Stars: Tomorô Taguchi, Shinya Tsukamoto, Nobu Kanaoka, Sujin Kim, Hideaki Tezuka, Tomoo Asada, Iwata, Keinosuke Tomioka | Written and Directed by Shinya Tsukamoto
After kickstarting his career with 1989’s Tetsuo: The Iron Man, writer/director Shinya Tsukamoto returned to the Japanese body horror series 3 years later with Tetsuo II: Body Hammer – an unconnected sequel which takes its own journey regarding a man’s transformation into machine. The opening moments show the camera acting as an unseen character’s perspective, stalking an unnamed salaryman who gets killed after the unseen character holds out his index finger like a gun and fires it.
The story then cuts to Taniguchi Tomoo (Tomorô Taguchi), a married salaryman with a young son named Minori. Adopted as a child, Tomoo questions his unknown past and the reasons for his recurring nightmares. His world is turned upside down when two men kidnap Minori and inject the father with an unknown substance.
After kickstarting his career with 1989’s Tetsuo: The Iron Man, writer/director Shinya Tsukamoto returned to the Japanese body horror series 3 years later with Tetsuo II: Body Hammer – an unconnected sequel which takes its own journey regarding a man’s transformation into machine. The opening moments show the camera acting as an unseen character’s perspective, stalking an unnamed salaryman who gets killed after the unseen character holds out his index finger like a gun and fires it.
The story then cuts to Taniguchi Tomoo (Tomorô Taguchi), a married salaryman with a young son named Minori. Adopted as a child, Tomoo questions his unknown past and the reasons for his recurring nightmares. His world is turned upside down when two men kidnap Minori and inject the father with an unknown substance.
- 10/26/2023
- by James Rodrigues
- Nerdly
“Tetsuo II is neither an abandoned child, nor a child smothered in love. He’s kind of a cynical, a child with mixed feelings.”
(Shinya Tsukamoto on “Tetsuo II: Body Hammer”)
After his debut feature “Tetsuo: The Iron Man” had gained him a reputation among independent film circles internationally, Shinya Tsukamoto had become one of the most interesting artists coming from Japan. 1989, the year of the film’s release, as well as the following years, would be a busy time for the director who received numerous offers for other features, and for music videos along with the opportunity to work abroad. However, the director was more interested in perfecting his style and the themes he had begun including in the first “Tetsuo”-film, and while the first entry was still in production Tsukamoto was already planning a possible sequel to the film.
Although the notion of making...
(Shinya Tsukamoto on “Tetsuo II: Body Hammer”)
After his debut feature “Tetsuo: The Iron Man” had gained him a reputation among independent film circles internationally, Shinya Tsukamoto had become one of the most interesting artists coming from Japan. 1989, the year of the film’s release, as well as the following years, would be a busy time for the director who received numerous offers for other features, and for music videos along with the opportunity to work abroad. However, the director was more interested in perfecting his style and the themes he had begun including in the first “Tetsuo”-film, and while the first entry was still in production Tsukamoto was already planning a possible sequel to the film.
Although the notion of making...
- 9/5/2018
- by Rouven Linnarz
- AsianMoviePulse
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