Is this Japanese film at its best? Probably. OK, so the soundtrack - and hammy acting - are perhaps more of a south-east Asian taste, and they grate with me. But there is no doubt that this movie is entertaining - as well as an excuse for plenty of grand guignol bloodletting. There are screeching Japanese schoolgirls aplenty too, for those who like that kind of thing. This film also has a plot that sort of makes sense, with characters' motivations justifying their actions, and a good dose of Japanese shame and suicide too. A bit overblown, a bit nutty (but now on in the same mentalist league as The Happiness of the Katakuris) - but good horrific fun. The only thing missing is reality TV cameras (and just how the organiser can afford his own private army and island is anyone's guess!). Was the writer of this script a teacher exploring a fantasy maybe? Anyway - Recommended.
A twisted tale of a government gone mad. But once you get your head around that fact it is compelling viewing. A must see. Not just for the Stylised killings, but the direction and the background knowledge that can be found on the extras about each death. Why some commited suicide and others turned into serial killers overnight.
If you want to know where the idea for The Hunger Games came from here it is. This Japanese cult film is a taut action film set in a dystopian near future where the fear of social collapse and a rise in violent youth crime forces the government to pass the Battle Royale Act in an attempt to bring moral and adult authority back into society. Under the legislation a class of teenagers are taken to a remote island and given a variety of weapons and forced to fight until only one survivor remains. They have necklaces attached that explode if they fail to comply with the 'game'. Friendships, loyalties and morality are all brought into question as some of the kids quickly resort to killing whilst others attempt to maintain their humanity and find another solution. It's in this that the film is focused, the philosophical debate around whether people, in desperate straits will resort to their base animalistic nature and murder or are humans inherently good and would refuse to participate even if it meant their own death. As a piece of cinema this is both exciting and shocking with strong bloody violence. As an action film it's really good and an example of foreign cinema that has been a huge influence, it's a firm favourite of Quentin Tarantino and his Kill Bill Vol 1 (2003) bears a stylistic similarity. Certainly a controversial film although it's not gratuitous in its depiction of violence but definitely a film worth checking out.