"Life is a game."
Tag - Kinji Fukasaku
My boys only know how to make a living as yakuza
In the thirteenth episode of AMP Talks, Panos Kotzathanasis Tom Wilmot and Rouven Linnarz discuss Takeshi Kitano's Violent Cop How he ended up directing in the...
“Hiroshima Death Match” is probably the most commercial film of the pentalogy, but fans of exploitation will have more fun with it than for any of the other...
Bunta Sugawara is at his masculine best in Murayama's engaging yakuza tale.
Machetes in newspapers and ramshackle dwellings abound as Ah Chiu decends into his own personal hell.
In his adaptation of Battle Royale, Fukusaku presents the violent destruction of teenage dreams in a world ruled by adults.
UK-based distributors Third Window Films and Arrow Video will release hard-copy Japanese cult classics come September. Among the titles include Macoto Tezka's...
The 1970s were arguably the busiest period within the career of esteemed Japanese director Kinji Fukasaku. While continuing the “New Battles Without Honor and...
About the Film Arguably the most ambitious Japanese film ever made, perhaps no other Asian film with few exceptions is more prominent or timely than Kinji...