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Sukiyaki Western: Django Japanese Movie released in September '07

#1 User is offline   Chakra'ca 

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Posted 29 March 2007 - 03:31 PM

Sukiyaki Western: Django


Sukiyaki Western: Django is an upcoming film by Takashi Miike. The movie will be filmed in Japan in the English language. The title references the cowboy film Django.

Plot
Set during "The Genpei Wars" at the end of the 1100s, the Minamoto and Taira gangs face off in a town named Yuda, while a deadly gunman (Ito Hideaki) comes to the aid of the townsfolk.

Cast
Hideaki Ito
Masanobu Ando
Yusuke Iseya
Renji Ishibashi
Takaaki Ishibashi
Teruyuki Kagawa
Yoshino Kimura
Kaori Momoi
Toshiyuki Nishida
Shun Oguri
Masato Sakai
Hideaki Sato
Koichi Sato
Christian Storms
Yoji Tanaka
Quentin Tarantino as Ringo

-Credit to Wikipedia

-edit
Trailers: All 3 are different and worth watching

Trailer 1:youtube
Trailer 2:youtube
Trailer 3 *Newest*:youtube

I'm really excited for this movie, Ito Hideaki, Ando Masanobu, Miike Takashi are all fantastic! and I'm curious about the part Tarantino will play too. It is set to release on September 15th
Official Website *It's in English & Japanese*
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Great News! SWD is being shown at the Venice Film Festival!

Miike’s ‘Sukiyaki Western Django’ to represent Japan in Venice
Takashi Miike’s upcoming film “Sukiyaki Western Django” will be competing at this years Venice Film Festival, it was revealed on Thursday.

“Sukiyaki Western Django” will be the only Japanese film in the competition in this year’s festival, which runs from August 29 to September 8, although two more Japanese films will be screened outside of the competition; Takeshi Kitano’s “Kantoku Banzai!” and Shinji Aoyama’s “Sad Vacation.“

“Sukiyaki Western Django” has been scheduled for theatrical release in Japan in September, this year. Source
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#2 User is offline   2partsvodka 

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Posted 29 March 2007 - 07:11 PM

looks interesting.......................
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#3 User is offline   HeffyEnd 

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Posted 29 March 2007 - 09:04 PM

Miike + Ando + Tarantino = Awesomeness.
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and nothing to doubt.
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#4 User is offline   alcyone 

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Posted 30 March 2007 - 05:22 AM

a lot of good looking japz actors....hehehehehe
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#5 User is offline   Chakra'ca 

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Posted 30 March 2007 - 01:14 PM

Here's an article about the movie, It's kind of old but the info is still there
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Sanspo have more details on Miike's "Sukiyaki Western: Django" this morning, as well as a picture of the cast in costume.

It's a homage to one of Miike's favorite films, the 1966 Italian-Spanish co-production "Django" directed by Sergio Corbucci, mixed with the tale of the Genpei Wars. The Minamoto and Taira gangs face off in a town named Yuda, while a deadly gunman (Ito Hideaki) comes to the aid of the townsfolk.

Ito admitted his uncertainty about taking the role. "I love westerns, but as for English, twirling guns and riding horses... I didn't know what to do. But once I gave it a try it was fun, and now I'd like to do a sequel as well."

A Hollywood voice coach was brought in to give the cast two months of training, on top of their horse riding and gun handling lesssons. Shooting is currently underway at a 150 million yen outdoor set of the town, built near the base of Mt. Gassan in northern Yamagata's Tsuruoka City.

Miike travelled to the U.S. to ask Quentin Tarantino to appear in the film. "He's a guy who doesn't play by Hollywood rules, so I thought he'd suit this film. I was in his 'Hostel' too". The "Kill Bill" director will arrive in Japan later this month and film his part at a studio in Tokyo. He plays a mysterious dude by the name of Ringo who appears at the beginning of the movie and fights with an unnamed Japanese cast member, who plays the lover of a female assassin disguised as a town dweller, to be portrayed by Momoi Kaori. "In the States he's not acting anymore, but he said he'd take this film seriously and is preparing for the role."

Kitajima Saburo be singing an Enka version of the theme to "Django" in Japanese, which Miike thought would be ideal for presenting the film overseas.

Filming is set to wrap in early December, and the finished product should open in Japan next Autumn
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credit to ryuganji.net
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#6 User is offline   Chakra'ca 

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Posted 14 August 2007 - 06:17 PM

Now that the movie is coming out soon, there's more buzz & pics about it. Here are a few promo stills from the movie, but I'll post the pics from the press conference too (mainly of Hideaki).









source

Also, there will be a manga version of this movie, with characters drawn to look like the actors. More HERE

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#7 User is offline   asianrice 

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Posted 14 August 2007 - 06:23 PM

That's one heck of a cast. Yusuke Iseya <33


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#8 User is offline   Chakra'ca 

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Posted 19 August 2007 - 08:28 PM

Here's pics from the press conference, this was like over a month ago.








here a link to the video of the Press Conference
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#9 User is offline   lmnyuta24 

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Posted 19 August 2007 - 09:02 PM

Yeah, I'm really looking forward to this movie. mini cooper, it has most of my favorite actors...Masanobu Ando, Shun Oguri, Yusuke Iseya, heck yeah! I wonder how their english is going to be. Overrall, this is a Miike film, so it's bound to kick some @ss!
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#10 User is offline   jade_frost 

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Posted 07 September 2007 - 12:03 AM

From IHT:

Samurai meets spaghetti western in Takashi's mad amalgam
By Roderick Conway Morris
September 6, 2007

Hollywood's "Magnificent Seven" was based on Akiro Kurosawa's "Seven Samurai," and Sergio Leone's "Fistful of Dollars," an unblushing rip-off of the Japanese director's "Yojimbo" (The Bodyguard). Miike Takashi, in the time-honored "Many Years Later" style of spaghetti westerns has now exacted revenge with his in-competition "Sukiyaki Western Django," one of the last to be screened at the Venice Film Festival, which ends Saturday night.

In this first production of the self-declared new "Sukiyaki western" genre, its plot pirated from Sergio Corbucci's 1966 "Django," Takashi has served up an outrageous brew of samurai pictures and spaghetti or, as they are known in Japan, "macaroni," westerns. Stirred into this mix are ancient Japanese tales of warring clans, folklore, classical and puppet theater, and Shakespeare's "Henry VI" trilogy - one of the clan leaders deciding overnight to rename himself Henry as a token of respect for the bard's work, his current bedtime reading.

The setting is a frontier gold-rush town in Japan, a bizarre amalgam of Japanese and Wild West architecture with post house inns out of the prints of Hiroshige and Hokusai and American saloon interiors. When the mysterious gun-slinging horseman rides into town, the former mayor's body is hanging from a giant Shinto "Torii" archway at the top of the main street.

The film is shot in lurid color, with traditional spaghetti western style editing at its most wilfully wonky. The excruciating dialogue - which contains such gems as "the sound of the Gion Shoja temple bells echoes the impermanence of all things" and "the color of the sala flowers reveals the truth that to flourish is to fall" - is delivered entirely in English (which Takashi does not speak himself) by a Japanese cast (with useful, sometimes essential, English subtitles). The music, lifted from the original Italian "Django," is whistled, sung using ancient Japanese vibrato techniques, and played on instruments including trumpets and Australian Aborigine didgeridoos.

The plot is ludicrous, the violence laughable, the costumes make punk and gothic look understated, the acting over the top. This will surely become a young people's cult classic. The director maintains that this is not a parody, but he has a devastating eye for the genre's weak points. If the jury, consisting this year entirely of film directors, awards this film the Golden Lion, its decision will go down in film festival legend (although its members may find themselves relieved for life of further jury duties). Takashi is also threatening to launch further productions on the same lines, including a "Sukiyaki Emmanuelle." The mind boggles.
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#11 User is offline   babycurious 

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Posted 07 September 2007 - 02:16 AM

Dang!!!!
I love the cast!!!
Ito Hideaki rocks!

hmmm will the audio be in english or in Japanese?
somehow I got the feeling, that I'll need english subtitle for any one of them tongue.gif
when he died, his eyes were closed and his heart was opened
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#12 User is offline   res0nate 

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Posted 07 September 2007 - 03:33 AM

Trying to see it this week.
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#13 User is offline   HeffyEnd 

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Posted 07 September 2007 - 03:16 PM

I was just looking up Django the other day, totally forgot the title was a reference.

This is one of the upcoming films I'm most looking forward to.. I hope I get so see it sometime soon.
There was nothing to fear,
and nothing to doubt.
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#14 User is offline   Chakra'ca 

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Posted 07 September 2007 - 04:42 PM

if you go to the Ito Hideaki thread at D-addicts, we have pics from venice and other links for the movie
D-Addicts thread
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#15 User is offline   st_heaven 

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Posted 07 September 2007 - 07:08 PM

wow, awesomeness

even shun oguri is in it! =D
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#16 User is offline   Chakra'ca 

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Posted 15 September 2007 - 04:08 PM

The movie was screened at the Venice Film Festival, the Toronto Film Festival and is now as of today in theatres in Japan. It's gotten mixed reviews. It seems like most of the people who really liked it were fans of Miike already and kind of knew what they were in for. Maybe the concept was just too out there for the film festival circuit.

here's a review credit to the japantimes.

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Although these films were set in contemporary Japan, they had little to do with any known reality. Shishido told me his name for them was "miso Westerns" and he was proud of the fact they predate the far more famous spaghetti Westerns of Italy.

So Takashi Miike's new Eastern Western "Sukiyaki Western Django" has many local precedents, though he claims he drew his inspiration from those spaghetti Westerns (usually called "macaroni Westerns" here) that he watched as a boy with his father.

Shot almost entirely in English in Yamagata Prefecture, with a cast that includes Miike fan Quentin Tarantino, "Sukiyaki" is not one of Miike's cheapie genre pics for the video shelves. Instead, it is big-budget entertainment for the world market that masquerades as a wacky cult film — a strategy often used by Tarantino himself.

Both Miike and Tarantino, overpraised and overindulged for years, are now in the baroque phases of their careers, strenuously embellishing by-now familiar themes with ever more convoluted arabesques of cinematic referencing and auteurist posturing. I count myself as a fan of both — but I also think they have both reached an impasse, like aging rockers who jazz up their stage shows as vehicles for their decades-old riffs.

Not that all of Miike's riffs in "Sukiyaki" are stale. He and scriptwriter Masa Nakamura have mashed up the Western and samurai genres in ways clever, cool and eye-poppingly outrageous. In other words, exactly what you would expect from Miike. But the over-the-top gestures that once seemed so spontaneous — like a naughty 14-year-old dreaming up gruesome tortures — now often feel ponderous and arch.

The biggest miscalculation, however, was the decision to have the Japanese cast speak English — and not simple day-to-day conversational English either, but ornately colloquial dialogue that rolls out of monolingual mouths like someone reciting the Gettysburg Address while gargling water. Some in the cast, such as Kaori Momoi and Yusuke Iseya, rate fairly high on the intelligibility scale, but the overall effect is grating. Will this bother local audiences? Maybe. I would also be annoyed if I had to sit though a Hollywood remake of "Yojimbo," Akira Kurosawa's classic 1961 Eastern Western, with Brad Pitt emoting in mangled Edo Period Japanese.

"Sukiyaki" begins with a poncho-wearing cowpoke (Tarantino) fending off baddies with superhuman feats of cool, then enjoying a meal of — what else? — sukiyaki (a beef stew). Naturally, he has a story to tell (much of which the film relates in an extended flashback), about remnants of the warring Genji and Heike clans who, centuries after the climatic battle of Dannoura (1185), are living survival-of-the-fittest existences in the new Wild East. Then gold is discovered near a Heike town and a gold rush ensues. One day a gang of red-clad Heike toughs, lead by the bombastic Kiyomori (Koichi Sato), swagger into town; but instead of allying with their Heike brethren, the gang violently take over, while co-opting the craven sheriff (Teruyuki Kagawa). After the brutal murder of the elderly mayor (Renji Ishibashi), the townspeople flee.

Soon after, a white-wearing Genji gang appear on the scene and start a turf war with the Heike. The Genji leader is the dandyish but deadly Yoshitsune (Yusuke Iseya); among his followers are the buffoonish Benkei (Takaaki Ishibashi) and crossbow-wielding Yoichi (Masanobu Ando). (One of the film's more memorable stunts is Benkei blasting a melon-size hole through a surprised Heike gangster with a gun, followed by Yoichi zapping an arrow through the hole and into another opponent.)

Then a lone gunman (Hideaki Ito) rides into town and, after proving his lethal worth to both sides, takes refuge in the general store of the feisty Ruriko (Momoi). She lives there with her grandson — the offspring of her Heike son, slaughtered by Kiyomori, and his Genji bride Shizuka (Yoshino Kimura), now the town prostitute. The boy, who witnessed his father's death and his mother's degradation, is mute. What miracle will make him speak again?

This is also the setup of "Yojimbo," as well as Sergio Leone's spaghetti Western remake "A Fistful of Dollars." But where Leone re-imagined Kurosawa's world in a Mexican nowhere, with Clint Eastwood creating a new flinty-eyed, take-no-prisoners definition of the Western hero, Miike is more intent on out-Tarantino-ing Tarantino in dreaming up blackly funny ways of dealing death and generally messing with audience minds.

The problem is, we've seen most of the gags before in other Miike pics, beginning with the hoariest of all — the grotesquely wounded character who doesn't realize he's dead meat until the camera draws back to reveal, say, the massive clock hand impaling him like a piece of yakitori (skewered chicken). Instead of laughing, I imagined the sweat of the prop guys as they labored to make an absurd effect look less than totally fake. Not good.

Unlike Tarantino, Miike also has a macho sentimental streak, expressed in "Sukiyaki" by the gunman's selfless championing of the traumatized boy, his much-abused mother and other decent townsfolk. But the operatic clowning undermines the drama.

By contrast, the "Wataridori" films look almost refreshingly naive. Kobayashi and Shishido would zing each other with snappy lines, show off their manly skills (bull whipping, gun twirling) and otherwise have fun with their absurd roles, but with youthful high spirits, not elaborately self-referential nudges and winks.

As for Clint at his cigarillo-chewing coolest, poor marble-mouthed Hideaki Ito doesn't begin to compare. But then, Clint had someone dub his Italian, didn't he?


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#17 User is offline   takeshiluv 

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Post icon  Posted 19 August 2008 - 11:26 AM

QUOTE (Chakra'ca @ Aug 19 2007, 10:28 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>

It doesn't get ANYYYY hotter than this.....
Ito...Iseya....and Ando in one pic.....
Gorgeousness........ sweatingbullets.gif
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#18 User is offline   Nightmare 

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Posted 19 August 2008 - 01:03 PM

Hot cast! w00t.gif But I don't know about the movie itself... I've seen a few trailers and clips of it, and it's just awkward. It's hard to understand what they're saying, but Yoshino Kimura and Yusuke Iseya English is okay. Iunno, I think it'll sound much better in Japanese. Meh, I still want to check it out.
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#19 User is offline   res0nate 

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Posted 19 August 2008 - 01:53 PM

iirc, there is NO Japanese cut of the film, nor are there any subtitles in anything but Japanese. The English was on purpose, but it doesn't take away from the film at all.

I have the film on both dvd & BD, I ought to check out the sub options for the latter. But I'm very sure that the dvd has only Japanese subs.
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#20 User is offline   COOKIE.BANDIT. 

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Posted 04 October 2008 - 07:46 AM

i wanna see this film cuz im a fan of Takashi Miike, plus that cast line-up look amazing
luckily it's playing in one of the theatres here smile.gif
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