Very stylish, but...
The boards here seem kind of one-sided in favor of Mr. Suzuki, so I thought I'd play the dissenting opinion. Now don't get me wrong, I love style as much as the next guy... but this movie was kind of jarring. Not the violence or anything, but mainly the editing, which I suppose is part of the style of the movie and what people like about it.
The editing in some sequences, as I have said earlier, seemed hard to follow. I've only seen the movie once, perhaps I should watch it again(but then again, its supposed to be more of a stylistically influenced piece than a complex drama). Its not everything about the movie, but some examples would be
** SPOILER **
When Tetsu leaves the guy that is supposed to help him, at the train station, then the rival group attack that group anyway. Tetsu comes after everyone is dead and takes on like 20 baddies by kind of flailing around and still leaves like 10 thugs with guns behind him when he turns around to shoot that one assassin in the eye. Know where I'm talking about? And then it just cuts to him 'drifting' down the road to some other unknown destination. Now to me, the drama was how he was going to get out of a situation where there were still an overwhelming amount of enemies with weapons, yet scene change.
Also his boss completely changing sides like that? Didn't seem very convincing.. all that happened was some guy(who was that guy his lawyer?) just says that Tetsu is still a vulnerability(well it was the other boss that said it, but his lawyer-man agreed with that statement so Kurata just blindly followed it). Seemed kind of forced..
Maybe I'm just old fashioned but the editing threw me for a loop. Everything seemed like it was missing a piece. I'll give you that the editing was ahead of its time, but that doesn't make it any less disconcerting.
In the end that's what most affected me, "Wow THIS was made in 1966?". But I wouldn't have thought it'd be a classic. A classic of its time, perhaps. Maybe that's why its considered to be such a mainstay of cinema, I can see how Anime or Tarantino was influenced by this, but it just didn't entertain me. How many people can honestly say that a Lumiere film was "interesting", right? Its all a matter of taste, but maybe I missed something, and that's what I ask of the forum.
Is it that you like this genre of film, of which this is a classic or did this film speak to you in some transcendent way above the style. Because in the end, style becomes nothing without substance.
P.S.- This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated. - Mitch Hedburg