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  • 632519 November 2003
    Unbelievable - this ultraviolent gangster flick is from 1972 - if it wasn't for the poor monophonic sound mix on the dvd, you almost wouldn't recognize the age! Fast cuts, ultracool gangster hero, bloody beat-ups and shootings - everything that Beat Takeshi Kitano is exploring and developing to a further stage in his brilliant movies 'Hana-Bi' or 'Brother' can be found in this masterpiece as a blueprint.

    Fans of Asian action cinema won't be disappointed - the film is moving so fast, the inevitable climax almost let's you lose breath - this is a true gem! Get it, see it!
  • The proud, self-destructive, punk/anti-hero violates national boundaries without compunction in late 60s/early 70s cinema. Here Isamu Okita (Bunta Sugawara), often simply called "Bro", is reminiscent not only of Alex (A Clockwork Orange) but also of Ivan (The Harder They Come), Johnny Boy (Mean Streets) and even of Michel (À bout de soufflé).

    'Gendai yakuza: hito-kiri yota' (which, in English, apparently means something like Outlaw Killer or Street Mobster) is a restless, prowling movie that occasionally bursts into hyperkinetic action. Something about the verging-on-ludicrous action scenes gives the viewer almost the same sense of release that Bro and the other punks feel.

    Isamu is a punk, a whore-son, born on the margins of post-war society. By virtue of his own courage and propensity for violence he becomes the leader of a street gang and attracts the attention of the more established yakuza crimelords. Most of the drama revolves around the conflict between his pride and his superiors.

    'Street Mobster' is very well filmed and has aged well, it's influence on films like 'Fight Club' is palpable.
  • zetes21 February 2010
    Bunta Sugawara plays a low-level criminal who keeps getting in trouble with a major yakuza clan. After a ton of screwing around with them, a second yakuza clan adopts him as one of their own. At first, everyone's happy about it, but soon enough, Sugawara feels trapped and starts to act out. This, of course, does not please his bosses. The main problem with this one is that Sugawara's character is just so unlikable - you have to wonder why the yakuza on either side keep letting him screw around so much. The mobsters from The Godfather would have whacked him instantly (especially since he's essentially a nobody; he has a few followers, but they're just punks, too). The value of the film comes from Fukasaku's direction, which seems revolutionary for 1972, almost Jason Bourne-like with hand-held cameras, thrusting the audience in the kinetic action sequences. The direction is definitely some of Fukasaku's best work.
  • "Street Mobster" is part of the early 70's crop of Japanese yakuza films that were spearheaded by Kinji Fukasaku, who is once again behind the helm without missing a beat. All the mandatory elements that make a yakuza film work are present: forming and switching of alliances between yakuza families, fistfights, stabbings, a guerilla view of Tokyo, frenetic action sequences, sleaze. But whereas a lesser, more workmanlike director would work these things from a checklist, Fukasaku instills so much energy that even the most rudimentary of things are a pleasure to watch.

    Indeed "Street Mobster" is packed full of raw, animalistic energy that more than makes up for the fairly predictable nature of the story. In typical yakuza fashion, yakuza gets out of prison after doing time for a hit, forms a small gang, takes on the bigger families, carnage ensues. It's all part of what makes the genre such pure, unadulterated fun though. However all these typical genre staples take a wildly exhilarating life of their own through Fukasaku's hyperkinetic and gritty style. There's no glamour or glory to be found in Fukasaku's violence: only brutality. Stylization is kept to a bare minimum with lots of hand-held shots and cameras constantly on the move that blend in with the action. The same guerilla tactics are used for the exterior shots that capture the seedy, downtrodden side of a Tokyo full of possibilities. Dilapidated warehouses, cheap bath houses, dark rooms, dim-lit diners, rundown neighborhoods with wooden cabins, again there's no glitz or neon lights shining in Fukasaku's yakuza universe.

    Regular collaborator Bunta Sugawara takes on the role of the titular Street Mobster, but gone is his cool (and sullen) demeanor from other yakuza films. He's responsible for some serious scenery consumption, wildly overacting, often approaching even Kikuchiyo territory (Mifune's character from Seven Samurai) but with the same honest, natural approach that made him the great actor that he was. He's also one of the best physical actors I've seen and you can see it paying off in dividends with every fight scene he gets involved with (and there are lots, don't worry).

    If you'd like to see a different kind of gangster film, one that relies more on viscera, grittiness and raw energy than faux glamour and hip mafiosos, you should definitely invest in Street Mobster. It's pulpy, fast-paced and balls-out. 70's Japanese action cinema in top form
  • This movie is the life story of a punk named Isamu--with the bulk of it following his insane path following his release from prison. While the idea of a mobster being a sociopath is no surprise, Isamu is peculiar even among the yakuza. This is because he also has an insane need for excitement and is incredibly self-destructive and angry--so much so that you know he cannot continue his path for long. After all, taking on the yakuza (sort of like the Japanese mafia) nearly single-handedly is just plain nuts! Yet, this crazed punk assembles a very small gang and attempts to do just that!

    "Street Mobster" is one of the most violent and nihilistic Japanese films I have ever seen. Its violence is vicious, uncaring and filled with pure rage. And, as a portrait of a thug, it IS effective and realistic. But, with graphic rapes, stabbing after stabbing after stabbing, it makes you wonder who the audience would be for this blood-fest. Plus, after raping one woman, the lady then has a twisted love-hate relationship with him that is just plain unsavory. Not a movie I enjoyed and one I am loathe to recommend because it's so nasty, but it IS unflinching and pulls no punches.
  • Outlaw Killer or as it says in the film, Street Mobster, is a bloody violent look into a totally self-destructive renegade street punk that can't ever seem to back down from a fight, no matter how suicidal. Truly a hilarious, incredibly charismatic character. So funny.

    The film follows him as he talks about his youth, his incarceraton and picks up with him creating a new gang. Parts are a bit too melodramatic, especially at the end, but the characters are well-crafted and the action sequences are frenetic and fun.

    A unique view of yakuza and street punk life in Japan in the early '70s from crazy-guy Fukasaku, the man behind Tora! Tora! Tora! and the fantastic Battle Royale.
  • Street Mobster is a violent Japanese gangster movie by prolific director Fukasaku Kinji who would later on direct influential genre masterpieces such as Battles Without Honor and Humanity, Graveyard of Honor and Yakuza Graveyard. Western audiences know him as the director of dystopian action thriller Battle Royale which was the last movie he was able to complete.

    The story of this movie is rather simple. It follows the life of a violent gangster who attacks the members of an inflluential clan who try to extort money from him and associates. He spends some time in prison but soon forms a new gang that is particularly violent. He ultimately gets injured and is temporarily forced to join a bigger family for protection. When another and even bigger family from Osaka tries to increase its influence in Kawasaki, the film's violent antagonist decides to disrespect common conventions and brutally disrespects the different gangster families. The three involved families come to the only reasonable conclusion: they must cooperate to eliminate the antagonist and his associates to preserve peace.

    The most interesting element about Street Mobster is its violent, nihilistic and egoistic antagonist who isn't interested in compromises, peace or truces. He desires to become the biggest gangster boss in the country by any means necessary. While this character is extremely dislikeable, he is brutally consequent and honest in his actions and therefore more complex and profound than one might think at first contact. The movie impresses with numerous violent scenes supported by dynamic camera work that have aged rather well and can still be considered offensive nowadays. The film has frantic pace and entertains from start to finish.

    On the negative side, there are very few characters to sympathize or empathize with. As opposed to Western gangster movies, even the victims and outsiders in organized crime come off as careless and despicable. The story is also extremely thin and quite predictable. The action scenes are quite intense but also rather repetitive. The movie impresses at first contact but lacks creativity, depth and diversity.

    To conclude, you should watch Street Mobster if you are looking for a particularly brutal, entertaining and fast gangster movie that has stood the test of time. This film certainly entertains while it last but doesn't leave any deeper impression due to its thin story line. Street Mobster is a feast for genre fans but can't compete with Fukasaku Kinji's later works.
  • squelcho6 August 2005
    This has a similar look to some of the early 70s New York gangster and Blaxploitation flicks, only with an eye for the big moody shadows that wouldn't be out of place in a Carol Reed movie. The acting is pretty good, even when the hero is tired and emotional, and the few characters that are fleshed out are never let down by the script. It's easy to see how Riki Takeuchi and Takashi Miike misspent their youth. I wouldn't go so far as to call it a classic, but it compares very favourably with the the best of its era.

    The twang of the jaws harp and the jarring off-key harmonica are a nod in the direction of Ennio Morricone. The hyper realism (and melodrama)is very much of its day. Think of Larry Cohen, Sergio Leone, Roman Polanski, Sergio Corbucci, Sam Fuller, Sam Peckinpah, Don Siegel, and their ilk in the 60s and 70s, and accept that film has always been an international conspiracy by artists with attitude. Audiences may be isolated by language, but filmmakers are interested in the visual aspects, and they don't need translation, only an understanding of technique. Kurosawa and Mishima opened up Japanese cinema to the world, and Japanese film makers responded by drawing influences from the wider world.

    This movie takes the technical influences and extrapolates them into the boom years of the Japanese economy. Where's there's money, there's organised crime. The casual unaffiliated street punk was a dying breed in the 70s. It's noticeable that the "punks" don't wear suits. They look more like refugees from the beatnik era, and the jazzy sections of the score (that accompany their drunken good times) seem to be saying that their day is done. Kinji Fukasaku is as deserving of credit as any of the aforementioned masters of pulp. His eye is true, and whenever he has a decent script, he makes a good or a great movie, usually on a tight budget. Who could ask for more?
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The yakuza film has been a staple in Japan for decades. Most haven't found their way to the states to be viewed in part because they seem to different from one another and audiences here aren't quite sure what to make of them. But Arrow Video has been attempting to change that and has been offering some of the most famous on blu-ray over the past few years. It's provided an opportunity for people to view world cinema and discover these films for the first time.

    To begin with if you are unfamiliar with the term yakuza they are what most would consider to be the organized crime units found in Japan. Movie featuring the organizations began appearing in the fifties but films made about their predecessors, bakuto, were made going back to the silent film years. The films gained popularity in the sixties and seventies before phasing out only to see a small resurgence in the nineties.

    This movie focuses on the character of Okita, a restless young man whose life has been imperfect from the start. Abandoned by his father, his mother a drug addict and prostitute who is found dead of an overdose he lives on the streets of Kawasaki forming a gang of his own. The gang mostly makes their money extorting money and kidnapping young girls they then turn into prostitutes. Being on the low rung of the criminal ladder they must pay tribute to those higher up. But Okita headstrong and anti-authoritarian. He attacks a member of the upper yakuza and is then captured and sent to prison.

    When he's released things have changed. The yakuza that were in place before him have moved up in the world with more sophisticated methods of making money. They've formed into two opposing units that each run their own section of town. The troubled youth have no connection to them and Okita along with fellow yakuza Kizaki who he spent time with in prison organize them into a mob just like he had before being sent away. This eventually leads him into confrontation with the two bosses and he must decide to either join them or fall.

    Along the way he is attacked by a prostitute who threatens his life. It turns out she was one of the young innocent girls he'd turned to prostitution years ago. The pair begin a volatile relationship that seems fairly twisted with her going from trying to kill him to being totally pledged to him.

    Bored with life like this Okita longs for the anarchy he once experienced before prison. Determined to upset the apple cart he sets out to disrupt the workings of those currently in power. When a big boss from outside the city joins in the fray it doesn't matter to Okita. His goal is anarchy and excitement at all costs. Just how far he's willing to go and how much those in power are willing to take are revealed before the film ends.

    I've seen several of the yakuza films and this was perhaps the oddest among them. The character of Okita seems to have no plans for the future, no goals, no interest in anything but stirring the pot. He is one of the most hopeless characters I've ever witnessed on film. It's as if he has no use for life, no reason to exist with the exception of destruction, almost a Godzilla in human form.

    The film also felt like one of the most violent I've seen so far. Not even so much the amount of bloodshed but the use of knives and the fact that any sexual encounters shown here seem to either begin or end with violence. There is little affection seen in this film and what there is always has the caveat of violence of some sort attached to it.

    The film has developed a following though and is considered by some to be one of the premiere yakuza films ever made. For myself I found it a bit disturbing and pointless. At the same time I realize two things about this film. Young people, those who tend to feel much like the protagonist here, will find more to relate to here than I did. And as with all films that can be potentially lost for all time I'm glad to see this one rescued by the folks at Arrow Video.

    Perhaps the film being made back in 1972 and most likely having little shot to promote it at the time, the extras for this film seem a bit limited. Included are an audio commentary by Japanese cinema expert Tom Mes, the theatrical trailer, a reversible sleeve featuring the original artwork or newly commissioned artwork by Chris Malbon and for the first pressing only and illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film by Jasper Sharp.
  • As can be expected from Japanese master Kinji Fukasaku, "Street Mobster" is a fast paced, stylistic and violent depiction of a low level Yakuza thug who punches to the beat of his own fist.

    Bunta Sugawara plays Okita, a small time hood recently released from prison. Upon his arrival to the outside world, he finds the underworld he left behind changed. A new crew runs his old stomping grounds, and he is lost and abandoned. After teaming up with some hoodlums, Okita sets his sights on bigger things, which all leads to his downward spiral in the Japanese underworld.

    Fukasaku directs this Yakuza flick with his usual visual tour de force. You can expect freeze frames, quick cuts, fast zooms, hand- held camera work, dutch angles, voice overs, a mixture of b&w and color cinematography, etc. The energy that the director supplies from behind the camera perfectly captures the momentum in which the lead characters react to their daily lives. There is a lot of action, with characters often breaking out into fights and chases at random. This kind of film needs to be taken with a grain of salt. The violence, like the melodrama and tacked on love interest, are over the top but enjoyable.

    So sit back and relax. This lean, mean, fast flying fist machine of a film will keep you entertained and enthralled throughout.
  • Although it's not part of his BATTLES WITHOUT HONOR AND HUMANITY series, STREET MOBSTER has much in common with Kinji Fukasaku's better-known Yakuza movies of the 1970s. It's shot in exactly the same fashion, with a fast-paced narrative, hand-held camerawork in the action sequences, and a nihilistic social milieu depicting warring bands of gangsters constantly chopping each other up. It even shares a lead character in the form of screen hard-ass Bunta Sugawara. However, STREET MOBSTER is very much a self-contained story, with Sugawara playing a self-reliant thug with a penchant for ruthless self-destruction. Rape, murder and mayhem are the order of the day in this chaotic movie that features not one redeeming character.
  • Street Mobster is among my favorite yakuza films, and from one of my favorite Japanese directors. This is a great, less-popular Fukasaku film, and it really deserves more attention.

    Okita is our "hero", if you can call him that. He's hot-heated, violent, and unapologetic. I can't think of a time in the film where he really shows restraint. He's just such an over-the-top, punk rockin' character who doesn't care about rival gangs or other thugs; he wants to do what he wants, when he wants to. And that's definitely the driving force behind the film, it's explosive nature. It's so unglamorous and filthy at times, and yet you have this sense of a man living his life, maybe not to it's full potential, but having a hell of a lot of fun doing what he's doing. And maybe he's not even enjoying it, everything else is just too conformist for him. He simply doesn't back down. So he really is a hero, a hero to the downtrodden. A counterculture icon, a raging machine.

    With it's boisterous protagonist comes a slew of background characters who are really just there to make Okita the centerpiece. Aside from the prostitute that he raped years earlier and now forms a bond with (Whose name I can't even remember!) there are few other noteworthy characters. And that's really okay. When they speak, they speak to get Okita's reaction. If you don't like Okita, then you're probably not going to like the film. Me, I enjoyed this rebellious, non-conformist gangster, yelling and picking fights. It was just so over-the-top and the director clearly embraced the punk style that was emerging at the time of this film's release.

    Speaking of release time, I just watched the film again a few minutes ago, and I still can't believe it was made in 1972. I'm sure you've heard it before, but it's way ahead of it's time. It looks 90s-ish to me. The shaky-cam and jump cuts stand out most as then-foreign techniques. Of course, now they've become the norm in films.

    So that's my short review. I don't feel that there's a whole lot more ground to cover as Okita is really the main attraction. So if you're looking to kill 87 minutes and consider yourself a fan of exciting cinema, look no further than Street Mobster.
  • ShaeSpencer16 August 2020
    Street Mobster has a stealthily complex script that revealed its impressive artistry gradually as the film progressed. Wild, ballsy cinematography. Well worth the watch. I am quickly becoming a Kinji Fukasaku evangelist.
  • This was the first movie i have watched from legendary Japanese director Kinji Fukasaku, as a big lover of Takeshi Kitano and his yakuza movies, i wanted to discover older classic Japanese yakuza movies, i have first watched works of Seijun Suzuki, after that i started with Fukasaku's movies, Street Mobster is fantastic movie, it is very fast paced movie, full of brutal violence, killings, nudity, it must be very schocking at that time, but what i most loved about film is main actor Bunta Sugawara, he is so good in his role of the main street punk Okita, he must be tough guy in a real life, also i must admit this is very different movie from other yakuza movies i have seen because the main protagonist wants to be independent from other yakuza syndicates, he doesn't wanted to be rich, he only wanted to be free, tough, to fight other guys and gangs, to be himself.

    I am recommending this movie to anyone interested in older Japanese movies, crime fiction and yakuza topics my rate 7.5/10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Since picking up their second box set of the Battles Without Honor and Humanity saga (all also reviewed) recently,I decided to check if Arrow has released any other Kinji Fukasaku titles, which led to me discovering the individual release of Doberman Cop (also reviewed) and this, as I got set to meet the street mobster.

    View on the film:

    Backed by a detailed audio commentary from Tom Mes, Arrow present a print which has a noticeable amount of more grain then the Battles releases, whilst the soundtrack thankfully remains sharp.

    Charging down the street like a Punk Rock singer as the sirens blast out the spidery score from regular collaborator Toshiaki Tsushima, co-writer (with Yoshihiro Ishimatsu) / directing auteur Kinji Fukasaku & Female Prisoner #701: Scorpion (1972-also reviewed) cinematographer Hanjiro Nakazawa (they would reunite for Graveyard of Honor (1975-also reviewed)) ignite an urgent Neo-Noir atmosphere burning in ultra-stylized hand-held tracking shots (a major recurring Fukasaku motiff) running across the streets with Okita, (played with a flick of the switch fury by Bunta Sugawara, who worked with Fukasaku regularly in this period) as candle wax blood red drips down the screen, from another successful hit.

    Wanting to make it clear who runs the streets, Fukasaku unloads excellent scatter-gun whip-pans and crash-zooms in the blunt force Action scenes, where the confined wide-shots create a close combat impression, superbly emphasized by Fukasaku with darting train lights and screams from the outside seeping through the thin walls of the safe houses.

    Loosely based on the life of a real gangster, the writers gloriously headbutt the audience with Fukasaku's unique nihilism, spiraling out from Neo-Noir loner Okita diving head-first into blistering gang warfare, with the gang members being prepared to stab each other in the back at any moment, as the writers grind them all up into a poetic fatalistic ending for the street mobster.