User Reviews (4)

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  • AntiFakeReviews21 January 2023
    This movie is actually pretty good and absolutely interesting to watch. It's also told a story of tragic fate that whoever involved in it would suffer and pay for the inevitable consequences as a chain-link domino falling one after another. There are several flaws that I think if edited smartly or more carefully enough, this movie could even become better; i.e., the two fashion shows are way too long, they just slowed down the flow of this movie. The fashion shows also felt repeatedly boring and cliched. Hiring some American Hippie-like men to play the vicious lowlife American GI Joe is a disastrous joke. Long hairs and unshaved beard, messy uniforms, Jesus. The young Japanese detective is acted like a Yakuza. The editing is also a bit of messy. But all of these shortcomings won't impair the whole movie's interesting scenarios. George Kennedy in this movie also performed well. Broderick Crawford is just too old to play that captain role, way passed the police retirement limit.

    A nostalgic movie about the 70s' of the 20th Century. Highly recommended.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The film had a brief run in the Japanese art houses back then, and never got a good U.S. booking for a big film from Japan in 1977. There is two version of the film, one is a Japanese print which runs more than 130 minutes, and a U.S. version, which was re-dubbed and addition scenes was added, and some Japanese scenes were cut out (Making Toshiro Mifune only appear once). The US version never got any theatrical booking as it came out on video in a small label in 1985. I saw both version and the impact of the film wasn't destroyed on the U.S. cut version. The film is about a Black man (played by singer Joe Yamamura) murdered in Japan, and a cop (the late Yusaku Matsuda, star of Paramount film BLACK RAIN) is on the case to solve the mystery. He later goes to America to team up with George Kennedy, who later Yusaku realized is the man that killed his father in WW2 days. Many American actors like Broadrick Crawford, Theresa Merritt, Rick Jason and William Sanderson are featured in supporting parts. There is lots of well acted scenes, car chase in New York, and the film is like a big puzzle slowly being put together. Yamamura sings a catch title song in English, but he is badly dubbed in the U.S. version. The film is highly recommended!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It is known as Ren2 Zheng4 (Sorry IMDB does not allow me type Chinese or Japanese characters) in Chinese, a very famous 1977 Japanese movie imported to China in 1979. It was a phenomenon movie in both Japan and China. The song in the movie, Straw hat song. Almost all the Chinese people was familiar with the song since the movie was the first several movies imported into China when China started to open up to the world.

    When I search the movie in IMDB, I could hardly believe the low score of 6.2, in my mind, the movie should score at 8+. The description only described first several minutes of the movie, and no review at all.

    Here is the actual plot:

    on the high-rise of the Royal Hotel in Tokyo, Japan, the annual Costume Design Awards exhibition is reaching its climax. Kyoko Yasugi, the wife of a Congressman, a famous fashion designer, attended the exhibition. At this time, it was reported that a black young man had died in the hotel elevator. According to the elevator attendant, the victim shouted "wheat straw hat, wheat straw straw hat" in English before he died. "Saijo Yaso"...How can black youth die here? Who is the murderer? The police launched a tense investigation.

    The police dog sniffed the Valley Park near the Royal Hotel from the location of the victim's death. The police found a pool of blood and a straw hat in the grass, indicating that this was the real crime scene. A pair of young men who had a tryst in the park reported seeing the deceased in the park, and before that, a woman in a suit also left the park in a white Crown sedan. It was quickly found out from customs that the victim was Johnny Hayward (played by Joe Yamanaka, who himself is also of mixed blood, he's also a singer and sings the famous Straw hat song in the movie), who came to Japan from New York three days ago. The "Saijo Yaso Poems" and the straw hat he left behind were brought in from the United States when he entered the country.

    After extensive searches, police learned that Johnny's father, Wilshere Hayward, had lived in Yokosuka, Japan, as a U. S. soldier stationed there after World War II, exactly the same period as the straw hat and the book of poetry. And the word "Casmi" left by the victim when he was dying was also found in a poem in the poetry collection, referring to a place called "Kiritsumi". So the police detective Munesue decided to go there to investigate. The local people said that the old lady Nakayama should know the story best, but when Munesue arrived at her house, someone had already taken the lead and murdered the old woman who knew the inside story. Munesue investigated some clues and learned that Nakayama opened a small hotel on the seaside of Hisanohama in Fukushima Prefecture that year and specialized in US troop's business. At that time, Yasugi Kyoko was also working in the store...

    At this time, the son of the designer Kyoko Yasugi, Kyohei Kori, fled to New York after killing someone in a car accident. Detective Munesue followed the leads to New York. With the cooperation of the New York International Criminal Police, they also launched an investigation into the case of black young man Johnny. They found the home of a man named Adams based on the clues. He reported that a few months ago, when he was driving, an old black man suddenly jumped out on the road. He knocked him down before he could brake, and was blackmailed for $6000. The man's name was Wilshere Hayward, and the money was given to his son, Johnny Hayward, at his request. The police then deduced that Johnny's father had crashed into the car in order to get money to send his son to Japan. But why did the father have to send his son to Japan?

    Kyohei Kori was shot and killed for resisting arrest. Munesue gets new clues and finds Johnny's father. Everything finally came to light: it turned out that Wilshere cohabited with Yasugi Kyoko when he was serving as a US soldier stationed in Japan after the war, and gave birth to his son Johnny. He took his son with him when the US troops withdrew from Japan. And Yasugi Kyoko soon married a small black market businessman Yohei Kori, concealed the past from him, and gave birth to Kyohei. Johnny grew up in the United States and was missing his mother, so Wilshere made a fortune for his son by crashing into a car and letting him come to Japan. At this time, Yohei became a powerful capitalist, and Yasugi Kyoko also became a well-known fashion designer. In order to protect his status and the family's reputation, Yasugi Kyoko killed his black son, Johnny, who came to find him. At the same time, in order to cover up her past, she killed the old woman who knew her past.

    Just as the fashion design award ceremony was about to end, Munesue told Yasugi Kyoko that her son, Kyohei Kori, was shot dead. With both sons dead, Yasugi Kyoko collapsed. After coming out of the award ceremony, Yasugi Kyoko drove towards the mountains of Fuji. She threw the straw hat into the valley with all her strength, and jumped off the cliff herself. The straw hats were falling and falling in the valley, and Johnny's song about the straw hats sounded again in the valley...
  • ksandness11 December 2021
    Warning: Spoilers
    Living in Japan in the late 1970s, I saw Ningen no Shomei heavily advertised on TV and saw people carrying the souvenir booklet around. The tag line, which translates as "Mother, whatever happened to my straw hat?" became a running joke. Well, I had to see this pop culture phenomenon myself.

    It begins with the murder of a half-Black, half-Japanese man in the Hotel New Otani (not an inn). Seeing this movie in a theater full of Japanese people was an interesting experience, because I found myself laughing at the plot and the production values.

    In particular, there's a flashback in which a Japanese man is being beaten up by some American GIs during the Occupation. Not funny in itself, but what made me laugh, sink down in my seat and cover my mouth to avoid being heard was the fact that these supposedly 1940s GIs all had 1970s beards and hair.

    Or shall I mention the time when a character makes a confession, which is immediately followed by a thunderclap out of nowhere?

    What about the murder victim walking toward the Hotel New Otani, which has a round penthouse-like structure on its roof mumbling "Sutoroo hatto, sutoroo hatto" or "Straw hat, straw hat"? This is from a character who is supposed to have grown up in the U. S.

    Poor George Kennedy and Broderick Crawford must have been desperate for money to appear in this convoluted mishmash, especially the final scene in which George Kennedy's character is walking through the ruins of the South Bronx and is stabbed to death by a Black man who calls him "Japanese lover!"

    This plot must have some sort of basic appeal to the Japanese, because it has been made into three movies and a TV miniseries.