



|
BATTLE
ROYALE
Not really trash,
this movie’s almost too good for ya! An “A” production
all the way. Good cast, luscious lighting, breathtaking scenery and
cinematography—and lots and lots and lots of killing.
It was a controversial sensation in Japan, spawning action figures (with
stick-on wounds and bandages!), phone cards, and a gun lighter! A slightly
futuristic “Lord Of The Flies” fable, with a class of 9-graders
dumped on an island to fight it out to the death. The teacher/gamemaster
Mr. Kitano is played with glee by “Beat” Takeshi, famous
actor/director from Japanese Yakuza flicks like “Hana-bi”.
What a great character, I don’t want to give too much away, let’s
just say he gets the ultimate teacher’s revenge. Supposedly on
the way to a school trip, the kids are gassed and taken to an island,
where they wake up fitted with explosive tracking collars. Teacher Kitano
tells them that kids like you are what is wrong with the country today,
so the government has instituted the BR program--Battle Royale, which
is demonstrated in a hilarious video with an tremendously perky Japanese
host. Friends are going to have to kill each other. Only one kid leaves
the island-it’s a battle to the death. They get a random weapon,
and scurry into the night.
Don’t worry about reading the subtitles, they help, but you can
understand the story without ‘em. (Actually, even if you read
the subtitles you will be confused.) From this early point on, it’s
an ongoing procession of horrors, as the kids start knocking each other
off. The great thing about this concept (and the thing that would get
changed and thus ruined in an American version) is that it’s not
grizzled old criminals deserving of brutality but young teenagers who
you are introduced to, get to like, and then see slaughtered. Makes
for a very affecting movie. Try at the film’s beginning to guess
who makes it off the island at the end. I did, and was way off—my
guy got offed in the first reel.
Director Kinji Fukasaku (maker of 60 movies including lotsa Yakuza flicks
and cult fave The Green Slime) does not dwell on the violence, but it’s
damn sure present and well done. The film jars one all the more for
it’s tender interludes where we meet the characters in gorgeously
shot scenes in the beautiful countryside with Bach playing. Then all
hell breaks loose again. There is a running body count to add to the
claustrophobia, given in daily reports on loudspeakers by the utterly
fantastic gravel-faced Kitano.
The violence is all wrapped up in some weird Japanese philosophy that
seems kinda muddled, and leaves it open for interpretation. Is it really
about kids’ lack of respect for adults? Or the childishness of
the adult world? Is it telling us to live life to the fullest, or telling
us only the amoral and deceitful survive? Is it pro-fascist? Pro-individual
rights? Is it a satire of life and death? Is it an anti-violence statement
that just happens to have a ton of brutal violence? Apparently the novel
it is based on goes into much more detail of the characters thoughts,
but without this, the movie’s intent is more nebulous. It seems
to try and make a statement, but I dunno what it is… and that’s
just fine. As a great piece of filmmaking, it stands on its’ own
and doesn’t really need to be picked apart. But if you must examine
the nuances of this popular film to death, there are several active
discussion groups where you can exhaust the excruciating minutiae of
the filmmaker’s vision. There is also a bunch of sites, here’s
two of the best for you to check out: www.battleroyaleonline.com and
www.battleroyalefilm.com And coming summer 2003 (at least on screens
in Japan) is Battle Royale II! Director Blank Fukusaku died of cancer
before its completion, so his son Kenta Fukusaku, the screenwriter,
completed it.
There are many versions of BR available. The one I got and would recommend
is the Director’s Cut, with 8 extra minutes, and an extra disc
full of making-of and behind the scenes stuff. Only problem with it
is that the subtitles on the extra disc are only in Korean! Battle Royale
(and it’s sequel) will never get proper theatrical distribution
in the US beyond scattered film festival screenings. The distributors
are scared of having the next Columbine-type incident blamed on their
film, so run out and buy the DVD now. You’ll be glad you did.
-Hysteric Eric
|
|