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Sister Street Fighter AKA Onna hissatsu ken (Blu-ray)
[Blu-ray]
Blu-ray ALL - United Kingdom - Arrow Films Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (16th March 2019). |
The Film
![]() Sister Street Fighter Collection ![]() Koryu travels to Yokohama, where upon arrival she is harassed by a group of hoodlums but quickly demonstrates her martial arts prowess by dispatching them efficiently. She is aided by her cousin Jiro (Nanjo Tatsuya), who enters part-way through the fight. Afterwards, Koryu and Jiro are reunited with Jiro’s sister Reiko (Tachibana Nami) and their father, Koryu’s uncle. Koryu makes contact with Fang Shing, who is working as a hostess in a sleazy strip club. Koryu is attacked by a group of hoods working for Central Trading. She escapes, but the instigators within Central Trading – including heavily Americanised villain Hayashi (Yamamoto Shohei) and Inubashari (Ishibashi Masashi), who leads a squad of ninja assassins. Both men work for the head of Central Trading, Kakuzaki (Amatsu Bin), who lives in a luxurious mansion protected by various groups of martial artists, including the Amazon Seven. Inubashari has a personal axe to grind with the honourful Shorinji martial arts school, who trained Koryu in Karate. The Shorinji school is headed by the kindly Fujita (Uchida Asao), and in line with Hayashi’s orders, Inubashari vows to destroy both Koryu and her former sensei. At the Shorinji school, Koryu is introduced to Emi (Hayakawa Emi), a female martial artist, and Hibiki (Chiba Sonny), who has already been searching for Mansei. Hibiki has managed to rescue Fang Shing and has concealed her within his sister Koku’s ballet school. Koryu discovers tht Kakuzaki is keeping Mansei hostage and has been trying various heroin-based concoctions on him. Aided by Emi and Hibiki, Koryu vows to infiltrate Central Trading’s headquarters and dispatch Kakuzaki and his various goons. ![]() Koryu travels to Japan. Immediately, she is taken to a trainyard by a rogue taxi driver, where she is force to fight two martial artists. (One of these fights takes place atop a moving train.) Koryu discovers that Birei is being held by Osone Enterprises; Osone Enterprises is involved in the smuggling of blood diamonds. The diamonds are smuggled into the country in the buttocks of young women, and then they are removed by a medical doctor who works for the corporation. Osone Enterprises is approached by a mysterious martial artist, Tsubaki, who demonstrates superior fighting skills before demanding that the corporation hire him to protect them from the Lady Dragon. This angers the three Honiden brothers – Shikajiro, Chazaburo and Inouchiri – who until this point have been the chief ‘muscle’ within the Osone Enterprises group. Koryu has been aided by her sister Byakurai, who also works for Osone Enterprises as a gem cutter. Osone discovers Byakurai’s treachery and has her tortured, using her to lure the Lady Dragon to a potentially deadly confrontation with the Honiden brothers and the horde of martial artists who work under them. However, Koryu has an unexpected ally in Tsubaki, who reveals himself to be the brother of the murdered detective Kidai. ![]() In Yokohama, Koryu is reunited with her friend Michi, who is also a martial artist. Koryu tracks down Suzy Wong, who is working in a seedy club called Empire. Wong tells Koryu that Shurei has been taken by Oh Ryu-Mei, ‘the shadow ruler of Yokohama’s Chinatown’, as his mistress. Oh is also using Shurei’s skills as a chemist to reconstitute the dissolved gold that his group have been smuggling into Japan. Oh uses gladiatorial combat to select four men who will be tasked with killing the Lady Dragon. However, shortly after the fights, another martial artist, Kurosaki Takeshi, enters and beats Oh’s four best men, insisting that ‘I’m the only one that can kill Koryu’. Eventually, Kurosaki succeeds in facing Koryu, and he appears to kill her. However, Koryu has really escaped, and she returns to Michi’s home where she recuperates. When Oh discovers Koryu is still alive, he uses Rika to lure Koryu into a final battle. ![]() Meanwhile, at the Far East Film Production Studio, studio boss Fujiyama oversees a gang who smuggle heroin into the country on fishing boats on the Echizen Coast before packing the drug into Buddhist statues which are shipped to the US. Fujiyama is visited by Spencer, an American member of an international narcotics syndicate who is masquerading as a Hollywood producer visiting the set of Far East’s latest movie. Spencer warns Fujiyama that an American agent is on the way to Japan with the intention of closing down the drug routes. Michi is asked to act as translator for Douglas, a visiting American professor. However, Michi is unaware that Douglas is in fact the American agent whose arrival in Japan Spencer warned Fujiyama about. Michi’s association with Douglas places her in mortal danger, as Fujiyama has placed a price on the head of the American agent. Michi and Jim become embroiled in the ensuing war between the hoodlums and the police. When Jim is killed, Michi seeks vengeance upon the gangsters, and it is up to Kiku, and her friend Inspector Takagi, to attempt to save her. ![]() Where Chiba’s Street Fighter mitigated Lee’s graceful movements through an emphasis on brute force within the martial arts technique of its star, Chiba, in the Sister Street Fighter pictures Shihomi marries the grace of Lee with the bluntness of Chiba. The Sister Street Fighter films also looked sideways for inspiration to the Hong Kong action films which starred Taiwanese actress Angela Mao – such as Huang Feng’s Hapkido (1972) and Lady Whirlwind (also 1972). ![]() Though the fourth picture, Sister Streetfighter: Fifth Level Fist, features a different protagonist (though played once again by Shihomi), all four films begin in Hong Kong and feature characters who are of mixed Chinese-Japanese heritage. The plot of the fourth film, Sister Street Fighter: Fifth Level Fist, revolves around Michi, the friend of the protagonist (Kiku), and her friendship with Jim. Both Michi and Jim are of mixed heritage: Michi is Chinese-Japanese, and Jim’s mother was black. Because they were treated as outsiders by their peers, Michi and Jim formed a strong friendship in childhood, which is depicted through high contrast monochrome flashbacks that show the harsh treatment Michi and Jim were forced to endure solely because of their mixed heritage. Koryu, as with her brother Mansei, is of mixed Japanese and Chinese heritage. In the first three pictures, the Lady Dragon herself is ordered to Japan in order to assist in finding a missing person. In the first picture, this is Koryu’s brother Mansei, who has disappeared whilst working undercover for the Hong Kong police; in Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread, the missing person is Koryu’s schoolmate Birei, who has been abducted by the agents of Osone Enterprise, who are smuggling blood diamonds into Japan in the buttocks of young women(!); in Return of Sister Street Fighter, Koryu must uncover the whereabouts of another of her friends, Shurei, who in disappearing has left behind her young daughter Rika. Shurei is being held by gangster Oh Ryu-Mei, who treats Shurei as his moll and also exploits her knowledge of chemistry in smuggling gold. (The gold is smuggled in a powdered form and then reconstituted on Japanese soil. ![]() ![]() The format changes slightly with the third picture, Return of Sister Street Fighter, which aside from dispensing with the freeze frames features a more compacted narrative. (A cynic might say that the film is ten minutes shorter precisely because it abandons the seemingly omnipresent freeze frames and onscreen titles that punctuate the first two pictures in the series.) In the first two films, Koryu is also allied with the honourful Shorinji school of martial arts, which is set against the villains’ abuse of the code of the martial artist – in particular, the cruel and honourless Honiden brothers in Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread. (‘What the fuck are you preaching here with your two-bit Hong Kong Karate?’, Inouchiri Honiden taunts Fujita, the sensei of the Shorinji school.)
Video
![]() Taking up just under 22Gb of space on the first disc, Sister Street Fighter is presented uncut, with a running time of 85:53 mins. (The film was previously released in the UK via the US ‘R’ rated version, which was already cut before its US release and suffered further cuts imposed by the BBFC; all of these cuts have been waived for this release.) Disc one also includes the US ‘R’ rated and English-dubbed version of Sister Street Fighter. Running 81:13, this variant is assembled from a variety of sources, with the bulk of the presentation being based on the HD master used for the main feature and material unique to this cut of the film being inserted from a lower quality source. ![]() Return of Sister Street Fighter and Sister Street Fighter: Fifth Level Fist are both uncut. Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread has been censored slightly for this release, a shot being reframed in order to avoid the inclusion of a potentially indecent image of a child via a framed photograph in the background. The presentations of all four films are pretty equivalent. The photography in all four films favours shorter focal lengths. As with a number of other Japanese pictures of the era which were shot under similar circumstances, lenses used during production aren’t the best: in the first film, in particular, there is some noticeable aberration towards the periphery of the image. Aside from this, there is some very minor damage here and there, with a few vertical scratches appearing in the emulsions from time to time. Taking the apparent quality of the lenses used to shoot the films into account, detail is pleasing throughout all four presentations, with a good level of fine detail being present. Contrast levels are pleasing though the curve into the toe seems sharp. Midtones are rich and defined throughout all four films. Colour is handled pleasingly, with a rich and consistently natural approach evident in the photography and carried through the presentation. Finally, all four films benefit from a pleasing encode to disc, retaining the structure of 35mm film. Sister Street Fighter ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread ![]() ![]() ![]() Return of the Sister Street Fighter ![]() ![]() ![]() Sister Street Fighter: Fifth Level Fist ![]() ![]() ![]() Some full-sized screengrabs are included at the bottom of this review. Please click to enlarge them.
Audio
All four films are presented with LPCM 1.0 soundtracks, in Japanese with optional English subtitles. (Sister Street Fighter also has the alternate English language dub, in LPCM 1.0 also, Sister Street Fighter: Fifth Level Fist has some brief moments of English language dialogue which are accompanied by burnt-in Japanese subtitles. Audio levels are fine throughout all four films; though not ‘showy’ by any stretch of the imagination, the audio tracks show good range and depth.
Extras
![]() DISC ONE: Sister Street Fighter (85:53) - ‘R’ rated version (81:13). - ‘Sonny Chiba: A Life in Action’ (10:10). Recorded in 2016, this interview features Chiba reflecting on his work with Shihomi Etsuko, discussing her talents as an actress and martial artist. - ‘Kazuhiko Yamaguchi: Kick-Ass Sisters’ (10:06). Also recorded in 2016, this interview with director Yamaguchi focuses on his work on the Sister Street Fighter Films. Yamaguchi talks about how he came to work on the first film and reflects on his career to that point. He discusses his work with the actors on the films, talking in some detail about the approach that was made towards staging the fights and choosing weapons for the characters. - ‘Masahiro Kakefuda: Subversive Action’ (10:51). In another interview dating from 2016, writer Kakefuda discusses his work for Toei and considers his preference for writing erotic films. He reflects on some of the influences on the Sister Street Fighter films. - Isolated Score Highlights (11:43). - Trailer (2:47). - Still & Poster Gallery (22:41). - US Trailer (2:35). - German Opening Titles (2:11). - German Trailer (2:35). DISC TWO: Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread (85:24) Return of the Sister Street Fighter (76:56) Sister Street Fighter: Fifth Level Fist (76:49) - Isolated Score Highlights: Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread (19:26); Return of the Sister Street Fighter (10:15) - Trailers: Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread (2:44); Return of the Sister Street Fighter (2:57); Sister Street Fighter: Fifth Level Fist (2:57).
Overall
![]() Arrow’s Blu-ray presentations of all four films are pleasing and would seem to be true to source, offering a filmlike experience. They are supported by an excellent array of contextual material, including the US ‘R’ rated version of the first picture and some superb interviews with Chiba, Yamaguchi and Kakefuda. Please click to enlarge Sister Street Fighter ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sister Street Fighter: Hanging by a Thread ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Return of the Sister Street Fighter ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sister Street Fighter: Fifth Level Fist ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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