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Burst
City
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Country
: |
Japan |
| Year: |
1982 |
| Genre: |
Action
/ Musical / Cyberpunk |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H
56 |
| Distributor: |
Discotek |
| Date
reviewed: |
10/26/2006 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
|
| Director: |
Sogo
Ishii |
Cast: Takanori Jinnai, Michirou
Endo, Machizo Machida, Shigeru Izumiya |
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Story:
Set in a barren, futuristic Tokyo of highways and wastelands,
a rowdy group of punk bands and their fans gather to
protest the construction of a nuclear power plant. Riot
police and the factory owner's yakuza friends soon move
in to break it up. However, the arrival of mysterious,
metal-clad bikers and a revolt among the disgruntled
construction crew makes for a situation that spirals
dangerously out of control… This description,
taken from the DVD sleeve provides far more linearity,
logic and plot than can be found in the actual film.
BURST CITY is preoccupied more with conveying the energy
than with telling a story, so… be warned: this
city is bursting with power, but is certainly not plot-driven!
Review: Sogo Ishii is not a film director:
he never went the beaten path in Japanese film industry
(which is, usually, to start as an assistant and rise
from there). Too passionate about his vocation, he
was also too impatient to wait, and while still a
student he grabbed a camera and went out there to
shoot life as he saw it. He found himself in the middle
of Japanese punk revolution in which he participated
both as a musician (he was a singer and a guitarist)
and director of promo and concert videos. His motto
was: ''To experience the video not with just the eye
and the ear, but to feel it through the whole body.''
Because of that, BURST CITY is not a film: it is a
raw, vivid, breathing and bleeding document of an
era. At the same time, it is a root of new Japanese
cinema. It spearheaded the career of a major director,
a pioneer of the 'new wave' of Japanese film, the
man who brought the youthful punk attitude and fresh
sensibility to the way movies were made. Before Tsukamoto
and Miike, there was Ishii. Before TETSUO there was
BURST CITY.
BURST CITY is the world's first cyberpunk movie, made
in the same year as VIDEODROME and BLADE RUNNER, and
predating the term for two years (coined by William
Gibson in his 1984's novel 'Neuromancer'). Set in
an indefinite near future, it presents a world of
speed and noise, a world of asphalt and metal, of
engines roaring along cold grey highways, of colorful
gangs clad in leather and rags MAD MAX-style. It created
a typically Japanese brand of cyberpunk in which alienation,
discontent and anger are painted against the background
of a desert slightly different than that in MAD MAX:
it is 'the desert of the real', the spiritual void
of contemporary affluent Japanese society. There are
no literal, visible ruins: quite the contrary, the
apocalypse of the soul has left the industry, office
buildings and high-rises untouched. They still domineer
the grey landscape, summoning their destruction, inviting
dreams of a real apocalypse which pervade so much
of Japanese cyberpunk, and genre film in general,
from BURST CITY through AKIRA and TETSUO all the way
to DEAD OR ALIVE, PULSE and beyond.
Ishii's own two previous films, PANIC HIGH SCHOOL
and CRAZY THUNDER ROAD, are the only precedents to
BURST CITY: brimming with youthful angst, they are
the visual equivalent of punk music. Perhaps too raw
for their own good, they are superseded by BURST CITY,
because that was his first film with some real budget
which provided a room for serious stylization and
directorial flair. Ishii's themes, style and direction
are showcased at their peak in BURST CITY, and his
ideal of ''feeling the movie through the whole body''
is achieved 110%. This is obvious from the stunning
opening minutes in which his camera takes a furious
joyride down the (mostly deserted) highways, bridges
and streets, with their lights turned into beautiful
abstract paintings, a SF ambience which needs no robots,
space ships or even huge fancy buldings like those
in BLADE RUNNER. Rapid-fire editing, non-linear structure
and disregard for plot are just some elements of Ishii's
style.
Characters are reduced to their colourful image, sketched
but never explored: after all, most of them are not
even actors but members of the leading punk bands
of the time. Instead of any specific person, in BURST
CITY Ishii's camera becomes a real protagonist and
runs, shakes, drives, and cuts insanely among the
people, gangs, cars, motorbikes and cityscapes thus
presenting one of the most fascinating examples of
the doctrine 'show, don't tell!' His characters communicate
their feelings and visions through numerous songs,
through action, movement, fight, and Ishii masterfully
penetrates their lifestyle and worldview completely
abandoning words (dialogue, narration, etc.).
Revolutionary on so many levels, this is a unique
and highly important piece of cinema: even if the
music is somewhat dated, Ishii's filmmaking is not
in the least! BURST CITY is a joy to watch and learn
about the real power of cinema to transcend the burdens
of literature (words) and theatre (stage) and find
unique style of its own, expressing things that no
other medium could. Not only the cornerstone of modern
Japanese film, BURST CITY is more than a historical
document: it is a must-have for any serious lover
of film.
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DVD
[ NTSC, Region 1
] :
Luckily, Discotek's special edition does full justice
to the importance of BURST CITY, and presents it in
a manner that could hardly be surpassed. Occasional
grain and murkiness come from the film's 16mm origins
and are part of its appeal: or perhaps you would like
your punk movie to be a slick, over-produced big-budget
extravaganza? It is presented in anamorphic 1.85:1 ratio.
Pity that the sound, so important for a film like this,
is only in Dolby Digital 2.0, and that some songs cannot
be heard loudly and fully. Again, this has to do with
the original source material, and it is what it is.
This edition really shines when it comes to extras:
Tom Mes provides three pages of excellent liner notes,
while the disc itself showcases textual background of
the film, its protagonists and the whole punk scene.
There is also a theatrical trailer, rare b/w stills
gallery and soundtrack lyrics (unfortunately, copyright
issues prevented the option of having a bonus CD with
the soundtrack the way it was done recently with Ishii's
ELECTRIC DRAGON: 80,000 VOLTS). Excellent carton case
envelops a regular, plastic one (with a different cover)
and rounds up this wonderful edition.
Reviewed
by Dejan Ognjanovic
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| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 3 |
4.5 |
4 |
5 |
4.5 |

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