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Deadly Outlaw: Rekka

Original title: Jitsuroku Andô Noboru kyôdô-den: Rekka
  • 2002
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Riki Takeuchi in Deadly Outlaw: Rekka (2002)
CrimeDramaThriller

When his beloved boss is killed, a dangerous young gangster cuts a path of vengeance through the Japanese mafia.When his beloved boss is killed, a dangerous young gangster cuts a path of vengeance through the Japanese mafia.When his beloved boss is killed, a dangerous young gangster cuts a path of vengeance through the Japanese mafia.

  • Director
    • Takashi Miike
  • Writer
    • Shigenori Takechi
  • Stars
    • Riki Takeuchi
    • Ryôsuke Miki
    • Ken'ichi Endô
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Takashi Miike
    • Writer
      • Shigenori Takechi
    • Stars
      • Riki Takeuchi
      • Ryôsuke Miki
      • Ken'ichi Endô
    • 13User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos30

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    Top cast20

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    Riki Takeuchi
    Riki Takeuchi
    • Kunisada
    Ryôsuke Miki
    • Sudo
    Ken'ichi Endô
    Ken'ichi Endô
    • Eiichi Shimatani
    Mika Katsumura
    Shin'ichi Chiba
    Shin'ichi Chiba
    • Yasunori Hijikata
    Yûya Uchida
    Yûya Uchida
    Tetsurô Tanba
    Tetsurô Tanba
    • Sanada
    Daijirô Harada
    • Nakajo
    Renji Ishibashi
    Renji Ishibashi
    • Otaki
    Shigeo Kobayashi
    Lily
    • Kunisada's Godmother
    Kazuya Nakayama
    • Iguchi
    Miho Nomoto
    Miho Nomoto
    Masaru Shiga
    • Detective Hideaki Asai
    Yûta Sone
    • Hiroshi
    Kyôsuke Yabe
    Yoshiyuki Yamaguchi
    • Tabata
    Joe Yamanaka
    • Director
      • Takashi Miike
    • Writer
      • Shigenori Takechi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.71.7K
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    Featured reviews

    chaos-rampant

    Miike as good as he's ever been in the yakuza genre

    Seemingly modeled after DEAD OR ALIVE, starting off with a stylistical hodge podge of slow-mo gunfights and paranoid posturing and sizzling in the finale with a fair share of comic-book outrageousness, Rekka succeeds as a movie not for being ultraviolent or particularly graphic (it is neither by Miike standards - although still violent enough to raise a public outcry if it was the work of a mainstream American director), not because yakuza underlings get shot full of holes or Riki Takeuchi scowls like a bulldog as he shoots rocket launchers in the middle of crowded streets (DOA homage anyone?), not for the sound and fury, but for the moments in between. In that respect, Rekka is antithetical to DOA. Whereas DOA dragged through a drab and lifeless middle act to arrive at an exciting conclusion, Rekka sustains itself through moments of quietude and intimacy. In between the outbursts of violence, Miike gives us life as lived. Takeuchi's friend giving him advice on his hair dye. The glances between Takeuchi and his Korean girlfriend. The dingy eateries, night clubs and neon-lit streets - Miike prowling Fukasaku's stampin' grounds half a century after the patriarch of the yakuza film first pictured a different kind of postwar Japan.

    In the end, Rekka works so well as a movie because Miike restrains the child within him eager to shock and impress and embraces the dramatist who observes the small moments of life. The plot is mostly forgettable, something about the son of a yakuza boss going on a spree to avenge the death of his father while a gangland conspiracy festers behind and a war between the different fractions is about to break out, and Takeuchi in the leading role scowls a little too much for my liking. But overall, this is as good a yakuza flick as I've seen from Miike, violent, funny, occasionally beautiful, imaginatively conceived but hastily executed (as with most Miike films), a thoroughbred Miike flick bearing all his trademarks, one aimed at both the heart and the gut. Not a masterpiece of any kind but a worthwhile movie.
    5spanky6666

    Not as good as I expected it to be...

    Those of you that are used to American-style movies, don't watch this because you're probably going to be bored. People, like me, who are used to weird Japanese movie-styles will mildly enjoy this movie. The editing is very strange, sometimes you get the impression that your DVD has skipped, the sound is also weird in some places, I can't explain exactly what's wrong with it but watch this film and you'll know what I mean.

    I recently watched "Imprint". That's an episode in the "Masters Of Horror"-series directed by Takashi Miike. THAT's what I call a strong and violent film. It was awesome!

    Don't expect too much and you will be entertained. But not as much as you expected. A decent watch. Nothing to keep.
    4Leofwine_draca

    Forgettable Yakuza tale

    DEADLY OUTLAW: REKKA is a rare misfire from the usually interesting Takashi Miike, who can typically be relied upon from making outrageously entertaining movies. This is a standard Yakuza movie, featuring a low rent thug who decides to go on an odyssey of revenge, yet despite a few moments of surrealism and violence you can't really tell it's a Miike film at all.

    Instead it has more in common with low budget art-house fare, featuring interchangeable characters and some padded scenes of characters wandering the streets aimlessly at night. Oh, there's bound to be a brutal fight scene or execution around the next corner, but there isn't anything that makes you care about what's going on. Okay, I don't watch a Miike film for the characterisation, but at least ICHI THE KILLER had tons of incident and AUDITION's slow build worked when matched with THAT ending.

    This one's predictable in the extreme, I couldn't care less about the characters, and the whole 'stone face' type of acting is just a bit dull. Miike tries to spice things up with a sex scene here and a mutilation there, but it isn't enough; for much of the running time, I was simply bored. DEADLY OUTLAW: REKKA does have the same kind of hustle and vibe as the early gangster films of Beat Takeshi, but it lacks their finesse and raw power. Attempts to make it feel like an old-fashioned grindhouse movie of the 1970s don't really gel either; instead this movie is both slight and forgettable.
    Demogorgo

    If you've seen Agitator or Kikoku, you know exactly what to expect.

    Rekka is a movie that deals with the theme of backstabbing and diplomacy of the new Yakuza clashing against the violence and honor of the old Yakuza; a common theme in Miike's under-the-radar gangster movies. It begins when the protagonist's father, the leader of a crime family, is killed. Before he knows what's happening, the new boss of his gang is already making agreements and accepting the murder to avoid a full-scale gang war. Needless to say, the son isn't happy, so he seeks revenge on the rival crime family. Knowing this, the new boss tries to get rid of him so that he can enjoy his new place in the Yakuza hierarchy.

    On its own, this is an exciting modern Yakuza thriller filled with bloodshed and intrigue. But if you're already a Miike fan, you might be let down by a few details.

    Rekka follows a pretty distinct formula. It has the same plot ideas, nearly the same characters, some of the same actors, and the same filmmakers as Agitator and Kikoku (which came out later). While Miike changes up the style and feel of each one, it still looks like he made three different versions of the same movie. Shigenori Takechi, the screenwriter of all three, has to be the laziest guy in the film industry. You see the same characters doing the same things, only with different names and settings. Like the other movies, the protagonist is a seemingly invincible and honorable guy who just can't seem to get killed no matter what he does. There is a charismatic and equally invincible hit-man chasing him. There are greedy and cowardly superiors that only he can stand up to. There is a dethroned and deceased father figure that he wants to avenge. And of course, there is a love interest that appears for a few minutes combined and has no personality or reason to even be in this movie.

    The way that this movie is different is that the feel is a little more intense and modern than the other two. The visuals and camera-work are comparatively better and do a much better job of grabbing your attention. It is not as slow-paced and complicated as Agitator (clearly the best of the three), and it's all-around better than Kikoku (the worst). The ending is the most unique part. For better or worse, it is incredibly strange, and I know that some people will like it. Rekka appears to have the largest budget of the three movie and is the easiest to understand; it's definitely the one to show to your friends.

    Like those two other movies, there are no insane shocker moments or incredible gore effects that will stick in your head forever. Rekka has almost nothing in common with Ichi or Fudoh, for example, so new fans of Miike's work might not get what they expect. But it has more than its share of violence, just not enough to make your head spin.

    On it's own, Rekka is definitely not a waste of time, and my criticism doesn't sound fair at all. However, the feeling is ruined when you've seen Agitator and/or Kikoku. Seeing these movies after each other in a short span of time left me with a feeling that I got from Graveyard of Honor, another Miike/Takechi product. But in that case, it only took one movie to make me feel uncomfortable by giving me the same message over and over again.
    9zetes

    Takashi Miike is my hero!

    Miike makes another yakuza picture. It's not especially groundbreaking, and it's certainly not one of Miike's deeper films, but it is extremely entertaining. That's mostly because of the main character, Kunisada (Miike regular Riki Takeuchi), who is the most psychopathic character in Japanese movies since Tatsuya Nakadai's evil samurai in Sword of Doom. Kunisada's mob boss, his surrogate father, is ambushed and murdered (though not before nearly strangling his assailant to death; the hit-man only lives because he cuts the dead man's hands off as they clench around his windpipe). Simultaneously, Kunisada, almost as if through a psychic bond, breaks out of jail and starts to go against the rival gang. The only problem is that the boss's death isn't necessarily a bad thing from his own gang's perspective. They and their rival gang try desperately to make a truce. Unfortunately for everyone, except for a small handful of loyal comrades, Kunisada won't stop until everyone around him is dead. The film suffers from Miike's major flaw as a filmmaker: a lack of coherency. There seem to be dozens of named characters, and it becomes very difficult to sort out who everyone is. I had to watch key scenes a second time to piece it all together (though I had most of it straight by the end of the film). But, even if you never quite figure it out, Miike's patented break-neck action sequences are so outrageously done that the film is more than worth watching. Watch out when Kunisada finds a rocket launcher!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Takashi Miike cut this movie to the strains of the 1971 progressive rock album "Satori" by the Flower Traveling Band, which he learned of through costars Joe Yamanaka and Yûya Uchida, who were also the band's founding members. Miike found the album to be way ahead of its time and was delighted at how well and inconspicuously it cut into a movie made 30 years later.
    • Goofs
      At 35:52 the shadow of someone holding a hand-held camera can be seen.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Rewind This! (2013)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 21, 2002 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • official website
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Violent Fire
    • Production company
      • Toei Video Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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