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Blackmail Is My Life

Original title: Kyôkatsu koso waga jinsei
  • 1968
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
417
YOUR RATING
Blackmail Is My Life (1968)
ActionCrime

A pungent, extremely entertaining tale of hedonistic, amoral blackmailer Matsukata.A pungent, extremely entertaining tale of hedonistic, amoral blackmailer Matsukata.A pungent, extremely entertaining tale of hedonistic, amoral blackmailer Matsukata.

  • Director
    • Kinji Fukasaku
  • Writers
    • Shinji Fujiwara
    • Fumio Kônami
    • Hirô Matsuda
  • Stars
    • Hiroki Matsukata
    • Tomomi Satô
    • Hideo Murota
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    417
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Writers
      • Shinji Fujiwara
      • Fumio Kônami
      • Hirô Matsuda
    • Stars
      • Hiroki Matsukata
      • Tomomi Satô
      • Hideo Murota
    • 14User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos5

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    Top cast40

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    Hiroki Matsukata
    Hiroki Matsukata
    • Shun Muraki
    Tomomi Satô
    • Otoki
    Hideo Murota
    • Seki
    Tetsurô Tanba
    Tetsurô Tanba
    Kenjirô Ishiyama
    Kenjirô Ishiyama
    Akira Jo
    • Zero
    Eriko Sono
    Erikô Miharâ
    Yôko Mihara
    Yôko Mihara
    • Natsuko Mizuhara
    Keijirô Morozumi
    Keiji Takamiya
    Torahiko Hamada
    Shigeru Amachi
    Shigeru Amachi
    Joe Yamanaka
    Shirô Amakusa
    Bin Amatsu
    Shinjirô Ebara
      Hiroshi Hijikata
      • Director
        • Kinji Fukasaku
      • Writers
        • Shinji Fujiwara
        • Fumio Kônami
        • Hirô Matsuda
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews14

      6.8417
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      Featured reviews

      chaos-rampant

      Early Fukasaku picture sees the great director still honing his style, on his way to greater things

      Blackmail is my Life came in a transitional period for Japanese crime cinema and it shows that by being somehow stylistically confused. The genre was with one foot still set on the earlier Nikkatsu pictures that portrayed yakuzas as people who operated with some sense of chivalry (and BIML reflects that by having the blackmailers act as the heroes), the cool of Seijun Suzuki who bid the genre adieu with Branded to Kill one year earlier (and what an adieu that was) and one foot looking at the future.

      The first half of the picture resembles the colourful pop air of Suzuki and anticipates the disjointed timelines and narrative style of The Yakuza Papers. Hiroki Matsukata is Muraki; professional blackmailer and quite successful at that. He lies on a bed and remembers. Flashbacks show us his humble beginnings. They start in black and white then colour kicks in. Frames freeze while he narrates in a voice-over. We go back and forth like that until after the half hour mark the story starts to shape up. His rise as a prominent blackmailer is seen through a series of incidents that lead up to the big con.

      The second half is predicated more on character than style. Fukasaku puts the quirky flashbacks, stills and narration of the beginning to the side and focuses on the story in a straight-forward manner. He's just as good this way. The movie turns more cynical and gritty and the ending is particularly memorable.

      The director is still not at the top of his craft (it's relatively still early in his career) but he shows that he's not willing to settle down for a simple, run-of-the-mill yakuza flick. He gambles; sometimes he wins, sometimes he doesn't. But he dares and as the saying goes, fortune favours the brave. If he hadn't taken a stab at a different approach like BIML, maybe The Yakuza Papers would have never materialized in all its glory. In that sense, Fukasaku deserves kudos for taking chances and following his vision.

      Blackmail is my Life may not always be successful in its stylistic daring but it's entertaining and cool. As the missing link between the hard bop of the 60's and the grittiness of the 70's, it's an important part of the general picture. Fans owe it to themselves to check it out.
      7secondtake

      Styling, 1960s Japan: Gritty Locations, Great Crime Noir Mood, Fast and Tragic

      Blackmail Is My Life (1968)

      Well, the bad guys (four men and one woman, all young and good looking) have a lot of fun, and carry a lot of poise. As rank amateurs they are lucky and, between racing around in their car, show a lot of cool style. It's 1968 in Japan, and it feels like maybe 1964 in the U.S., with people still wearing suits and looking good doing it.

      Eventually, they get in over their heads, but we don't really worry at first. They often say vague things like, "We'll go ahead with out plan," but they never say what they are planning. And then the plan happens, and it's fast and jazzy, in a kind of extended television way. The plot is kind of interesting, digging into the underworld of Japan in this sideways fashion. And visually it's fun, very nice wide screen compositions in a wide range of gritty Japanese locations. There is even a dramatic, spare electric guitar score, perfect for the period.

      The more serious and deadly this movie gets, the more it loses it's lighthearted flaws. There is clearly (to me) an influence from Bonnie and Clyde (the previous year) with romanticizing bad guys and extended violence. There is some real poignancy built in, as well. There are lots of night scenes and dramatic lighting, and this has a late film noir kind of quality, somehow, dark and brooding between action scenes. If you don't mind some Japanese camp aspects, this might really make your night. And just a heads up: the second half is easier to like in a conventional way, even if the first half is more original and excessive.
      jkheumann

      a great visual experience

      Blackmail is My Life is one of four films that Fukasaku produced in that year and once again affirms not only his brilliant visual style but the incredible energy of the whole crew that worked with him. You have to see this film wide on a big screen to see how beautifully it is shot and composed. It moves fast but the visual strategies show Fukasaku's control over his world and produce a great viewing experience before you even have to delve into the brutal world of Japanese low lifes and the power of the political world that exists at the time. This film fits in comfortably with other films of the time from all over the globe where power and politics were being critiqued and examined from every angle and genre available.
      6davidhilley

      Well made, but not as thrilling as it could have been.

      The main character, Shun, characterized as a 'young punk' with his group of youthful, attractive social outcast friends, finds money in the business of blackmail in the underworld of an economically vibrant Japan. While riding high off a string of successful extortions of small time yakuza affiliates, their ill fated plot to steal a sensitive memorandum proves they have bitten off more than they can chew. I was initially impressed with the movie's style and pace and it seemed to be setting up a fun movie surrounding the exploits of this group of young bright eyed kids. I enjoyed how each character was given scenes that showcase them while Shun is still given the most back-story. That is all done in a pretty successfully stylized manner. But the main plot fails to really stimulate after the first 45 minutes of setup. I think the problem was that stealing a memorandum for money just wasn't as exciting as events that happened earlier in the movie and Fukasaku gets little heavy handed communicating themes in this later part of the movie, causing a few eye rolls on my part. A well shot movie- perhaps not the most realistic premise, and enjoyable, but not super thrilling.
      5planktonrules

      It's different but not especially distinguished.

      I noticed that IMDb lists this as a crime film AND a comedy. Well, there's nothing funny about the film--it's not at all a comedy. Instead, the film is about four low-lifes who make a career out of blackmailing people and fighting various mobs (who SHOULD have been able to smash them like bugs but somehow didn't throughout much of the film). For them, it all seems to be for the thrills and laughs--the money is secondary. However, the deeper the risk the greater the thrills--so they keep biting off more and more and more. You figure that eventually they'll get in way over their heads. And that is when their friend Zero (a black guy--which is quite unusual for a Japanese film) is killed, things look really bad for these bizarre anti-heroes.

      While this film is quite different from the usual mobster film of the time, it still is a pretty ordinary crime drama. It was reasonably entertaining but no more. For those who like the genre, it's worth seeing--for others, probably not.

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      Related interests

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      Action
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      Crime

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Title music, played several times during the film, is ripped off (different but substantially an imitation) from the 1966 Yardbirds' song "Over Under Sideways Down".
      • Connections
        References Tokyo Drifter (1966)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Language
        • Japanese
      • Also known as
        • Blackmail Is My Business
      • Production company
        • Shochiku
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 30m(90 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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