Almost defying description, Miike's film opens with found documentary footage about sperm production in young males and then turns to a graphically violent recreation of the execution in 1865 of the 28-year-old Okada Izo, a low-born samurai who fought and killed in the service of the anti-shogun rebel Hanpeita Takechi. Fast-forward through fifteen decades of Japanese history: suddenly Izo's spirit possesses the body of a homeless man in an alley of Tokyo's financial district. The reincarnated assassin goes on a killing rampage through time and space, from the Warring States period to the day after tomorrow, slaughtering everyone from a Buddhist elder to the prime minister ('Beat' Takeshi in one of dozens of star cameos), not forgetting his own mother. Nothing can stop him, because Izo is negation itself: the contradiction spewed up by the 'perfect system' that is Japan. Nothing is immune to his attack, except perhaps the godlike emperor (Matsuda Ryuhei, dishy in silk) and the maternal goddess of mercy (the ineffable Momoi Kaori). Standing to one side, watching and commenting in song, is Tomokawa Kazuki, a radical folkie from the 1960s. So, is this the first philosophical splatter film? A demolition of Japan's body politic? Or maybe a sensitive account of the programming of male hormones? Miike's answer is up there on the screen, and my guess is that he's smiling. (TR)
- Director
- Miike Takashi
- Country of production
- Japan
- Year
- 2004
- Festival Edition
- IFFR 2005
- Length
- 128'
- Medium
- 35mm
- Original title
- Izo: Kaosu mataha fujori no kijin
- Language
- Japanese
- Producers
- Kss Inc., Excellent Film Co., Office Hatano Inc
- Sales
- Omuro, Excellent Film Co.
- Cast
- Beat Takeshi