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Graveyard of Honor

Original title: Jingi no hakaba
  • 1975
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Graveyard of Honor (1975)
ActionCrime

A self-destructive man becomes a powerful member of the Japanese mafia but quickly loses his self control. Based on the true story of Rikio Ishikawa.A self-destructive man becomes a powerful member of the Japanese mafia but quickly loses his self control. Based on the true story of Rikio Ishikawa.A self-destructive man becomes a powerful member of the Japanese mafia but quickly loses his self control. Based on the true story of Rikio Ishikawa.

  • Director
    • Kinji Fukasaku
  • Writers
    • Tatsuhiko Kamoi
    • Hirô Matsuda
    • Fumio Kônami
  • Stars
    • Tetsuya Watari
    • Tatsuo Umemiya
    • Yumi Takigawa
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Writers
      • Tatsuhiko Kamoi
      • Hirô Matsuda
      • Fumio Kônami
    • Stars
      • Tetsuya Watari
      • Tatsuo Umemiya
      • Yumi Takigawa
    • 14User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos8

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    Top cast70

    Edit
    Tetsuya Watari
    Tetsuya Watari
    • Rikio Ishikawa
    Tatsuo Umemiya
    Tatsuo Umemiya
    • Kozaburo Imai
    Yumi Takigawa
    • Chieko Ishikawa
    Eiji Gô
    Eiji Gô
    • Makoto Sugiura
    Noboru Andô
    • Ryunosuke Nozu
    Hajime Hana
    • Shuzo Kawada
    Mikio Narita
    Mikio Narita
    • Noboru Kajiki
    Kunie Tanaka
    Kunie Tanaka
    • Katsuji Ozaki
    Shingo Yamashiro
    • Hiroshi Tamura
    Reiko Ike
    Reiko Ike
    • Teruko Imai
    Hideo Murota
    • Yasuo Matsuoka
    Meika Seri
    • Woman in the slums
    Takuji Aoki
    Kenjirô Asano
    Hidehiro Aya
    Kenta Dan
    Saburô Date
    Saburô Date
    Ryôko Ema
    • Director
      • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Writers
      • Tatsuhiko Kamoi
      • Hirô Matsuda
      • Fumio Kônami
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    7.12.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8elo-equipamentos

    Kenji Fukasaku exposes sympathize for a mad dog character!!!

    It's an unusual Yakusa picture, according some Fukasaku's most closest work friends interviewed on bonus material explained that Rikio Schikawa a wild persona portrayed by Tetsuya Watari is meaning the compassion whereby Fukasaku felt by those losers in the society, thus the story spans since his tender years just narrated by someone until post WWII when the acting really starts properly, exposing a kind of mad dog criminal character entering in a Yakusa gang making great damages whatever he goes, thus has been punished by banishment for ten years in agreement of Yakusa's law, however he dares go back in few years.

    Another interesting point is about the fully chaos carried out there by lost the war, followed by American military intervention which wasn't any novelty, although countless people from nearby countries raided the Japanese ground as reprisals over the fierce and ruthless deployed by Japanese Army on previous years on the continent, also inserting those drugs displayed on story, brought massively aftermaths the war and all black market over an economy in ramshackle.

    Aside some overacted implied by Kenji Fukasaku on the narrative, the picture in fully interesting by a character study, also understanding how Japan overcame those chaotic environment post WWII, where the Yakusa's mobsters took the political power in many territory thru "good looking civilians" a true achievement by the underrated master Kenji Fikasaku.

    Thanks for reading.

    Resume:

    First watch: 2025 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8.
    chaos-rampant

    Fukasaku annihilates the gangster genre

    The bittersweet irony of Fukasaku was that he was a talented man that only became known to us through his last film. So it's enthralling to discover small gems like this when in the West we were praising Scorsese for his grittiness.

    It helps to know a bit about this type, the yakuza film. Fukasaku's The Yakuza Papers series offer all the introduction you're going to need.

    If you are acquainted this will come as a pleasant surprise. The plot is nowhere near as convoluted, the barrage of constant name-dropping that made the former occasionally hard to follow is absent. Instead we get the distilled energy, with hand-held cameras peering from the most improbable angles, filming the numerous fights not from a distance but in the middle of the swirl. We get stills, narration, clever use of sepia, fast forwards and so on, years before Tarantino made it cool.

    Yet what sets Graveyard of Honour apart from other yakuza movies is the protagonist. He's not the typical rags to riches and back figure seen in gangster movies. He doesn't hit the good time before falling down, he's not Tony Montana. No, it's all down-hill for him; a self-destructive yakuza without a care in the world who brings about his own misery and challenges his bad karma at every corner. His nihilistic stare reminded me of Ryonosuke Tsukue from Sword of Doom.

    Strongly recommended for crime drama fans.
    7Jeremy_Urquhart

    A good Japanese crime film

    Definitely has similarities to Fukasaku's Yakuza Papers series (not that there's anything wrong with that!) in terms of pacing and visuals. It is, however, a little easier to follow, thanks to honing in on one main protagonist all the way through, and not having as many important supporting characters.

    Most challenging here is that the protagonist does some really terrible things, even by the standards of crime film protagonists. He's not supposed to be likeable of course, but the film arguably does go a little further than it needs to when it comes to how he treats some female characters.

    Other complaints might be some occasional weird, jarring edits, and the colour filters - while keeping things varied - didn't always seem to be purposeful? But that might just be me.

    So there are problems, but the acting is good, as is everything that works in the Yakuza Papers series, so Graveyard of Honor is easy to recommend to any fans of that series, or Yakuza movies like them.

    Am looking forward to watching Miike's remake, too. I hope there's a good reason for it being 40 minutes longer than this one, too.
    searchanddestroy-1

    Typical seventies Fukasaku's work

    This crime and social drama flick made during the seventies is typical of the Kinji Fukasaku's films of this period. Brutal full of excess and fast moving scenes, it reunites Tetsua Watari and Ando Noburu in this violent and bloody Japanese crime flick inspired from actual events where the director seems to glorify the hoodlums; as if the film maker from the Rising Sun country wanted to show some kind of Japanese Jimmy Cagney's role. Some kind of Japanese WHITE HEAT.
    6JoeytheBrit

    30 Years of Madness

    Kinji Fukasaku's mid-70s faux-biopic of a sociopath Yakuza gangster in late-40s Japan is certainly an absorbing experience, even if it never quite manages to immerse the viewer entirely in the nihilism of the world in which Tetsuya Watari's Rikio Ishikawa exists. It's difficult really to determine whether Fukasaku is trying to attract or repulse us here and, for me, this is the film's main weakness. Ishikawa has no redeeming features: he's simply a crude, boorish rapist and murderer who invokes unexplainable loyalty in those around him. There is some amusement to be found in the bewilderment of Ishikawa's Yakuza superiors, who don't seem to know quite what to do with the loose cannon in their midst (presumably something in the Yakuza code prevents them from simply taking him into a back alley and shooting him like a dog) but, for all its kinetic energy and undeniable style Graveyard of Honour mostly fails to fascinate, and fascinate it must – the way a caterpillar squirming on the end of a pin fascinates – if it is to hold an audience who can feel little or no connection with its main character.

    Despite these criticisms, the film is never dull. Fukasaku is an unsurpassable director, completely confident of his skills, totally focused, and unafraid to adopt subjects and styles that must have seemed out of the ordinary at the time. It's to his credit that most of the techniques he uses in this film are still widely used today – especially by US gangster flicks. Fukasaku fills the screen with people in this one, countless people, hundreds of them, conveying the raucous and claustrophobic overcrowding of a country recovering from a bruising war. And while attention to period detail is perhaps not this film's strong point, this shortcoming is overcome by good use of sepia tones to reinforce the sense of history.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime

    Storyline

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    • Connections
      Featured in IFC Grindhouse: Graveyard of Honor (2007)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 15, 1975 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Home Vision Entertainment (DVD Distributor)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Psycho Junkie
    • Filming locations
      • Ikebukuro, Tokyo, Japan
    • Production company
      • Toei Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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