Battle Royale |
(2005) |
Action, Sci-Fi, Sport, Thriller |
In Verzameling
#1618 |
0*
|
DVD
114 min. |
IMDB
8.0
|
Kinji Fukasaku | |
Fujiwara Tatsuya | |
Tatsuya Fujiwara | Shuya Nanahara - Boys #15 |
Aki Maeda | Noriko Nakagawa - Girls #15 |
Taro Yamamoto | Shôgo Kawada - Boys #5 |
Chiaki Kuriyama | Takako Chigusa - Girls #13 |
Sosuke Takaoka | Hiroki Sugimura - Boys #11 |
Takashi Tsukamoto | Shinji Mimura - Boys #19 |
Yukihiro Kotani | Yôshitoki Kuninobu - Boys #7 |
Eri Ishikawa | Yukie Utsumi - Girls #2 |
Sayaka Kamiya | Satomi Noda - Girls #17 |
Aki Inoue | Fumiyo Fujiyôshi - Girls #18 |
Regisseur | Kinji Fukasaku
|
Producent | Kenta Fukasaku
Kinji Fukasaku |
Schrijver | Koushun Takami
Kenta Fukasaku |
Once the prequel has been dispensed with, the classmates are drugged and awaken on an island where they find they have been fitted with dog collars that monitor their every move. Instructed by their old teacher ("Beat" Takeshi) with the aid of an upbeat MTV-style video, they are told of their fate: after an impartial lottery they have been chosen to fight each other in a three-day, no-rules contest, the "Battle Royale". Their only chance of survival in the "Battle" is through the death of all their classmates. Some pupils embrace their mission with zeal, while others simply give up or try to become peacemakers and revolutionaries. However, the ultimate drive for survival comes from the desire to protect the one you love.
The film looks like a war-flick on occasions, with intense Apocalypse Now-style imagery (check out the classical score blasted over the tannoys with sweeping shots of helicopters). Yet, Battle Royale works on many different levels, highlighting the authorities? desperation to enforce law and order and the alienation caused by the generation gap. But whether you view the film as an important social commentary or simply enjoy the adrenalin-fuelled violence, this is set to become cult viewing for the computer game generation and beyond. --Nikki Disney