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Young Thugs: Nostalgia

Kishiwada shônen gurentai: Bôkyô

Japan

1998

94 Min
Color
Japanese
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Takashi Miike

PROD Yasuhiko Furusato, Masao Kimura, Toshiaki Nakazawa

SCR Masa Nakamura

DP Hideo Yamamoto

CAST Setsuko Karasuma, Saki Takaoka, Toshikazu Nakaba, Yuki Nagata, Naoto Takenaka, Akihiro Shimizu

ED Yasushi Shimamura

MUSIC Kôji Endô

SOUND Yoshiya Obara

Synopsis

A prequel to Miike’s “Young Thugs: Innocent Blood”, this follows Riichi in his early formative years growing up on his way to becoming the thug in the earlier film. —IMDb

The presentation of family in Young Thugs: Nostalgia (1998) is less abstracted than many of Miike’s other films; with the specifics of the time and place and the emphasis on the dynamics of the characters in relation to the overall plot giving us something that seems very special and unconventional by the director’s usual standards set by films like Ichi the Killer (2001) and Dead or Alive (1999); with the combination of great, intelligent characterisations, strong performances and some absolutely impeccable direction. Although it is based on a novel, the film feels like a more personal project for Miike, with the depiction of small-town Osaka life and the late-1960’s/early 1970’s timeframe being very close to the filmmaker’s own youth and experiences; with that sense of nostalgia, as alluded to in the film’s sub-title, being more apparent in the fantastic evocation of a particular time and place within Japanese culture and society. —Graham Greene

Director

Original

Takashi Miike

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

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