TOKYO GORE POLICE Director Talks DRILL BRA SISTERS and JU-ON!

We mentioned quickly last night that Tokyo Gore Police director Yoshihiko Nishimura had mentioned that the next film from the crew behind Tokyo Gore Police and Machine Girl would be Drill Bra Sisters and we had the chance to ask Nishimura for a few more details today. The film is still being written so details are scarce but one of the lead characters is obviously carrying forward from The Machine Girl - which raises the possibility of further character cross overs - and Nishimura confirmed that it will be Machine Girl director Noboru Iguchi calling the shots on this one as well. As for Nishimura? Well, he’s got something big on the horizons himself as well: he will be taking over the reins of the hugely popular Ju-On films - remade in the USA as The Grudge. The next installment of the long running franchise is being written now, series creator and original director Takashi Shimizu will be involved as a producer and Nishimura will be directing. More details as we get them.
twitch

Hajirai Machine Girl Sequel Trailer!

So most of us are aware of the Japanese splatter film The Machine Girl. which was one of my Top Ten Favorites for 2008. However, what many of you probably dont know is that there is already a twenty minute short film sequel to the blood filled original. This short sequel is titled Hajirai Machine Girl and has a new girl take over the mantle from the previous film. It revolves around the character Yoshie as she must overcome her shyness to become the new Machine Girl.

Yeah I know, sounds a little strange but the good news is the good folks at TwitchFilm got their hands on the trailer for this new short film sequel and it is more of the rediculousness that the first film had. However, be warned that some people may find this new follow up a little on the tasteless side as one of the weapons…..well, lets just say it comes out of the body instead of being attached to it. Intrigued? Then check out the trailer for Hajirai Machine Girl below. It’s in Japanese so dont expect captions but it’s more Machine Girl mayhem to enjoy!

The 20-minute Hajirai Machine Girl short sequel is an added bonus feature to the new Japanese DVD release of the original film. No word on any release of this short film any other way other then as a Japanese DVD bonus feature. Also, keep your eyes peeled for more information as a full lenght sequel titled The Drill Bra Sisters is set to be made sometime soon.

(Hajirai Machine Girl trailer starts at about the 40 second mark)

The Machine Girl
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Source : Horror-movies.ca

Where’d She Put That Gun? A Trailer For Noboru Iguchi’s HAJIRAI MACHINE GIRL!

We’ve been talking about it for a while now and now you can get a look for yourself: the trailer for Noboru Iguchi’s Hajirai Machine Girl has arrived. An ultra-low budget sequel to Iguchi’s already low budget cult hit The Machine Girl, this was prepared as a bonus feature for Machine Girl‘s Japanese DVD release and picks up the story with secondary character Yoshie taking up the Machine Girl mantle, though she must first overcome her shyness (hajirai) to do so. Overcome her shyness? Yeah, safe to say she does that … the weaponry in this case ends up somewhere a little more *ahem* personal than the stump of a severed arm.

Meatball Machine
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source : twitch

Schlocky Japanese low-budgeter “The Machine Girl”

Posted in DVD, Movie Review, The Machine Girl by admin @ Oct 4, 2008 - Comments (0)

Variety Review of the machine girl

Kataude mashin garu (Japan)
A Fever Dreams presentation of a Tokyo Shock Original, Nikkatsu, Fever Dreams production. (International sales: Nikkatsu, Tokyo.) Produced by Yoko Hayama, Yoshinori Chiba, Satoshi Nakamura. Executive producer, John Sirabella. Directed, written by Noboru Iguchi.

With: Minase Yashiro, Asami, Kentaro Shimazu, Honoha, Taro Suwa.

By RUSSELL EDWARDS
Shameless gore, gallows humor and guilty pleasures are the byproducts of a mechanical plot and impressive helming in the schlocky Japanese low-budgeter “The Machine Girl.” Already revered for outrageous efforts like “Sukeban Boy,” director Noboru Iguchi meets all the Nipponese extremist standards with this revenge yarn about a machine gun-limbed schoolgirl who takes on the yakuza. Designed for a gaijin crossover audience (complete with English credits), pic has a long future in ancillary for Nipponese and international auds with a grindhouse sensibility.

When bullies kill her younger brother, schoolgirl Ami (Minase Yashiro) seeks revenge on the perps and their parents. She loses an arm during a yakuza torture session; fortunately, sympathetic motor mechanics help with a machine-gun prosthesis, and Ami turns the bloody tide. Pic shows evidence of cultural recycling, with Japanese influences on Robert Rodriguez being reconditioned for this much cheaper model. Perfs are as gaudy as the bloody special effects, though artful framing belies the idea that Iguchi has knocked out this film carelessly. Adequate tech credits show little finesse, but the target aud won’t care.

Camera (color), Yasutaka Nagano; editor, Kenji Tanabe; music, Koh Nakagawa; production designer, Yasuo Kurosu; Special Effects & Gore Effects, Yoshihiro Nishimura. Reviewed at Berlin Film Festival (market), Feb. 8, 2008. Running time: 96 MIN.

Versus
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GUNNING FOR OUTRAGE

Posted in Movie Review, The Machine Girl, The Machine Girls News by admin @ Oct 4, 2008 - Comments (0)

NY Post The machine girl Review
ID you hear the one about the schoolgirl who loses her left arm in a fight with mobsters and has it replaced by an eight-barrel machine gun (shades of Rose McGowan in “Grindhouse”), which she uses to exact vengeance on the bullies who killed her brother and his best pal?

So goes “The Machine Girl,” by Japanese schlockmeister Noboru Iguchi.

But there’s more: Nonstop violence, gallons of spurting blood, outrageous humor (a kitchen scene is a hoot), extreme vomiting, a drill bra, human sushi and tempura, and other perversity.

Iguchi, who has a well-deserved reputation for outrageousness, never allows this low-budgeter to take itself seriously. Viewers who take the same approach will have a kick-ass time - if they have a strong stomach, that is.

In Japanese, with English subtitles. Running time: 96 minutes. Not rated (violence)
V.A. MUSETTO

Mike Bracken’s Full Review: Machine Girl

Posted in DVD, Movie Review, The Machine Girl, The Machine Girls News by admin @ Aug 19, 2008 - Comments (0)

Plot Details: This opinion reveals minor details about the movie’’s plot.

TokyoShock, the Asian exploitation branch of film distributors Media Blasters, has long been known for bringing quirky and crazy Japanese films to domestic audiences (my personal favorites being the three Misa Kuroi films that make up the Eko Eko Azarak trilogy). However, for their latest offering–The Machine Girl—the company has decided to step out from their role as mere distributors and instead become producers. The end result is a creative Japanese splatterfest that has just enough heart to make up for its numerous shortcomings.

Asami is Ami Hyuga, a young high school student living alone with her brother Yu. Their parents are dead, having committed suicide after being falsely accused of committing some heinous murders. Despite this, life is good. Ami is fairly popular and a pretty decent basketball player. Her brother isn’t quite so lucky. He’s a little more geeky than his sister, and has run afoul of a gang of local bullies. If this weren’t bad enough, the parents of the head bully are also highly connected yakuza. When these bad seeds kill Ami’s brother and his best friend, she swears to get revenge—and she almost does, only the Yakuza parents eventually thwart her plan and hack off her left arm in the process. With no one to turn to, Ami finds herself teaming up with the parents of the other victim of the murder. The mother is just as gung ho for revenge, while the dad is a mechanical genius who comes up with a machine gun prosthetic for Ami’s missing arm. Reloaded, she and the mother set out to get revenge against the family responsible for the death of their loved ones. What ensues is an outrageous Japanese battle royale with enough blood, guts, and carnage to remind me of the good old days when Japanese cinema was more concerned with gore than angry dead girls.

The film takes its place in a cinematic pantheon alongside movies like Takashi Miike’s Full Metal Yakuza and Robert Rodriguez’s Planet Terror. It’s not quite as accomplished as either of its inspirations, but for being something of a fan-made film, it avoids many of the pitfalls that those sorts of movies often fall prey to: snarky pretentiousness, a seemingly never-ending string of obvious homages, and the constraints of a miniscule production budget. Despite this success, The Machine Girl still finds other ways to fall just short of exploitation perfection. The gore, while generally fantastic, suffers whenever a sequence employs CGI as opposed to a more traditional splatter gag. For all the blood and severed limbs on display, the film has a noticeable lack of nudity (which is an exploitation film staple). Finally, despite only running 96 minutes, some of the early parts of the film suffer from poor pacing.

Even with these problems, the film is still entertaining—provided you like the standard Japanese exploitation film elements. These invariably include ninjas, insane yakuza, girls in sailor schoolgirl outfits, attempted rape, geysers of blood from any and every wound (if someone were to get a paper cut in one of these flicks, the blood would shoot out three feet into the air and the victim would lose gallons of life fluid before the bleeding could be stopped), and crazy martial arts violence. In fact, the film opens up so strongly (with Ami facing off against a young gang and slaughtering them in increasingly more violent fashion) that it becomes that much easier to forgive the problems that follow. The Machine Girl basically shows us a few of the tricks it has up its sleeves in those first few moments, and because of that, we give it a pass whenever it slows down and wanders off course. We know what has to be coming—and we’re willing to wait because director Noboru Iguchi gave us a taste in the early going. It’s like a drug dealer giving us a free fix for our first high. He knows we’re gonna hang around and want more no matter what.

The film itself is relatively well made from a director’s standpoint. Iguchi may not be the most gifted visual stylist to ever step behind a camera, but his scene compositions are solid (if a bit basic). What he lacks in aesthetic sensibilities he mostly makes up for with sheer enthusiasm for the material. He works in homages from films like Evil Dead 2 in a way that’s somewhat obvious, but not obnoxious. You get the sense that he clearly loves these kinds of films and he’s happy to be making one. The enthusiasm is contagious.

Still, what ultimately carries The Machine Girl is the gore. I’ve already mentioned that most of the CGI effects are a bit disappointing, but there are more than enough standard gore FX to make up for it. To quote one of my idols, Mr. Joe Bob Briggs, heads will roll in this film. It doesn’t stop there, either—limbs fly (and get turned into tempura at one point) People get drilled by a bra (you have to see it to believe it), swords and shuriken fly, bullets chop people in half, then into quarters and beyond. Blood doesn’t spurt in this film, it fountains. Simply put, this is a gorehound’s wet dream. If you love your movies with a bit of the old red sauce, then you’re bound to be pleased with The Machine Girl just on the basis of the onscreen mayhem and seemingly endless supply of blood and guts.

Overall, though, the gore is just enough to get the finished product a slightly better than average grade. There’s franchise potential in Ami’s character and I wouldn’t be shocked if we see a Machine Girl 2 in the not too distant future. Given what I’ve seen in her debut outing, I’d be more than willing to see what trouble Ami finds herself in next.

FANTASIA Report: TOKYO GORE POLICE Review

Posted in Japan Gore, Movie Review, The Machine Girl, Tokyo Gore Police by admin @ Jul 14, 2008 - Comments (0)

The near future. Tokyo’s police force has been privatized, the new private force authorized to execute justice on the spot. The officers are both hated and feared but are a necessity in a world plagued by ‘engineers’, mutant creatures that generate powerful weapons from any significant wound on their body meaning that they become more dangerous the more that you fight against them. The only way to stop an engineer is to cut out a strange key-shaped tumor that exists somewhere within each one of them, a task that falls to specialized sword wielding hunters within the police force. And the leading hunter on the force is Ruka - played by Audition‘s Eihi Shiina - a beautiful, self destructive woman plagued by memories of her suicidal mother and slain father who has brought down fifty engineers to date.
TOKYO GORE POLICE
From the same team that created The Machine Girl, Tokyo Gore Police is quite likely the most aptly titled film ever made. The thing is positively saturated with blood, massive sprays of the stuff filling frame after frame of the film. With its over the top effects and massive levels of splatter this thing is destined to become a classic among fans of the genre. Like Machine Girl the effects are pleasingly squishy, based on real world latex prosthetics rather than CGI, and wildly inventive. Where the two films part ways, however, is in the basic approach to the material. While Machine Girl plays out largely tongue in cheek, Tokyo Gore Police takes its world very seriously. There is no nodding and winking here, instead director Yoshihiro Nishimura sets out to create a sort of alternate future where these events, bizarre as they may be, actually make some sort of sense. The end result is a sort of nightmare fugue, a swirling hallucination that just plunges farther and farther into depravity as it proceeds.
TOKYO GORE POLICE
No doubt about it, Nishimura’s effects are what will draw most to the film but what holds it all together is Shiina’s performance. A strange, otherworldly sort of presence, Shiina is one of the more distinctive and compelling actors working in Japan today and doesn’t appear on screen nearly often enough. With a lesser performer at its heart Tokyo Gore Police would descend into camp but Shiina makes perfect sense here and gives the whole thing a strange sort of legitimacy. She works well as an action heroine - fight scenes are well choreographed by Versus‘ Tak Sakaguchi - but more important are the self destructive urges that run throughout her character, her own life mirroring the tone of the Japan of the film.

Laced with sly social commentary - the television ads selling ‘cute’ wrist slicing knives and anti-hari kiri PSA’s are brilliant - and a surprisingly good cast Tokyo Gore Police has goals far beyond being a simple splatter picture. Nishimura clearly has something to say and, low budget or no, his fusion of extreme violence of political satire can’t help but bring to mind Verhoeven’s Robocop and Starship Troopers. The extreme visuals alone make Tokyo Gore Police a must for splatter fans, the added depth makes it a classic of the type. Definitely recommended.

Tokyo Gore Police
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Source: Twitch

‘Tokyo Gore Police,’ ‘Machine Girl’ splash down at Hole in the Head’s finale

One-armed bandit: Machine Girl’s Asami lost an arm in her battle against a shady ninja family, but that doesn’t mean you should stand in the way of her quest for vengeance (witness the poor slob in the rear).

Ho boy, are you ready for the nightmares? That’s practically guaranteed this weekend as the Another Hole in the Head fest closes out with its final mow-down. Fans of arterial spray, extreme Japanese filmmaking, random acts of unkind dismemberment, and fatal flying guillotines will be able to get their geek on one last, but hella amazing time with this last-minute double feature of Japanese shock-and-argh at Brava, showcasing the late add Tokyo Gore Police and crowd fave Machine Girl.

MACHINE GIRL

Possibly the most exuberantly bloody and cartoonish offering in the fest, which bites off/pays homage to Grindhouse AND Kill Bill. This archetypal Japanese revenge story - passionate and cruel by turns - hinges on the trials and tribulations of Ami Hyuga (Asami), a high-school basketball nut, fresh-faced daughter of an accused killer, and loyal big sister. Her younger brother becomes snared by spiralling gambling (!?) debts and ends up in hock to the local budding young hoods, including the son of a yakuza/ninja kingpin (whose devil ‘do bears a remarkable resemblance to that of Prodigy’s lead vocalist) - it doesn’t end prettily. Something snaps in Ami, and she goes after the kids responsible for her bro’s death, only to come up against a formidable array of monstrous parents driven to protect their equally rotten offspring. Losing her arm - slowly - in a nasty torture scene just sends her over the edge. Don’t even ask yourself how she can possibly operate a attachable machine gun with a stump - Rose MacGowan figured out how in Planet Terror, so can she.

You won’t soon forget the memorably ’60s-ish comicbook-like action sequence opener, evocative of both Seijun Suzuki and Sin City, or the finale, less a balletic bloodbath than a completely over-the-top showdown between the “Super Mourner Gang” of grieving parents (just because your son chose to become a ninja doesn’t mean you don’t hurt), giant holes blasted in bodies, a driller bra donned by the meanest mama ever, and a scalping scene that combines disco strobing and an almost Looney Tunes-esque dark comedy.

TOKYO GORE POLICE

Also produced by the venerable exploitation house Nikkatsu (well, they made all kinds of films, though their “roman porno” and “pink” softcore films brought them infamy) with a few of the same actors popping up, Tokyo Gore Police is the eagerly awaited, latest turn by the cruelly beauteous Audition S&M star Eihi Shiina. Here, she’s a girl cop - part of a sinister Philip K. Dick-ish privatized police squad commissioned with ridding the world of monstrous psychopaths who grow weapons out of whatever body part they lose. Sound familiar? Yes, these are the same good - or bad, depending on how you feel about this level of gore - people at Nikkatsu who gave you Machine Girl.

Directed by first-time auteur Yoshihiro Nishimura (who crafted special effects makeup for Machine GIrl, the also memorable Hole in the Head features Exte and Meatball Machine), Tokyo Gore Police is chock-full of disturbing scenes: point-blank exploding heads (recurring like a child’s bad dreams), exposed brains, intimations of limbless sexual servitude, and natch the Snail Girl, above. But the movie’s blend of Ultraman live-action monster brouhahas and a Burner-y, nouveau goth-steampunk aesthetic that, personally, pulls me out of the narrative. I felt a little less invested in Tokyo Gore Police than the more, ahem, classically B-minded Machine Girl. But, hey, this isn’t a competition - unless you want to see how far I can throw a severed hand - so stick around for both flicks. Shock fiends won’t be disappointed.

Another The Machine Girl Movie Review

The Machine Girl is one of those movies that is successful only because it tries to be bad. (Remember Snakes on a Plane?) Of course, that doesn’t make it good. Ninjas, flying guillotines, drill bras, a girl with a machine gun for an arm — how could you not want to watch this movie after viewing the trailer? Unfortunately, Girl i s also one of those movies with a trailer that shows all the best parts, rendering everything in between underwhelming by comparison.

Want to have a good time? Don’t watch the trailer, gather a bunch of friends, and sneak some forties into this movie. The trailer spoiled all the best parts for me, but I can certainly imagine how outrageous this movie would’ve been had I walked into it blindly. The conundrum here is that most people probably would have no interest in watching this movie without seeing the trailer. And if you have seen the trailer, well, I guess the movie is still worth watching, but I’d either try to sneak in through the fire exit or wait for it to come out on DVD.

Whew. With that said and done, Girl is a Japanese revenge fantasy that revolves around Ami Hyuga (Asami), whose brother is brutally murdered by bullies for lunch money. In a Kill Bill-like fashion, Hyuga starts hunting down his killers one by one. But when she confronts the ninja/Yakuza family responsible for her brother’s death, she’s outnumbered and captured. Rather than killing her, the family chooses to torture her, first slicing off her fingers and then her left arm. She manages to escape and seeks refuge with a friend who engineers a machine-gun arm for her to aid her in her revenge quest.

You’ll get everything you want out of a movie with this premise. It’s a 90-minute splatterfest with enough blood spraying to fill a swimming pool. The bad guys are so bad they’re not just senseless killers; they’re also necrophiliacs. It’s always fun to see how far the Japanese will go with the bizarre and the grotesque, and clearly in this movie there’s no limit line.

Director Noboru Iguchi made a wise decision by not taking the movie seriously. The over-the-top visuals and cheesy lines like “What would Mom and Dad say, before they killed themselves over murder allegations?” make it clear this movie is a big joke aimed to amuse in the cheapest ways possible. Takashi Miike made the mistake of trying to make a serious movie out of Ichi the Killer, which was about a sexually repressed man who fights with blades that come out of his shoes. That movie is as repugnant as Gi rl but is lacking the laughs, which makes it feel more like you’re watching a snuff film. Awkward.

Aka Kataude mashin gâru.

Reviewed at the 2008 Hole in the Head Film Festival.

Reviewer: Brian Chen

Don’t Fear the Subs: ‘Machine Girl’ and Ridiculous Splatter Gore

by Peter Martin

Forget about a blood bath, this movie features enough red syrup for a blood flood. Maybe you saw Rose McGowan in Grindhouse and thought, ‘Pretty good, but not enough severed limbs and geysers of blood. And wouldn’t it be cooler if she had a machine gun arm instead of a leg, and it had a chainsaw attachment?’ Well, have I got a movie for you!

Noburu Iguchi’s The Machine Girl, which was released on DVD last Tuesday, features copious spraying fountains of blood and dozens of detached body parts. Add ninjas, yakuza, a flying guillotine and a drill bra to your basic ‘revenge for the murder of an innocent loved one’ formula, and I think you already know if this movie is up your alley.

Scott W. pointed to the trailer over at Twitch last year and, truthfully, nearly all of the movie’s best bits are highlighted in that two-minute blast of gore. But, really, if you’re a fan of this kind of stuff, you’ll want to see all the action sequences in their complete, unrated, unadulterated, possibly nauseating glory. Watching the entire movie also makes it abundantly clear that the filmmakers did indeed have their tongues planted firmly in cheek. After all, you can’t slice up this much latex and spill this much blood without having a demented sense of humor, can you?

The Machine Girl starts by showing Japanese schoolgirl Ami (Minase Yashiro, making her acting debut) in spectacular action, annihilating a gang of schoolboy thugs, and then rewinds six months to tell her origin story. Ami and her brother Yu are teen orphans; their parents were accused of murder before killing themselves. Yu and his best friend Takashi are killed by arrogant teen gang leader Sho Kimura (Nobuhiro Nishihara); his parents (Kentaro Shimazu and Honoka) are maniacally protective yakuza. Ami swears revenge, loses her arm to the yakuza, and teams up with Takashi’s mom Miki (Asami), whose husband builds Ami a new machine gun arm.

The pace rarely flags, and if you get bored you can just fast forward to the gore, but the dramatic scenes are well-designed to establish the right tone and provide context for the explosions of viscera.

Tokyo Shock’s DVD looks good for a movie that was probably shot on video. If you have an irrational fear of subtitles, you could wuss out and listen to the English dub, but the Japanese-language version is much stronger. Both Japanese and English tracks are available in DD 5.1 and DD 2.0. The English subtitles are well-timed and easy to read.

“Behind the Scenes of Machine Girl” is a decent 10-minute promo piece with sound bite interviews and production footage, but no details on any of the gore effects. Neither do we get to hear anything extensive from writer/director Noburu Iguchi. The original trailer is included, as well as trailers for Heroes Two, Death Trance, Lone Wolf and Cub (TV series) and Zebraman.

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