In cult favorite director Takashi Miike’s humorous crime flick, two losers run out of drinking money and have to look for work. When they luck into high-paying jobs that don’t require any experience, they take them immediately — not realizing they’ve signed up for the yakuza. Soon, they’re involved in all kinds of rowdy antics and minor crime. But when their friend is conned into making a hard-core S&M video, they must get serious to help her. —Netflix
A contemporary of such noted film experimentalists as Tetsuo: The Iron Man [1989, maverick Japanese workhorse director Takashi Miike became one of the most talked about filmmakers in the international festival circuit. Despite the derailed manic energy of the aforementioned films, it was the stark relationship drama turned sadistic nightmare Audition that found the director receiving increasing international exposure. Audition succeeded in pulling the rug from under viewers as it turned the age-old image of the submissive Japanese female on its head with a shocking and nearly unbearable finale that had many horrified viewers shell-shocked. Born in Osaka, Japan, in 1960, Miike spent his childhood growing up in Osaka, where he eventually opted to study filmmaking at the Yokohama Academy of Visual Arts. Inspired more by Bruce Lee than Seijun Suzuki, Miike’s distinctive style came more as a result of not studying the traditional rules of filmmaking than a conscious attempt to break them… read more