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Ley Lines AKA Nihon kuroshakai (Blu-ray)
Blu-ray B - United Kingdom - Arrow Films Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (26th January 2017). |
The Film
![]() ![]() Made prior to Audition (1999, Arrow’s Blu-ray release of this film has been reviewed by us here), the ‘breakout’ film which established its incredibly prolific director Miike Takashi amongst non-Japanese audiences owing to its critical success in other countries, the three films gathered here – grouped under the label ‘the Black Society Trilogy’ (or kuroshakai trilogy) – characterise the focus of Miike’s pre-Audition pictures on the lives of yakuza members. The progression of the films also traces Miike’s approach to cinematic convention: all three pictures are combative in their sensibilities, and with each picture in the series Miike seems to escalate his war against convention, each subsequent film pushing against the paradigms of the genre and of cinema itself. Ley Lines (1999), the final film in the trilogy, openly parodies the censorship of ‘V-Cinema’ (the direct-to-video films in which Miike cut his teeth as a filmmaker), via the use of visually distracting optical censorship of nudity and grating beeps on the audio track whenever a character uses bad language; Ley Lines also seems to abandon conventional ideas about narrative structure. Released in the same year as Audition, Ley Lines thus seems to represent a transitional film for Miike, easing the director into his highly idiosyncratic post-millennial films such as Visitor Q (2001) and The Happiness of the Katakuris (2001, released on Blu-ray via Arrow and reviewed by us here). ![]() The first film in this trilogy, Shinjuku Triad Society (1995) was also the first film Miike made for theatrical release. Prior to this picture, Miike’s work (he had directed twelve films prior to this one) had been within the world of V-Cinema, a context in which Miike learnt to work quickly and efficiently – qualities which characterise his approach to cinema even to the present day. ![]() The second film, Rainy Dog (1997), revolves around Yujiro (Aikawa Sho), a Japanese hitman who is in exile in Taipei. When he receives news that his brother has taken over as the boss of a yakuza clan, following the death of the previous ‘don’, Yujiro is told that he will not be able to return to Japan. Yujiro resigns himself to being trapped in Taipei. Things become more complicated when a woman visits Yujiro and leaves with him a young child, Ah-Chen (He Jianqin), who she claims to be Yujiro’s child. Ah-Chen is mute. In Taipei, Yujiro takes orders from local Triad boss Mr Ke. Mr Ke commands Yujiro to assassinate a traitor within Mr Ke’s gang, and Yujiro obeys, killing the gangster under the gaze of Ah-Chen – who has been following Yujiro, regardless of Yujiro’s disinterest in the boy. After Yujiro encounters another Japanese gangster in exile, a rival hitman who tells Yujiro ‘I’ll get you eventually. It’s my job’, Mr Ke commands Yujiro to kill another man, Chiping Ku. Yujiro makes his first attempt at the job but stops when it begins to rain: Yujiro has a superstition about rain, believing it to bring bad luck, and thus refuses to work whilst it is raining. Yujiro takes a detour, spending the night with a prostitute, Lily (Chen Xianmei), whilst Ah-Chen sleeps in the street outside. ![]() In Ley Lines, following a series of missteps, petty criminal Ryuichi (Kazuji Kitamura) and his more studious brother Shunrei (Michisuke Kashiwatani), both of whom are of Japanese-Chinese heritage, make their way to Tokyo, along with their friend Chang (Yasuburo Itou). There, they find themselves targeted and exploited by prostitute Anita (Li Dan). Desperate to make a living for themselves, the trio become involved in selling a drug, the intoxicative inhalant toluene, on the city streets for low-ranking crook Ikeda (Sho Aikawa). Attempting to score fake passports which will allow them to flee Japan for a new life in Brazil, the trio encounter money-lender Wong (Naoto Takenaka). They plot to rob Wong at gunpoint, using his money to buy their way out of the country and establish themselves elsewhere, but Wong is tipped off by his associate Barbie (Samuel Pop Aning) and Ryuichi, his brother and his friends find themselves targeted by the gangster. ![]() In the opening moments of the film, the narrator tells us ‘The Dragon’s Claw Society is the name of our organisation. I am a member, and my boss is called Wang. I know a love story that’s both sickening and sweet. That’s how love is’. This last sentence could form as a mission statement for Miike’s representation of the concept of love throughout his films, which – as the narrator of this film suggests – invariably depict that emotion as simultaneously ‘sweet’ and ‘sickening’, an approach which runs counter to much of cinema’s representation of love and romance. Like the other protagonists of the films within the Black Society Trilogy, Tatsuhito lives in a liminal space: seeing himself as neither Japanese nor Chinese, his status as one or the other questioned by those around him. When Wang abducts Tatsuhiro and threatens to ‘harvest’ his kidneys, Tatsuhiro resists angrily: ‘Don’t touch Yoshihiro’, Tatsuhiro warns the gangster, ‘He’s my family. In that shithole of a village [in China, where the brothers were raised], on the coldest day in the coldest winter, we were kicked into a pig pen because we have Japanese blood in us. All thefts were blamed on us, two brothers’. This internal conflict and sense of displacement comes to a head when, investigating Wang, Tatsuhito travels to Taiwan searching for information and witnesses the poverty and simplicity of rural life in that country. Coming to see life in rural Taiwan as idyllic, Tatsuhiro finds himself absent-mindedly singing along with a local man who voices a song about the pleasures of rural life, something which is in stark contrast with the urgency and violence of life in urban Japan. ![]() The film is deeply brutal and blacky comic. Very early in the picture, we are shown a crime scene. The flash of the police photographer’s camera illuminates the scene, showing us the image of a grinning police officer holding a severed head. Later, the film goes to great lengths to highlight a similar level of brutality in both Wang’s crimes and Tatsuhito’s attempts to ensnare Wang: Tatsuhito has a male suspect raped in order to extract information about Wang, and Tatsuhito himself sodomises Ritsuko as a method of ‘persuading’ her to inform on Wang. In a manner that no doubt will alienate some viewers but which is typical of Miike’s combative approach, Ritsuko goes on to respond positively to the rape that Tatsuhito enacts upon her, later freeing the detective when he is captured by Wang and reflecting on their ‘encounter’ by suggesting that when Tatsuhito raped her anally, she experienced her first true orgasm(!) ‘It was the first time I came without being high’, Ritsuko sighs after untying Tatsuhito. Later, she mounts the badly injured Tatsuhito whilst he is in no condition to consent, in effect raping him. As the film progresses, the audience may begin to develop a sense of sympathy for the cruel Wang when they discover that Wang is haunted by his own murder of his father – to the extent that through Zhou’s eyes, we see Wang washing his hands obsessively and declaring ‘It won’t come off… The blood of my father’, in the manner of Lady Macbeth. ![]() Rainy Dog has strong similarities with a number of other 1990s films in which hitmen, or at least violent criminals, are forced to take care of a child. During that era, the juxtaposition of the connotations of the profession of a violent gangster or hitman and the innocence associated with childhood was exploited in a number of films from a variety of cultural contexts: Clint Eastwood’s A Perfect World (1993) featured Kevin Costner as an escaped convict who kidnaps an eight year old boy and finds himself taking on an almost fatherly role to the child; in Luc Besson’s Leon (1994), Jean Reno’s hitman takes a teenaged girl (Natalie Portman) under his wing and teaches him the tricks of his trade; and in Kitano Takeshi’s Kikujiro (1998, the recent Third Window Films Blu-ray release of which has been reviewed by us here), a middle-aged yakuza (played by Kitano) finds himself escorting a young boy, Masao, across Japan. ![]() It’s hard to watch Rainy Dog without comparing it with Kitano’s Kikujiro: the two films are strikingly similar, especially in how in their movement towards their respective climaxes they both feature a strong use of a beach location. Where Kikujiro ends on a surprisingly warm note, Rainy Dog features an unremittingly bleak conclusion: both films are heartbreaking in their representation of the relationship between a yakuza and a child, but for very different reasons. ![]() Ryuichi and his brother are introduced as children in the film’s opening sequence. We see the two boys walking on a beach, the footage post-processed to look like an old home movie and therefore carrying connotations of memory and the past. Ryuichi and his brother encounter and are abused by a larger group of children who ridicule the boys’ Chinese heritage (using racial slurs against them) and telling them that they smell. From here, Miike cuts to Ryuichi as a young man; he waits patiently at a counter, where he is told by an official that he cannot apply for a passport whilst he is on probation. Ryuichi is shown in conversation with a series of bureaucrats, who treat him unsympathetically: ‘If you were Japanese, you’d follow Japanese rules’, one of them tells him. ![]()
Video
Please note that for the purposes of this review, we were only presented with DVD copies of the finished product and did not have access to the Blu-ray discs. ![]() Colour reproduction is solid throughout. This is particularly noticeable in Ley Lines, which features some very bold use in colour seemingly achieved by the use of monochrome filters on the lens (eg, a high contrast red filter, in at least one scene in the film). Ley Lines features the most outrageously experimental photography out of all three films, shucking off the chiaroscuro photography of its predecessors in favour of a very stylised aesthetic – which includes, in one sequence, a shot presented as if the camera were positioned inside the blades of a speculum that has been inserted into a woman’s vagina(!) Shinjuku Triad Society and, in particular, Ley Lines also pokes fun at Japanese trend in optical censorship by featuring a number of scenes in which characters expose their genitals – only for the characters’ genitals to be censored in a very overt, parodic manner. Please see the bottom of this review for some larger screengrabs from each film. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Audio
![]() Optional English subtitles are provided for all three films. These subtitles improve greatly on those that were included in Tartan’s DVD releases of these films. For example, in the case of Shinjuku Triad Society Arrow’s subtitles translate the final lines of the film in a manner which seems to be much more correct (and makes much more sense) than the translation that was included in Tartan’s DVD release of that film, and in the case of Rainy Dog much of the Chinese dialogue that was strangely unsubtitled in Tartan’s release now, on Arrow’s new discs, features English subtitles.
Extras
![]() The other content of the DVDs are as follows: DISC ONE: * Shinjuku Triad Society (101:17 PAL) - Audio commentary with Tom Mes. - ‘Takashi Miike: Into the Black’ (45:07). This lengthy new interview with Miike Takashi sees the director talking about his relationship with cinema, beginning with his fascination with Bruce Lee’s films. He reflects on the training he received early in his career. He says that ‘As a kid, the only thing I was good at was running away. And I’ve been running away ever since. But, in the midst of running away, I became a director’. Miike goes on to discuss his early career in V-Cinema and how he developed his approach as a director. The interview is in Japanese with optional English subtitles. - Trailer (1:25). DISC TWO: * Rainy Dog (94:24 PAL) - Audio commentary with Tom Mes. - ‘Show Aikawa: Stray Dog, Lone Wolf’ (21:42). In a new interview, the actor talks about his work in V-Cinema and the films he made with Miike. Like the Miike interview, this is in Japanese with optional English subtitles. - Trailer (1:26). DISC THREE: * Ley Lines (104:36 PAL) - Audio commentary with Tom Mes. - Trailer (1:40).
Overall
![]() The three films are linked by a very film noir-style approach. Figures of authority are invariably represented as corrupt or powerless. Isolde Standish has declared that in Shinjuku Triad Society, for example, the police are represented ‘as mediators who maintain stability between the two mutually dependent financial concerns of “legitimate” society and those of the underground represented by the triad/yakuza organisations’ (Standish, 2006: 335). The films represent an escalation of Miike’s style, and each film in the trilogy sees Miike becoming bolder in terms of his technique; Jasper Sharp has said that the three films in the kuroshakai trilogy ‘consolidated his [Miike’s] association with the yakuza genre, while containing interesting observations about Asian ethnic minorities in Japan’ (Sharp, 2011: 161). These are concerns which would run throughout Miike’s subsequent films, in the Dead or Alive pictures, for example, or such films as The City of Lost Souls (2000). The three films here offer an excellent experience, for both Miike fans and for the uninitiated. We were only given the DVDs for review purposes, but these offer vast improvements over the previously available DVDs – if only for the more accurate and consistent subtitling of the first two pictures. Furthermore, Arrow’s new release of the ‘Black Society Trilogy’ includes some superb contextual material: Tom Mes’ commentary tracks for all three films are a delight, and the new interview with Miike is detailed, heartfelt and fascinating. References: Desjardins, Chris, 2005: Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. London: I B Tauris Magee, Chris, 2011: World Film Locations: Tokyo. Intellect Books Sharp, Jasper, 2011: Historical Dictionary of Japanese Cinema. Scarecrow Press Standish, Isolde, 2006: A New History of Japanese Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing Shinjuku Triad Society: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Rainy Dog: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Ley Lines: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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