The Dead Or Alive Trilogy Reviewed Here
September 3rd, 2010 by Ronald EricksonThe Dead or Alive Trilogy belongs on your must see movie downloads list simply because it’s so crazy. You’ve seen action movies, you’ve seen over the top action movies, but you’ve never seen anything quite like these three flicks from Mike Takashi . Every one is out to top the last in terms of sheer craziness.
Dead or Alive Part One was designed to be a way to bring together two hot Japanese stars, being Sho Aikawa, the Japanese Pacino, and Riki Takeuchi, the Japanese DeNiro, so Dead or Alive is sort of the Japanese Heat. However, it’s really nothing like Heat, and it’s sort of designed to fix the problem with that movie, being that the ending wasn’t quite the climax most viewers were hoping for.
We won’t spoil the ending of Dead or Alive, but let’s just say that it’s certainly not an anti-climax. The entire movie is a thrill ride, starting with a rock video style montage that gets you into the movie’s world fast, and culminating in an ending that you will not believe.
Dead or Alive 2 is both a sequel and not a sequel. The two leads are recast as two entirely different characters, but they sort of parallel the original two characters. In the original, they were a cop and a gangster after one another’s throats. This time, they’re best friends. They grew up together in an orphanage and now work as hitmen who donate all their proceeds to fighting disease in third world countries.
Interestingly, while the movie is very positive in its outlook and portrays its heroes in a positive light, the reality of violence is not simply glossed over. The first is a wild action movie, the second is a little more honest about the weight of violence on a person’s heart.
The third of the trilogy, Dead or Alive Final, takes the series in an all new direction, getting into a science fiction setting akin to Blade Runner. It might not be the best of the trilogy, but it has to be seen so you can see how it ties the whole trilogy together in a strange way.
Check out Deadly Outlaw Rekka if you want more Miike. It has the same sort of over the top, insane attitude towards the story, and recasts Riki Takeuchi in the title role, as he seeks to avenge the death of his surrogate father. What really makes that movie work is the style. The story is standard revenge stuff, but it’s all set to an alternative rock album from the seventies by the Traveling Sunflower Band, and the action is all out stuff. Takeuchi also turns in an interesting performance as the unstable and unpredictable Rekka.
As the trailer for the first film declares: Takashi Miike is the rabid dog of Japanese cinema. You never know what he’s going to do in his movies. Interestingly, he’s said in interviews that he tends to look for boring scripts. When the script is dull, that gives him a lot of opportunity to spice it up. And spice it up he does. Miike has always managed to take these director for hire movies and make something new out of them. He makes an average of four movies a year, and has made around a hundred feature films total. The quality of each of these movies… It goes up and down, but if only one in ten is worth watching, ten great movies is more than most directors ever get around to creating.
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