Search - Yakuza Graveyard on DVD


Yakuza Graveyard
Yakuza Graveyard
Actors: Tetsuya Watari, Meiko Kaji, Seizo Fukumoto, Takuzo Kawatani, Hideo Murota
Director: Kinji Fukasaku
Genres: Action & Adventure, Indie & Art House, Drama, Mystery & Suspense
UR     2006     1hr 37min

Studio: Kino International Release Date: 07/31/2007

     
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Movie Details

Actors: Tetsuya Watari, Meiko Kaji, Seizo Fukumoto, Takuzo Kawatani, Hideo Murota
Director: Kinji Fukasaku
Creators: Toru Nakajima, Kazuo Kasahara
Genres: Action & Adventure, Indie & Art House, Drama, Mystery & Suspense
Sub-Genres: Crime, Indie & Art House, Drama, Mystery & Suspense
Studio: Kino Video
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen - Closed-captioned,Subtitled
DVD Release Date: 06/27/2006
Original Release Date: 01/01/1976
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/1976
Release Year: 2006
Run Time: 1hr 37min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 2
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Languages: Japanese
Subtitles: English

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Movie Reviews

Another Great Fukasaku Yakuza Film! 4 1/2 Stars!
Erik Rupp | Southern California | 11/25/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Kinji Fukasaku had a long, distinguished career as a film director in Japan. His movies were successful and highly influential within Japanese cinema, but outside of the Japan his work was only known by fans of Japanese movies - a small cult following that found collecting his movies to be difficult.

Then, at the end of his career, Fukasaku directed a movie that received considerable attention internationally - Battle Royale - and his prior works were snapped up by several distributors. The most notable of these works is, perhaps, The Yakuza Papers series (also known as Battles Without Honor and Humanity), but Fukasaku made dozens of movies, most of them quite good (among them Street Mobster, Graveyard of Honor, Cops VS Thugs, and a few great Samurai movies including Shogun's Samurai/Yagyu Clan Conspiracy, and Swords of Vengeance/The Fall of Ako Castle). All of those movies were made in the 70's - arguably Fukasaku's greatest period in his career.

During that time Fukasaku also made another great Yakuza film, this one - Yakuza Graveyard. Yakuza Graveyard focuses on a, "Cop on the edge," (before that became totally cliche'd), and his relationship with both his fellow police officers AND the Yakuza members he is supposed to stop. Without giving too much away he becomes conflicted between the two worlds, and finds that there is both honor and dishonor on both sides.

The movie is a hard edged, no holds barred movie filled with violence. It also has a very solid script as the main characters are compelling and fairly well rounded. The camera work lends itself to realism, although Fukasaku does turn the camera literally on its side for some shots.

Yakuza Graveyard is a, "Must Have," for Fukasaku fans, and for fans of the Yakuza genre in general. Even for people who have not seen many (if any) Yakuza films, but like movies like Goodfellas, this is a good film to check out and test the waters.

Kino's DVD is quite good, with good Anamorphic Widescreen picture quality and decent sound (it doesn't sound great, but it is over 30 years old and sounds good considering its age). I've read that there is some VERY mild motion blurring when people move really fast, but I looked for it and didn't see any (and I have seen it on other DVD's, so if it's there, it must be VERY minor). The color is good, the constrast level looks right, and the picture is sharp and clear.

If you like Yakuza Graveyard you will have to get the entire Yakuza Papers/Battles Without Honor and Humanity series (five films), and if you are a fan of the Yakuza Papers movies you must order Yakuza Graveyard. Now. (It's that good.)"
Cop & Society on a Downward Spiral
telecaster62 | The Upper Middle | 04/25/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Dirty Harry had a phantom wife haunting his world view, 'Popeye' Doyle had issues: Detective Kuroiwa as portrayed by Tetsuya Watari is a friggin' MESS. Losing balance in a situation in which cops and yakuzas drink from the same trough, his friendships and lovers are no better. But by the tragic end, he's the least tainted.

Director Kinji Fukasaku loads this mid-1970's cops-and-gangsters film with his trademarks: ever-moving cameras, zooms, action, blood, violence, corruption, weasel police officials, psycho yakuzas, women forced to degrade themselves to survive. It even takes on the anti-Korean racism that still exists in some unenlightened corners of modern japan.

Interestingly, Tetsuya Watari had 10 years earlier starred in Seijun Suzuki's "Tokyo Drifter", another fantastic yakuza flick that's completely different. Whereas "Drifter" is chock full of Suzuki's colorful Vincent Minelli-inspired sets, crazy camera angles, mod fashions, comic timing and sly visual puns.. Fukasaku takes us to the polar extreme of gruesome no-holds-barred reality. There's no yakuza "chivalry" in Fukasaku's vision, and no reward for doing business with the devil."