VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,1/10
13.327
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un agente di polizia incline alla violenza scopre che il suo collega è un trafficante di droga.Un agente di polizia incline alla violenza scopre che il suo collega è un trafficante di droga.Un agente di polizia incline alla violenza scopre che il suo collega è un trafficante di droga.
- Premi
- 3 vittorie e 1 candidatura
Takeshi Kitano
- Azuma
- (as Beat Takeshi)
Sei Hiraizumi
- Iwaki
- (as Shigeru Hiraizumi)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizTakeshi Kitano insisted on long takes. Close-ups easily lasted 10 seconds, medium shots went on for 20 seconds and the shot where Azuma (Kitano) walks onto the bridge and into the frame lasted 57 seconds.
- BlooperBoom mic visible from behind a car at 49:28 as Iwaki approaches Azuma.
- Citazioni
Azuma: Turn yourself in tomorrow.
Delinquent Kid: I didn't do anything!
Azuma: You didn't do anything?
[Rams kid's head into the wall.]
Azuma: Well, then I didn't do anything either!
- Curiosità sui creditiThere are no opening credits beyond the title.
- Versioni alternativeWhen the film was released in Swedish cinemas in 1992, it was censored with a little more than one minute for violence, the cuts were made in the following scenes:
- The policeman getting assaulted before he gets his head crushed by a baseball bat.
- The scene where Azuma assaults Hazishume on the toilet, and the finger cutting sequence.
- The following cuts are when Azuma assaults the killer in the locker room and a bloody execution scene at the end.
- ConnessioniFeatured in 7 psicopatici (2012)
- Colonne sonoreGnossienne No.1
(1890)
Main theme is an electronic variation of the above title by Erik Satie
Arranged by Daisaku Kume
Performed by Daisaku Kume
Produced by Kazuyoshi Okuyama
Courtesy by Vap Inc.
Recensione in evidenza
Kitano cripples the senses and jars the nerves in his films. This is a movie about a two-fisted cop whose blunt face and cliff's edge personality drive every scene, even the ones Kitano is not in. Kitano's character is not reacting to a violent world, but infecting it with his own brand of violence. The "violent cop" has lost his hope, therefore he fears nothing.
Kitano as director gives us a real world of humor and interaction. Events happen, there's no plot. Every scene has this pulse that is raging, the characters even when still seem kinetic as sprinters. Punches, kicks, and bullets explode bodies. Kitano's character clashes with a psychotic hit man, but it is Kitano's cop who is out of control, unstoppable in his desire to inflict justice as he sees it.
There's scenes which cannot be forgotten: Kitano's cop
interrogates a punk drug dealer in a club rest room. These two actors go through a scene in which Kitano slaps this man over and over until he talks. The difference is that Kitano is really slapping this actor, and slapping living hell out of him. Cringe-worthy, and up there with one of the other scenes that illustrates what a hard man Kitano is: stabbed with a knife, Kitano grips the blade as it comes out of him, clinching his fist down on it so he cannot be stabbed again. Blood pours out from between his fingers, he cannot let it go because his fist and knife are one; Kitano understands the brutality of the fight, the reality of two men trying to kill each other, no quips, no words, no yells or curses, just blood and rage; cut to the bone, it's the way the whole film makes you feel.
As far as the recent BROTHER is concerned, it makes perfect sense for Kitano to use similar themes seen in his earlier films. BROTHER is Kitano's first real attack on American audiences. They, en mass, haven't seen his stuff, and if Kitano's going over old ground, he's doing it in HIS style. Better a retread Kitano than most of Hollywood's slobbering star-cramped idiocy.
Kitano as director gives us a real world of humor and interaction. Events happen, there's no plot. Every scene has this pulse that is raging, the characters even when still seem kinetic as sprinters. Punches, kicks, and bullets explode bodies. Kitano's character clashes with a psychotic hit man, but it is Kitano's cop who is out of control, unstoppable in his desire to inflict justice as he sees it.
There's scenes which cannot be forgotten: Kitano's cop
interrogates a punk drug dealer in a club rest room. These two actors go through a scene in which Kitano slaps this man over and over until he talks. The difference is that Kitano is really slapping this actor, and slapping living hell out of him. Cringe-worthy, and up there with one of the other scenes that illustrates what a hard man Kitano is: stabbed with a knife, Kitano grips the blade as it comes out of him, clinching his fist down on it so he cannot be stabbed again. Blood pours out from between his fingers, he cannot let it go because his fist and knife are one; Kitano understands the brutality of the fight, the reality of two men trying to kill each other, no quips, no words, no yells or curses, just blood and rage; cut to the bone, it's the way the whole film makes you feel.
As far as the recent BROTHER is concerned, it makes perfect sense for Kitano to use similar themes seen in his earlier films. BROTHER is Kitano's first real attack on American audiences. They, en mass, haven't seen his stuff, and if Kitano's going over old ground, he's doing it in HIS style. Better a retread Kitano than most of Hollywood's slobbering star-cramped idiocy.
- robotman-1
- 28 giu 2001
- Permalink
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1.960 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 43 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Violent Cop (1989) officially released in Canada in French?
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