Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell Bastards!
Original title: Kutabare akutô-domo: Tantei jimusho 23
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Police detective Tajima, tasked with tracking down stolen firearms, turns an underworld grudge into a blood-bath.Police detective Tajima, tasked with tracking down stolen firearms, turns an underworld grudge into a blood-bath.Police detective Tajima, tasked with tracking down stolen firearms, turns an underworld grudge into a blood-bath.
Jô Shishido
- Hideo Tajima
- (as Joe Shishido)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.81K
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Featured reviews
Yet another Suzuku film that stars a human squirrel!
I have no idea why, but Japanese actor Jô Shishido apparently had plastic surgery in order to give him squirrel-like cheeks (you know--filled with acorns)!! This is according to IMDb and I have wondered why he would do this and why the director would keep starring this odd man in his films. I assume Suzuki just had some sort of cheek fetish! Regardless, it's pretty weird.
The film begins with some Yakuza (Japanese mobsters) being viciously gunned down during an illegal transaction of guns. Who did this is unknown--and a private detective (Mr. Squirrel) offers to solve the crime if the cops pay him and give him a new identity. Apparently there is another guy who is a mobster and part-time chipmunk, so they give him fake i.d. for that guy and agree to the rest of his terms. I didn't realize that cops accepted freelance commissions! The film, quite honestly, then gets a little confusing--something I noticed in other Suzuki films. But, the style is so cool and the story so full of neat little twists, that I didn't terribly mind. I am not sure why, but they cast a deliberately bad actress who apparently talks through her nose and dresses like a man as Squirrel-boy's assistant. Why?! I guess it's just another weird touch in a generally weird film. Another thing you do need to say about this film is that it has fantastic music--very 1960s and very cool. It's sort of like James Bond music, cool jazz and Beach movie music combined! And in addition, there are some very kooky music numbers in nightclubs that you just have to see. Weird and fun.
The film begins with some Yakuza (Japanese mobsters) being viciously gunned down during an illegal transaction of guns. Who did this is unknown--and a private detective (Mr. Squirrel) offers to solve the crime if the cops pay him and give him a new identity. Apparently there is another guy who is a mobster and part-time chipmunk, so they give him fake i.d. for that guy and agree to the rest of his terms. I didn't realize that cops accepted freelance commissions! The film, quite honestly, then gets a little confusing--something I noticed in other Suzuki films. But, the style is so cool and the story so full of neat little twists, that I didn't terribly mind. I am not sure why, but they cast a deliberately bad actress who apparently talks through her nose and dresses like a man as Squirrel-boy's assistant. Why?! I guess it's just another weird touch in a generally weird film. Another thing you do need to say about this film is that it has fantastic music--very 1960s and very cool. It's sort of like James Bond music, cool jazz and Beach movie music combined! And in addition, there are some very kooky music numbers in nightclubs that you just have to see. Weird and fun.
Unique cocktail
What happens when you mix Adam West's Batman with James Bond, jazz music and pop art? Well... this movie. It's plain fun, full of primary colors, with a stylish hero in silk suit who doesn't take himself too seriously, clever deception tactics, gangs with samurai swords, pow! biff! bang!
Add Suzuki's usual game that transforms "continuity goofs" in virtue... Your usual "time" and "space" will be challenged. This is an acquired taste. If you are fan of Suzuki then this is a must. All of his trademarks are already there. And if you want to taste a new drink, this is a good chance.
Suzuki would be fired some years later since for the president of Nikkatsu Studios "we don't need a director who makes movies nobody understands". Suzuki's reply? "Why make a movie about something one understands completely? I make movies about things I do not understand, but wish to."
This film might serve as an aperitif for a different type of cinema. It will stimulate your appetite.
Add Suzuki's usual game that transforms "continuity goofs" in virtue... Your usual "time" and "space" will be challenged. This is an acquired taste. If you are fan of Suzuki then this is a must. All of his trademarks are already there. And if you want to taste a new drink, this is a good chance.
Suzuki would be fired some years later since for the president of Nikkatsu Studios "we don't need a director who makes movies nobody understands". Suzuki's reply? "Why make a movie about something one understands completely? I make movies about things I do not understand, but wish to."
This film might serve as an aperitif for a different type of cinema. It will stimulate your appetite.
Straightforward Suzuki is still awesome
This was made slightly before the time when Suzuki began to experiment with the medium more radically. That would be Youth of the Beast. This one is more straightforward. Yet it is not any less entertaining. The guy was a heck of a director, even when he was apparently bored with what he saw as generic assignments. Jo Shishido stars as a private detective. He is hired by the police to infiltrate a yakuza gang to help them stop their gun running ring. The story doesn't always make a ton of sense, but it moves along so quickly that you might only realize it later. Shishido is awesome, and the film includes three wildly colored musical numbers (at night clubs - it's in no way a musical). Jo Shishido even joins into one of the numbers, which is just orgasmic!
Japanese Pop Cinema
Having seen no comment for this film, I decide to put up my own. This is the first Suzuki film that I saw, What struck me about the film was how accessible it was to western audiences. It really was a 60's crime thriller, Joe Shishido could easily be the Japanese James Bond. Another thing that struck me was the music, having become accustomed to hearing traditional chants and whistle tunes in Chambara films, I was surprised to hear a song that could effortlessly be converted to English. Not only that but I really did like the music in the film, I also have a feeling that Suzuki is a man of music, as it seems to be a crucial element in all his films.
Although by no means a masterpiece, I do think that this is a light, enjoyable film, not as heavy going as some other Japanese films. If you are interested in discovering Japanese Pop Cinema, I think that this is an easy beginner's step but that's just one man's opinion, check it out for yourself.
7/10
Although by no means a masterpiece, I do think that this is a light, enjoyable film, not as heavy going as some other Japanese films. If you are interested in discovering Japanese Pop Cinema, I think that this is an easy beginner's step but that's just one man's opinion, check it out for yourself.
7/10
Seijun Suzuki displays Japan living up in westernization process!!
The small Japanese studio Nikkatsu had the still young Seijun Suzuki at their directors, here he displays an American oriented offering nearby James Bond in western pop culture, allied with several elements that affirms such guidance as the burlesque environment as those flashy neon night clubs where gambling and dancing girls are the highlights scored by Jazz & beatnik among fancy sport car in a Japanese westernization process with a slight humor oriented neither.
In this newest colorful ambience the picture unfolds, when a private detective without any apparent purposes put himself in jeopardy against some Yakuza's mobs aided by local police to infiltrate between the criminals, a kind of lone hero, backed by strong erotic appeals as often Seijun Suzuki did in others pictures, it somehow reward the audience plenty, aside the usual mismatches the movie is utterly enjoyable mainly by the leading star Jô Shishido in flawless acting, overall it exposes a Japan in makeover process, great actioner Hollywoodian picture.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2025 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8.
In this newest colorful ambience the picture unfolds, when a private detective without any apparent purposes put himself in jeopardy against some Yakuza's mobs aided by local police to infiltrate between the criminals, a kind of lone hero, backed by strong erotic appeals as often Seijun Suzuki did in others pictures, it somehow reward the audience plenty, aside the usual mismatches the movie is utterly enjoyable mainly by the leading star Jô Shishido in flawless acting, overall it exposes a Japan in makeover process, great actioner Hollywoodian picture.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2025 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in Seijun Suzuki | TCM (2013)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Go to Hell Bastards!: Detective Bureau 2-3
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.45 : 1
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