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  • Yusaku Matsuda stars in this what the Japanese call action/romance movie. Matsuda was a very popular action star in Japan until his untimely demise after filming "The Black Rain" with Michael Douglas.

    Shohei Narumi (Yuusaku Matsuda) is a gun for hire. He's been recruited by Tonichi Electric company to rescue Chairman's son in law who's the president of the company from kidnappers. The kidnapping is a cover, and the real motive is over defense budget, and the rival company is trying to assassinate the key personnel of Tonichi Electric. The head of the rival company Seishiro Adachi is the ring leader of kidnappers. He has no qualms over killing people to forward his business agenda. Narumi is paid handsomely, and he accepts the contract. He finds that the story is not so strait forward as kidnappers includes the police. He's also asked to assassinate Adachi, but finds that Adachi is cohort with unexpected company.

    The story is very '70s Japan style that resembles the then popular action novel of Haruhiko Ooyabu. It's supposed to be very gritty and macho with lot of sexual innuendo, but compared to today's level of violence on cinema, it's very tame. It's almost innocent by today's standard. But like most of Yuusaku Matsuda's films, this is an entertaining movie. It has comical elements as well as plot that's fairly outrageous. It's sort of escapism, but it works.

    This movie is not to be taken too seriously. It's made for audience to just kick back and enjoy. The format is dated, but for old time Yuusaku Matsuda fans, this movie should give the right dose of his action.
  • The Most Dangerous Game (Japan, 1978) directed by Tôru Murakawa Hitman Narumi (Yûsaku Matsuda) is hired to rescue one of a series of kidnapped CEO's in this gritty, urban crime movie (the first of three), involving yakuza, crooked cops, and corrupt businessmen. There's a STYLISHLY realistic atmosphere to it, as opposed to an actual one, but it looks cool, and 1970's Japan is one of my more favorite places to see a movie filmed. Keiko Tasaka plays the sexy girlfriend of one of the bad guys, who gets smacked around by our 'hero', before he rapes her! She of course ends up 'liking it' and then refuses to leave him alone. She spends the rest of the movie hounding him. In fact, it seemed weird to me how often he gets beaten up, except when he's roughing up women or weak people, but of course when he starts shooting - then pretty much everyone goes down. As 70's Japanese Anti-heroes go, he's got the cool shades, can take a beating, is a little quirky, can take or leave the most beautiful women and still get the job done at the end of the day .
  • Mottomo kiken na yuugi, internationally known as The Most Dangerous Game, is the first film in a trilogy about hitman Narumi Shouhei. This character is a rough anti-hero who is addicted to gambling, has debts of several million yen, is constantly drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes and often sleeps until the late afternoon. He gets hired by the chief executive officer of an important company that is starting to work on a national air defense project. One of the company's most important managers has been kidnapped and the chief executive officer believes that another company is responsible for the crime. Narumi Shouhei's task is to free the kidnapped manager and eliminate the leaders of the other company and their hired guns.

    This movie might not sit well with contemporary conservative audiences. Narumi Shouhei is drunk half of the movie, smokes one cigarette after another, insults employers and villains alike, is only focused on monetary rewards and is particularly rough with his opponents as the body count rises rather drastically as the film progresses. In one scene, Narumi Shouhei tries to get the attention of a ruthless manager and decides to break into his apartment, interrogate and torture his girlfriend Sasaka Kyoko and then proceeds to rape her while the upset manager is listening on the phone. Interestingly enough, Sasaka Kyoko ends up feeling attached to the brutal rapist as she takes care of him and worries about his fate. Such script elements ask for much tolerance, suspension of disbelief and open-mindedness to put it mildly.

    Another significant element that needs to be pointed out is the lighting technique used throughout the film. If you prefer a realistic movie, then you will have several shaky scenes filmed with handheld cameras as you won't see what's exactly going on in some scenes portraying nightly infiltrations and chaotic fighting sequences. If you are looking for an artistically appealing movie with calm and clear shots, that element will significantly decrease your enjoyment of that feature.

    One must confess that the rude anti-hero stands out with his pitiless behaviour and won't leave any viewer neutral or bored. There is even a certain dark humour to some of his gestures that blends in refreshingly in an otherwise brutal film. Other positive elements include the short, precise and cool dialogues, the intriguing settings including an abandoned asylum and the brutal extended fighting scenes that still keep viewers on the edges of their seats in this day and age. Let's not forget about the moody jazz soundtrack that blends in surprisingly well, even for audiences who usually don't care about jazz music at all like myself.

    At the end of the day, Mottomo kiken na yuugi or The Most Dangerous Game is certainly a product of its time that might not have aged very well for more conservative audiences but might appeal to cineasts intrigued by Japanese gangster movies of the seventies. On the movie's strong side, you will get a charismatic anti-hero, a healthy dose of black humour, cool dialogues, atmospheric locations, bloody fight scenes and a jazzy soundtrack. On the negative side, some scenes are extremely tough to digest, the shaky camera work might induce headaches and the lighting technique used throughout the film is below average to be generous. I have recently been watching this film with a good friend and we have both been greatly entertained but we also think that the other two entries in the trilogy offer an overall more elevated quality.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    You first meet Shohei Narumi when he's being roughed up after he contests a game of mah-jong. Mah-jong game. He recovers from that in time to find and rescue a kidnapped businessman, at least for a few minutes before that guy is killed in the middle of a gun battle. Narumi is saved by Kyoko (Keiko Tasaka), the mistress of one of the men he's trying to stop. He gets another job once he's back on his feet: kill the boss of the kidnappers, which he does. Twice.

    How twice? The guy has a public double, so they both have to go. But even the cops are on the take, setting an ambush, but he escapes and, well, kills everyone except one car of criminals who kidnap Kyoko and drive her across Tokyo while somehow, incredibly, Narumi keeps up while wearing cowboy boots. Look, I've been on Japanese streets and even though they are clogged with traffic, there's no way you can chase a car on foot.

    The one issue I have with the movie is that it's kind of hard to like the hero. I mean, he isn't even a hero, for one. He wins over Kyoko by assaulting her. But then, the film almost demands that you become a fan of him, what with the cool as cool gets clothes, him drinking gin when shot in the stomach instead fo going to the hospital and just being an all around amoral killing machine. Because you never see anything the bad guys do or plan because the movie moves from action moment to action moment like an ADHD kid playing with his toys, you eventually have to concede that he is the protagonist that you must be in favor of.

    Directed by Tôru Murakawa and written by Hideichi Nagahara, this film has literally a slam bam pace that never slows down. Ever.