Seishun no satsujinsha (1976) Poster

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8/10
Raw Power
santasprees7 April 2008
Framed by the last unfocused protests of 60s and 70s Japanese radicalism, this is a raw and rather ragged take on the doomed young lovers' motif (Thieves Like Us, Badlands) but where their American forebears take flight on the open road our troubled Japanese anti-heroes are set in a frieze of emotional and physical inertia and spend much of their time helplessly moping about in a roadside café.

This rarely-seen film boasts some great twilight cinematography of inhuman hinterlands (highway verges, the edges of an airport, blank vistas of ribbon development) and an unwavering faith in the central performances that borders on the indulgent but ultimately pays off in depicting the ferment of teenage desire and frustration.
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8/10
Seishun no satsujinsha
RaulFerreiraZem27 April 2022
Really great.

The second portion of it is not half as good as the first one but still the film manages to be pretty great. The whole murder sequence is really amazing and probably one of the most tense and well shot murder scenes i've ever seen.
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6/10
A young man kill his father and mother, based on a true story
jburati24 August 2000
Warning: Spoilers
Based on a true story, the story of a young man who killed his father and mother because they want him to break off with the girl is living with. He cannot cope with the murders and run towards his self-destruction.
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Period piece, perhaps best left for fans of Harada Mieko
ButaNiShinju19 June 2016
Would have to say on the whole it's pretty dreadful. It wouldn't be stretching it too far to say it is mainly a vehicle for nude scenes by Harada Mieko (then just 17 years of age, not something which would generally be allowed today..) with some gruesome stabbing deaths thrown in for good measure. The film-making is uniformly gloomy, with almost all scenes being shot on rainy days (or at least with the rain machine going full bore..). The cinematography is occasionally inventive, and this is perhaps the only feature that renders it watchable to the end.

Its interest today is mainly in its portrait of 1970's Japan. The tail-end of 1960's political radicalism in Japan found its expression in the ongoing protest against the construction and expansion of Narita airport, and this forms the fascinating if unlikely backdrop of the film, which is otherwise a somewhat Oedipal mash-up of patricide, matricide, rape, and attempted suicide.
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