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
Price: USD 17.99

1 used & new available from USD 17.99

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.

Schlock horror: Tokyo Gore Police

Posted in Japan Gore, Tokyo Gore Police, Yoshihiro Nishimura by admin @ Jun 20, 2008 - Comments (0)

Yoshihiro Nishimura’s latest gore-fest looks set to raise the bar in the exploitation market, with swords, cops and mutants galore

have to admit, a lot of the big 90s Japanese horror movies left me cold. You know the ones. Most of them were remade for the US market, and they often involved a vengeful spirit stalking the living through some piece of seemingly innocuous modern technology. Even the Ringu movies - which won a loyal cult following at home and abroad - just seemed a little dull and convoluted to me.

Which brings me to the latest slice of Japanese horror to hit our screens - the fantastically titled Tokyo Gore Police. Trailers for Yoshihiro Nishimura’s latest began to leak onto the internet in early May, via the always informative Twitch.net, and each successive trailer is serving to make this insane-looking exploitation flick seem more and more like essential viewing.

Obviously influenced by such low budget auteurs as Herschell Gordon Lewis (Blood Feast, The Gore Gore Girls), and
Andreas Schnaas (Violent Shit 1-4) - as well as seemingly taking some homegrown inspiration from the Yokai Monsters series - Tokyo Gore Police mixes cheap-looking gore effects, improbable plotting, and some breathtakingly imaginative creature effects. The plot (as described on the official site) revolves around Ruka, a samurai sword wielding female cop (played by Audition’s Eihi Shiina) and her attempts to track down Key Man, a mad scientist who has flooded Tokyo with all kinds of bizarre mutants. Ruka and Key Man, however, share a vendetta against the Tokyo Police, who murdered their respective fathers in the past. So we’re talking sword wielding cops, mad scientists, mutants and revenge. Sounds like a perfect Saturday night to me.

As with most films of this nature, the plot seems secondary to the visuals, and so far the trailers are promising us a slick, vile, silly and totally over the top feast for the eyes. Look out for the barmy crocodile woman in the second trailer. Tokyo Gore Police is the brainchild of the same team (director Nishimura and production company Fever Dreams) that gave the world the frankly astonishing Machine Girl. That one was the story of a schoolgirl who rebuilds herself as a cyborg assassin to take revenge on the yakuza who destroyed her life…
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There is no official release date for Tokyo Gore Police, but already it is the talk of the horror movie fan sites. I’d say it’s about time to start drooling in anticipation now.

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Tôkyô zankoku keisatsu - Tokyo Gore Police Tailer!

It’s Five Minutes Of Madness In The TOKYO GORE POLICE Trailer!

Tôkyô zankoku keisatsu - Tokyo Gore Police
Strap yourselves in, boys and girls, because things are about to get very, very bloody and very, very strange.

The creative team behind The Machine Girl is back together for Tokyo Gore Police, a cult action-horror starring Audition‘s Eihi Shiina as a cop forced to battle off a swarm of hideous mutants spawned by a man made virus. Machine Girl effects guru Yoshihiro Nishimura takes the helm for this one, working from a script by the writer Uzumaki while Versus star Tak Sakaguchi handles the action sequences, all of which means this thing has cult credentials like nobody’s business. What it also has is an unstoppable string of wildly over the top creature and gore effects washed down by buckets and buckets of blood.

If you’ve been waiting to get a look at this your wait is over. The first trailer debuted at the recent Yubari Fantastic Film Festival and the producers of the film have been kind enough to give Twitch an exclusive first look at that same trailer, all four minutes and forty nine seconds of it. It starts off fairly straight before building to a fever pitch and, good news for fans, as insane as this trailer is it doesn’t spoil the biggest shots of the film. Madness, I say. Madness.

You’ll find the trailer in the Twitch Player below the break, hit the link below for behind the scenes stills and watch for an interview with Nishimura in these pages soon.


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Eleven Arts adds two

Posted in Fever Dreams, The Machine Girl, The Machine Girls News by admin @ May 28, 2008 - Comments (0)

Japanese aligned LA production and sales outfit Eleven Arts has picked up international rights, excluding Asia and certain territories, of a love story “Cobalt Blue.” Pic, now in production, is directed by Yosuke Nakagawa as an adaptation of his own novel, and stars Masami Nagasawa (”Crying Out Love, in the Center of the World”.)

Company also picked up “Tokyo Gore Police,” a horror-actioner from the same team as sales hit “The Machine Girl.” Helmed by Yoshihiro Nishimura , it stars Eihi Shiina (star of “Audition”) and Itsuji Itao. Eleven Arts is selling rights outside the U.S. and Japan.
Patrick Frater

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