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Grindhouse
Double Feature: The Bodyguard/Sister Street Fighter DVD released: August 14, 2007. Approximate running time: 179 minutes Aspect ratio: Anamorphic 2.35.1 Widescreen Rating: R Sound: Dolby Digital Mono DVD Release: BCI Eclipse/Deimos Entertainment Region Coding: NTSC Region 1 Retail Price: $12.98
Ian Jane on August 30, 2007. |
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| Quick links: [video] [audio] [extras] [overall] |
| The Film |
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Tarantino and
Rodriguez' ode to trashy seventies exploitation movies may not have set
the box office on fire but it did manage to convince a few home video
companies to follow in their footsteps by releasing some interesting 'grindhouse'
themed releases. BCI Eclipse is one of those companies, and this entry
in their Welcome To The
Grindhouse double-feature line pairs up two fine offerings
starring the Bad Man From Japan himself, Sonny Chiba – The
Bodyguard and Sister
Street Fighter. THE
BODYGUARD “The
path of the righteous man and defender is beset on all sides by the
iniquity of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he, who
in the name of charity and good will shepherds the weak through the
valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother’s keeper, and the
father of lost children. And I will execute great vengeance upon them
with furious anger, who poison and destroy my brothers; and they shall
know that I am Chiba, the Bodyguard, when I shall lay my vengeance upon
them!” This
altered quote from the Biblical book of Ezekiel over top a gang of
Karate warriors practicing their moves starts The
Bodyguard off with a bang. While Tarantino might have stolen the
idea for Samuel L. Jackson’s character in Pulp Fiction, he wasn’t
able to steal Chiba’s charisma which completely carries elevates this
rather goofy film and positions it as a completely enjoyable exercise in
seventies martial arts cinema. When
the movie begins, Sonny’s on his way home from a trip to the Big
Apple. A half dozen evil terrorists try to highjack the plane, so he
takes it upon himself to waste the punks using nothing but his hands and
his mad karate skills. Obviously, when the plane lands, he makes the
news and he announces at a press conference that he’s going to hire
himself out as a bodyguard to those who can help him fight crime –
specifically, take down a drug smuggling ring. Sonny’s just not down
with drugs at all and he makes this painfully clear by chopping a glass
Coke bottle in half with his hand. Soon enough, the lovely Reko (Mari
Atsumi) hires him on board. She’s a little scared as her NYC mafia
boss boyfriend was just wasted by the local Yakuza and she’s worried
that she’s next on their list based on what she knows about a dope
deal gone bad. What
Sonny doesn’t know is that behind his back, Reko is trying to finish
off the unresolved drug smuggling operation so that she can cash in on
the dope and live happily ever after with her boy-toy, Takami (Ryohei
Uchida). But, as cinematic drug deals tend do, this one goes sour fast
and soon enough Sonny’s trying to protect his client from the Yakuza
and a few other interested parties. While
the plot is, to be blunt, kind of stupid the film moves along at a
reasonably good pace and features enough action, violence and wacky head
scratching moments that it’s way too much fun to simply discard. Chiba
carries the film admirably, bringing more machismo to his lead role than
any one man has a right to bring. Along the way arms are ripped off,
eyes are poked out, heads are cut off and many bones are broken, the
film’s excess highlighted by the unexpectedly artsy scene where
Sonny’s younger sister is laid naked in the form of a cross by some
hoods who carve Cosa Nostra into her flesh. It
should be noted that this version of The
Bodyguard is the U.S. theatrical cut that was re-cut for
Aquarius Releasing in 1976 after the commercial success of New Line’s
imported dubbed release of The
Street Fighter. It is not the original Japanese cut (known as Karate
Kiba) which was released in Japan in 1973. At the time of this
writing to the best of this writer’s knowledge there has never been a
home video release of the original version. Terry Leven shot a new intro
starring Aaron Banks and Bill Louie, both of whom Leven would use again
in First Of Fear, Touch Of Death, which was also released by
Aquarius. SISTER
STREET FIGHTER The first film in
the series was spun off of the success of Sonny Chiba’s famous Street
Fighter films; with a cameo appearance from Sonny
himself ensuring that there’d definitely be a crossover audience for
this inaugural entry. When the movie
begins in seventies Hong Kong, Tina Long (Shihomi) has just found out
that her brother Lee (Hiroshi Miyauchi) has gone missing somewhere in
Yokohama, Japan. What she didn’t know until now was that he was
working as an undercover narc trying to bring down an international
heroin smuggling ring operating between Hong Kong and Japan. To try and
do her part to help her brother out, Tina hops on the next plane to
Japan and once she lands, she starts doing some detective work of her
own. The more she snoops
around, the more she learns and soon enough she traces things back to a
dope king named (Bin Amatsu) whose gang of minions are smuggling smack
by hiding it in wigs! She knows that he has got Lee stashed away
somewhere so she starts fighting her way into the deeper layers of his
organization. Unfortunately, the drug lord’s right hand man,
Hammerhead (Masashi Ishibashi), is pretty rough stuff as are the Amazon
Seven (a group of ladies in cavewoman outfits) but thankfully she’s
got a couple of allies, namely Sonny (Sonny) and Emi (Emi Hayakawa), to
help her out should the going get tough. Shihomi was only
eighteen years old when this first film was made and there are a few
spots in the movie where she looks a little nervous, but for the most
part she gives her all here and while the martial arts scenes would get
better in the later films, she’s got a really endearing naivety to her
here that goes a long way to making her character so likeable -she’s
cute, but she’ll kill you if you cross her. Shihomi also did all of
her own stunt work in the film, her training at Chiba’s Japan Action
Club having paid off well. Fast
paced and deliriously seventies to its core, Sister
Street Fighter is a blast. It’s worth noting first and
foremost that the U.S theatrical version of the film presented on this
DVD is roughly five minutes shorter than its Japanese counterpart (the
uncut Japanese version is included in the Sister
Street Fighter Collection boxed set). Directed with plenty
of style and flair by Kazuhiko Yamaguchi (the man
behind Chiba’s Mas Oyama trilogy made up of Karate
Bullfighter, Karate
Bearfighter and Karate
For Life) and co-written
by Norifumi Suzuki (of Sex
& Fury and School
Of The Sacred Beast
fame), there’s a great pop-art sensibility to the first movie that
makes it completely watchable and rather impressive on a visual level. The
action moves quickly in the film, and the violence reaches levels
comparable to those seen in the Chiba films that inspired it –
eyeballs are plucked and limbs are severed and there are more
bone-crunching blows here than you can count. Combine this with a
relatively standard but completely effective plot and some truly
intriguing comic-book style bad guys and the film comes up a winner.
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| Video | 2.5/5 | |
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| Audio | 2.5/5 | |
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| Both films are presented in their English dubbed versions, Dolby Digital Mono style. Expect some mild hiss and a snap, crackle and pop once in a while but the audio is pretty much always well balanced and the dialogue is easy enough to understand. Neither film sounds particularly good, but the sound mixes are serviceable enough and again, they sound like they probably would have when they were projected in low rent fleapit theaters. |
| Extras | 1.5/5 | |
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Extras are limited to trailers for Ninja Wars, Burnout, Kill Point and The Kidnapping Of The President as well as feature presentation and intermission bumpers.
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| Overall | 3/5 | |
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While this release doesn’t replace the need for a Japanese version of The Bodyguard it at least presents the film in widescreen for the first time on home video in North America and in reasonably good quality. Die-hard fans have probably already got the Sister Street Fighter collection but the set is available at a very fair price making this fun, trashy karate double feature pretty much a no-brainer for Chibaphiles. Want more information on this and other fine DVDs from Deimos Entertainment? Click here! |
| Film Rating | DVD Rating | |||
| Director: | Simon Nuchturn/Kazuhiko Yamaguchi |
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| Writers: | N/A/Masahiro Kakefuda and Norifumi Suzuki |
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| Released: | 1976/1974 |
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| Cast: |
Sonny
Chiba, Jiro Chiba, Etsuko Shihomi, Aaron Banks, Bill Louie/Etsuko Shihomi,
Hiroshi Miyauchi, Sanae Obori, Sonny Chiba, Emi Hayakawa, Masashi
Ishibashi |
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