Film: Yakuza Hunters - The Revenge Duel In Hell
UK Release date: 21st May 2012
UK Distributor: Cine Du Monde
Certificate: 18
Director: Kazushi Nakadaira
Starring: Asami, Jiro Sato, Misato Tate, Rumi Hiiragi, Yuki Matsumura
Running time: 73 mins
Genre: Action
Country: Japan
Subtitles: English
Reviewer: Adam Wing
The last time we saw Asami she was taking revenge on the
gang members who had left her for dead after running riot in her town. She
teamed up with a quartet of gun toting babes. locked, loaded and ready for
action. Dressed in next to nothing (go figure), Asami and her ‘Yakuza Hunters’
took to the streets in search of simple-minded madmen and the taste of bloody
retribution. The fight sequences (when they came) were deliciously dirty, but
Yakuza Hunters dragged its (high) heels from time to time, boosting the running
time with layers of misjudged sentiment. With a retro soundtrack and gore by
the bucket load, the first chapter kicked enough Yakuza ass to make the
prospect of part 2 a welcome one, but if you’re hoping to see Asami half naked
again, you’ll have to file this second helping away under ‘disappointment’.
Other than Asami spending the entire movie in clothing,
Yakuza Hunters 2 is pretty much business as usual. Three years have past since
Asami left town, but it isn’t long before she stumbles across her down beaten
master Inokuma, the man who first taught her how to fight. The Shoryu Yakuza -
who are threatening everybody with eviction so that they can build a new casino
- is now running the town. In order to achieve their goal, they hire
cold-blooded killer Akira (Hitomi Miwa) to kill anyone who gets in their way.
They should maybe have mentioned that to Asami though, because it’s pretty
obvious that she didn’t get the memo. Relationships are worsened when Akira
brutally murders those closest to Asami, and she has no choice but to take up
arms again (not to mention her hat) in a babe on babe battle to the death –
fully clothed that is. I mentioned that part already, didn’t I?
The bloodthirsty opening cuts deeper than you might expect
(literally not figuratively), but it’s not long before Yakuza Hunters 2 falls
into the same trap as its predecessor. Inokuma finds Asami a place to stay with
big-sis (Yumi Yoshiyuki), and the rest of the first act takes us on the dullest
of ‘emotional’ drives. Asami’s relationship with big-sis does have important
repercussions later on, but Shinozaki handles their growing friendship with the
subtlety of a sledgehammer. It’s not just their scenes that suffer; several
sequences are borderline coma inducing, with Shinozaki mistaking high emotion
for next to no motion. The camera stays fixed in one position a lot of the
time, inducing fidgets and adding next to no zip to the humourless exposition.
Worse still, some characters serve no purpose at all, with bartender Yuzi’s
(Naoki Kawano) infatuation with Asami adding next to no weight to the drawn out
opening.
The first film was gorier and more action-packed (which is
really saying something), and for much of part 2 even Asami seems to have lost
her edge. The kick-ass revenge seeker we all fell in love with has taken a step
back, and it’s not until Akira arrives in town that she rediscovers a sense of
purpose (and fun). Asami’s relationship with big-sis doesn’t always convince,
and it’s a problem that haunts the movie until its conclusion, but it does
provide our heroine with enough ammunition to pick up her sword once again.
There are still moments of gut-punching splendour to savour, but Yakuza Hunters
2 isn’t as enthusiastic as it ought to be. Having said that, Asami is still
hot, Hitomi Miwa brings fiery menace to the role of number one contract killer,
and Yakuza Hunters 2 hits the right notes with its funky soundtrack. Nothing
here touches the extended riverbank fight sequence of the original, but an
energetic early encounter with Akira is tightly choreographed, and Asami gets
the chance to go ‘all Bruce Lee’ on her well-formed ass, which was always going
to be a highlight for me.
Not nearly as twisted as you might expect, Yakuza
Hunters 2 suffers the same fate as the first chapter. Despite random bursts of
glorified violence there seems to be less focus on frivolous fun, action
excess and token nudity. Asami and Hitomi Miwa make a good fist of it - there’s still a great movie if you cut the two films down to size - but for all
its promise, Yakuza Hunters 2 feels more like a retread than an actual
improvement.
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