cinema to new extremes..."
Source: Total Film
p.134 07/01/2003
Review 3:
"Takashi Miike's ICHI THE KILLER separates the men from the boys....With hyperkinetic camerawork and editing as well as a deep plot shaded with viciously dark humor..."
Source: Rolling Stone
p.219 12/11/2003