Le parrain d'un grand syndicat du crime ordonne à son lieutenant de faire rentrer dans le rang un gang de trafiquants de drogue dissident, une tâche que ce dernier transmet à son subordonné ... Tout lireLe parrain d'un grand syndicat du crime ordonne à son lieutenant de faire rentrer dans le rang un gang de trafiquants de drogue dissident, une tâche que ce dernier transmet à son subordonné souffre-douleur.Le parrain d'un grand syndicat du crime ordonne à son lieutenant de faire rentrer dans le rang un gang de trafiquants de drogue dissident, une tâche que ce dernier transmet à son subordonné souffre-douleur.
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
- Ôtomo
- (as Beat Takeshi)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFollowing a string of unconventional, commercially unappealing films, Takeshi Kitano engineered this film specifically as commercially appealing, going back to the genre which brought him the most success, and going as far as imagining the death scenes first and writing a story around them later.
- Citations
Ikemoto: H-h-hold on a minute...
[panting]
Ikemoto: I'll reverse the banishment.
Ôtomo: Huh?
Ikemoto: I'll reverse the banishment.
Ôtomo: You banish me, then you reverse it?
[explodes]
Ôtomo: How many fucking tongues do you have?
Ikemoto: Huh?
Ôtomo: Are you deaf? How many do you have?
Ikemoto: I've only got one.
Ôtomo: Only one? *Two* or *three* is more like it, you fucking prick!
Ikemoto: I'm telling you I've only got one tongue!
Ôtomo: [a little calmer] Open your mouth.
[louder]
Ôtomo: Stick out your tongue!
Ikemoto: [beat] Huh?
Ôtomo: [barking] Stick out your tongue!
[Ikemoto reveals reluctantly a bit of his tongue]
Ôtomo: MORE!
[Ikemoto does]
Ôtomo: STICK IT OUT, YOU MOTHERFUCKER!
[Ikemoto sticks out his entire tongue, then Otomo slams his jaw so violently that Ikemoto bites through his own tongue; Otomo then shoots him]
- ConnexionsFeatured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Episode #2.18 (2011)
The great Japanese director Beat Takeshi returns to the big screen with ¨Outrage¨ dealing with a genre that gave him international recognition and made him one of the best Asian filmmakers , and being Takeshi Kitano's first gangster film in ten years , after Brother (2000) . It is an exciting picture displaying suspense , tension , and interesting gangsters war , though sometimes difficult to follow . There is also a cruel depiction of Yakuza life in the 21st century . The story opens with a striking wide shot of a large group of gangsters dressed in black as their leaders meet , these guys have sworn allegiance to their bosses, but it means little once the bullets start flying . Cold and violent film with a confuse plot , twisted intrigue , grisly killings , thrills , chilling events and colorful images . His stunning long takes can resemble intricate paintings while his characters enjoy little respite from the ruthlessness of the real world . However , it results to be a little bit boring , including with no sense dialogs and some embarrassing situations adding brutal murders . Following a string of unconventional , commercially unappealing films, Takeshi Kitano engineered this film specifically as commercially appealing, going back to the genre which brought him the most success, and going as far as imagining the death scenes first and writing a story around them later .
The motion picture was professionally directed by Takeshi Kitano in his peculiar style , being his first film shot in 2.35:1 format . Since his 1989 directorial debut, Kitano has written, directed, edited or starred in almost a film per year without losing the momentum of his originality and heightened artistic sensibility. The extraordinary success of 1997's Hana Bi confirmed Kitano's place as a leading figure of international cinema , here offered remarkable visions of violence and beauty . Among its numerous awards, "Hana-bi" or ¨Fireworks¨ won Venice Film Festival's Golden Lion and was named Best Non-European Film by the European Film Academy . In 2000 Kitano made Brother (2000), his first film shot outside of Japan. Originally a comedy star on Japanese television, Takeshi Kitano , aka Beat Takeshi , rose to international fame as a director of Yakuza dramas during the 1990s . "Brother", like other Kitano-directed films such as his debut "Violent Cop" , ¨Boiling Point¨ (1990) and ¨Sonatine¨ (1993), centered around Yakuza (gangster) characters. The filmmaker contrasted the violence and action of those films with comedy or tenderness in films like Ano Natsu, Ichiban Shizukana Umi (1991) (US title: "A Scene at the Sea"), Minnâ-Yatteruka! (1994) (US title: "Getting Any?"), Kizzu ritân (1996) (US title: "Kids Return") and Kikujiro (1999). For the first time in six years, Kitano remained strictly behind the camera on Dolls (2002), his tenth film as a writer-director . His last film is this ¨Outrage¨ that most closely resembles 2000's Brother in tone, but it outdoes that picture by remaining unpredictable with constant betrayals , getting a considerable success .
- ma-cortes
- 20 juill. 2014
- Lien permanent
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- How long is Outrage?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Outrage
- Lieux de tournage
- Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Japon(Exterior)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 44 745 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 6 518 $ US
- 4 déc. 2011
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 8 457 741 $ US
- Durée1 heure 49 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1