Gonin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gonin | |
---|---|
DVD cover of Gonin |
|
Directed by | Takashi Ishii |
Produced by | Katsuhide Motoki Taketo Niitsu Takuto Niizu |
Written by | Takashi Ishii |
Starring | Koichi Sato Masahiro Motoki Jinpachi Nezu Kippei Shiina |
Music by | Goro Yasukawa |
Cinematography | Yasushi Sasakibara |
Editing by | Akimasa Kawashima |
Release date(s) | Sept 23, 1995 |
Running time | 109 min |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
IMDb profile |
Gonin (or, in some English-language editions, The Five) is a 1995 film directed by Takashi Ishii and starring Takeshi Kitano, Koichi Sato, and Masahiro Motoki.
[edit] Summary
Bandai (Sato) is a disco owner whose business, following the collapse of Japan's "bubble economy", is slowly disintegrating, and who owes debts to local Yakuza money he cannot possibly pay. His solution is to rob the gangsters, for which purpose he assembles a team consisting of other casualties of the economic downturn—including a hustler (Motoki) who frequents his club (and who, depending on how you interpret the film's opening credits, may or may not have stabbed him in the face), a down-on-his-luck ex-cop (Jinpachi Nezu), an unbalanced salaryman (Naoto Takenaka), the extent of whose derangement is unclear until the film's most notorious and horrifying scene, and a Thai pimp (Kippei Shiina, in a strange, convincingly brain-damaged performance). The hastily-planned heist goes off awkwardly, and the Yakuza start tracking down the conspirators, hiring a team of hitmen (Kitano and Kazuya Kimura) to take out the thieves.
[edit] External link
- Gonin at the Internet Movie Database
- (Japanese) Gonin at the Japanese Movie Database