is a 1960 Japanese Sun Tribe film directed by Koreyoshi Kurahara and starring Tamio Kawachi, Eiji Go, Yuko Chishiro and Noriko Matsumoto. It was produced and distributed by the Nikkatsu Company. The story concerns the young hoodlum Akira, his friends, their transgressions and specifically their revenge on the couple that got him sent to jail, a reporter and his fiancée, by means of assault, vehicular and sexual. When the fiancée finds herself pregnant by Akira she enlists his help with her finance who has become distant since the attack.
The film was a return to a subset of the youth film genre that had
been shut down at the behest of moral outrage several years
earlier. Often compared by critics to
Breathless (1960) and
Rebel Without a Cause
(1955), it is a stylistic departure from studio norms, driven by
its jazz score and employing filmic techniques described as being
as energetic and frantic as its characters. It achieved success in
Japan and was followed by
Black Sun (1964), featuring many
of the same cast, crew and characters, with the addition of
acclaimed drummer
Max Roach to the
soundtrack.
Audubon Films released
The Warped Ones in the United States in 1963 where it was
marketed as a
sexploitation
film.
Synopsis
Criminal and jazz aficionado Akira (
Tamio
Kawachi) and his
prostitute
girlfriend Fumiko (
Noriko
Matsumoto) are arrested when they are spotted fleecing
foreigners in a
jazz club by a reporter
named Kashiwagi (
Hiroyuki Nagato).
In jail, Akira meets Masaru (
Eiji Go) and on
their release they and Fumiko resume criminal activities. They spot
Kashiwagi and his artist fiancée, Yuki (
Yuko Chishiro), hit him with a stolen car and
kidnap her. They take her to a remote beach where Akira
rapes her while Masaru and Fumiko fornicate in the
ocean.
Soon after, the three rent an apartment with money earned from
fencing the stolen car. Masaru and Fumiko commit to starting a
family, while he joins a
yakuza gang, to the
derision of Akira. Yuki tracks Akira down and informs him that she
is pregnant. Kashiwagi has become distant and haughty and she
pleads with Akira for help. Akira arranges for Fumiko to seduce
Kashiwagi so that the couple might again be on equal terms. Masaru
is killed by a rival yakuza. Fumiko discovers that she is pregnant
but without Masaru's support she resolves to get an
abortion and resume her prostitution career. Akira
and Fumiko meet Kashiwagi and Yuki by chance at an abortion clinic
where Akira reveals that each woman was impregnated by the other
man, to the amusement of the former couple and befuddlement of the
latter.
Production
The
Nikkatsu Company made three popular
Sun Tribe films in 1956, a genre based on
a contemporary
youth subculture
whose interests revolved around beach life, jazz music and their
progressive attitudes towards sex. The films met with moral public
outcries and a fourth production was shut down at the behest of
Eirin (The Motion Picture Code of Ethics
Committee). However, the genre later experienced a resurgence which
included
The Warped Ones. The film marked director
Koreyoshi Kurahara first
collaboration with
screenwriter Nobuo
Yamada. They reused a many elements of Kurahara's earlier Sun Tribe
film
The Time of Youth
(1959), including abortion, a near fatality via an opened gas cock
and a criminal act near water, an explosion beside a stream in the
former and the rape on the beach in the latter.
Nikkatsu was promoting lead actor
Tamio Kawachi as one of its Bad Boy Trio,
along with
Akira Kobayashi and
Tadao Sawamoto. Kurahara asked him to
think of his character as a "hungry lion roaring at the sun." He
turned in what writer Mark Schilling described as his most unusual,
and one of his best, performances of the period. Supporting actress
Noriko Matsumoto came to the film
as a relative unknown.
Hiroyuki
Nagato had starred in
The Time of Youth.
Eiji Go was the younger brother of future Diamond
Line star
Joe Shishido. The film was
completed on August 18, 1960.
Style
As writer Mark Schilling put it, "the soundtrack drives the
action," and composer
Toshirō
Mayuzumi's jazz score moves swiftly.
Cinematographer Yoshi Mamiya and
editor Akira Suzuki employed
swish-pan,
freeze frame and
jump
cuts, alternating between carefully composed shots and
seemingly recklessly hand-held camera work. The titular youths of
the film too move violently and speak in grunts, screams, whistles
and sound effects, Akira frequently greeting women with, "Wanna get
laid?" or Masura's
scat,
"At-tatatatatataaaaa!" They are portrayed as amoral, impulsive
narcissists and
hedonists, pickpocketing and stealing cars with
equal nonchalance. The
antihero, Akira,
described as possessing the "face-rubbing mannerisms of
[Marlon] Brando and the tortured swagger of
James Dean," varies between the sadistic
and the indifferent—save when in a jazz-induced fervor—and reaches
extremes largely unseen in the contemporaneous cinema of the West.
The film's subject matter is
sensationalistic and it contains much
incident in its short run time. The overall style is matched to the
characters' verve and the story's frantic pace.
While not portraying Akira sympathetically, the film does offer a
socio-political view on the
origins and inevitability of such criminal types in society. The
tenement in which the youths
reside are depicted as inhospitable and sterile. Lacking education,
proper role models and
moral codes,
critic Bryan Hartzheim posited, crime and base pleasures are their
most open recourse. They seem aware of the injustices in their
environments and rail against society at large. However, Akira is
illustrated as being capable of innocent pleasure, particularly in
one fleeting scene in which he and his black friend Gil (
Chico Rolands), whom he views as a fellow
outcast, frolic in the
ocean.
Reception
The Warped Ones was originally released in Japan by the
Nikkatsu Company on September 3, 1960. The
film was successful in Japan, although not so much so that
Tamio Kawachi was ever elevated to major star
status and after his "Bad Boy" period he was mainly relegated to
second lead and supporting parts. In July 1961, Arthur Davis' newly
formed, American, foreign film distribution company Kanji Pictures
announced it had acquired ten Nikkatsu films for North and South
American markets and parts of Europe. The films included
The
Warped Ones,
Shōhei
Imamura's
Pigs and
Battleships (1961) and
Kon
Ichikawa's
The
Burmese Harp (1956) and were to be distributed by Kanji or
sold to other distribution companies. An English-
dubbed version of
The Warped
Ones was then released in the United States on December 18,
1963, by
Radley Metzger's
sexploitation-centric
Audubon Films, initially as the
The Weird
Lovemakers, then
The Warped Ones became the more
common title. It was marketed as an American film, and misleadingly
implied to contain sexually explicit material, in order to appeal
to a wider audience.
The
original film resurfaced some four decades later at the 2005
Udine
Far East Film
Festival in the No Borders, No Limits: Nikkatsu Action
Cinema retrospective. Mark
Schilling curated the retrospective in order to expose
international audiences to 1960s Nikkatsu Action films which, aside
from the films of
Seijun Suzuki,
remained predominately unseen outside of Japan. Schilling
originally titled the film
Season of Heat—a literal
translation of the Japanese title—but it was retitled
The
Warped Ones for subsequent incarnations of the retrospective,
which included runs in Austin and New York. It also appeared in a
12-film retrospective of
Koreyoshi
Kurahara's Nikkatsu films at the 2008
Tokyo Filmex International Film Festival in
Japan. It was screened with English
subtitles.
Critics have most often compared the film to landmark youth films
Breathless (also
1960)—released in France five months earlier—directed by
Jean-Luc Godard and
Nicholas Ray's
Rebel Without a Cause (1955),
although, Bryan Hartzheim found it takes its youths more seriously
and with less sympathy. He stated, "[
The Warped Ones
takes] a wrecking ball to what can be considered the indulgencies
of the [youth film] genre, an exhibition of the horrors of
uninhibited youth taken to its carnal extremes and matched by a
visual accompaniment akin to the abstract and improvised style of a
Miles Davis score."
Tim Lucas of
Video
Watchdog magazine called the film "an important rediscovery on
many fronts... one of the great jazz films, and possibly the best
illustration the cinema has ever given us of the jazz buff. It's
the only film I've ever seen that makes jazz seem scarier than the
darkest heavy metal, that makes jazz seem
dangerous." For
TokyoScope: The Japanese Cult Film Companion, Alvin Lu
commended the score as "stunning" and Kawachi's performance as
"ferocious, the very incarnation of the kind of social chaos that
could be engendered by too much exposure to jazz, Coke, and hot
dogs."
The Boston Globe's
Wesley Morris wrote, "[Koreyoshi] Kurahara
takes the movie to extremes of behavior and style, merging the two
until the form seems as violently unstable as the characters. He
makes a wave that in Europe was called 'French' and 'new.' But with
all due respect to Jean-Luc Godard, this is breathless - and more
interesting, too." Morris further qualified that while
Breathless may appeal to contemporary viewers
academically,
The Warped Ones retains a spontaneous,
documentary feel. Schilling discerned the film, "Among [Kurahara's]
boldest departures from studio convention."
Reviewer Peter Martin confided, "
The Warped Ones baffled
and mystified me, but I liked it very much." J.R. Jones, for
The Reader's Guide to Arts &
Entertainment, found the film "actually celebrates the values
it's supposed to be condemning," but recommended it for its
kineticism and action.
TV Guide and
Allmovie did not recommended it, both gave
it one star in their respective four and five star rating
systems.
Legacy
The success of the film lead
Koreyoshi Kurahara and Nobuo Yamada to
write and direct a couple more original scripts, where Kurahara was
primarily known for his adaptations of novels. This included the
follow-up
Black Sun
(1964) which again featured
Tamio
Kawachi, who reprised his role from
The Warped Ones,
as did several of the other actors, and a lot of jazz music. In it,
Kawachi's Akira shelters a black
G.I.,
Gil, played by
Chico Rolands, who goes
A.W.O.L. after killing a white man in a
bar fight. The film explores the two men's friendship and
race relations. It was also the first
reversal on
rashamen-themed films,
post-war, often American-Japanese
co-productions focusing on
friendships or romances between a Japanese and an American.
Rashamen films were intended as to promote goodwill
between the two nations but were generally less well received in
Japan, seen as unrealistic or patronizing. Film historian
Tadao Sato described
Black Sun as the
first film of this sort where Japanese pity Americans instead of
the reverse as Akira's preconceptions of black Americans are
undone. Mark Schilling characterized Kawachi as bringing an
"explosive energy" to the film and Roland a "piping screech of fear
and desperation." Acclaimed American jazz musician
Max Roach contributed to the score.
Alvin Lu found
The Warped Ones to be a prime example of
the
Sun Tribe genre and placed it among
those films whose outlook made way for the Japanese
pink film. In the film
Tim
Lucas noted antecedents and a possible influence to "the most
hellbent characters" in the films of acclaimed director
Quentin Tarantino's films and specifically
to
Stanley Kubrick's iconic
A Clockwork
Orange (1971). Lucas drew comparisons between
The
Warped Ones' main character Akira and ''A Clockwork Orange'''s
Alex DeLarge, including their respective obsessions with hard jazz
and the music of
Ludwig van
Beethoven, the former with a framed copy of
Ornette Coleman's album
The Shape of Jazz to Come
next to his bed, the latter an engraving of Beethoven. Also, scenes
of the former's verbal deconstructions by a group of art students
versus the latter's by the government. Akira's attacks on
abstract art and DeLarge's on
pop art–lined homes. Finally, the character's
regular hangouts, both painted with black walls, the former's
adorned with portraits of jazz legends, the latter's with
advertisements for "Vellocet" and "Drencrom"—the fictional drugs
DeLarge and his gang use to invigorate themselves before their
criminal acts. Lucas concluded, "Kubrick simply had to have seen
it."
Two American music groups took their name from
The Warped
Ones' alternate
sexploitation title,
The Weird
Lovemakers.
The now defunct Tucson
punk band
The Weird Lovemakers assumed
the name in 1994 and held it until their disbandment in
2000. The Oakland, California
–based electropop band
The Lovemakers planned to use the
same name on their inception in 2002 but dropped the "Weird" upon
their discovery of the former band having taken the
name.
Home video
In North America, an abridged,
dubbed,
VHS version
of the film is available from
Something Weird Video under the
moniker
The Weird Lovemakers. In 2007, a
DVD-R version was also made available. Home video
rights to the full, subtitled film are held by
Janus Films and a
DVD
version is expected from
The
Criterion Collection.
Soundtrack
On February 23, 2007, the Japanese
label Think! Records reissued the soundtrack on
Compact Disc as a part of its Cine Jazz
series, which featured 1960s Nikkatsu Action film scores. It is
part of a two disc set, the first contains music from
Toshirō Mayuzumi's score for
Black Sun (1964) and
the second from his score for
The Warped Ones. The first
disc features American jazz musicians
Max
Roach on drums,
Clifford Jordan
on tenor saxophone,
Ronnie Mathews on
piano,
Eddie Kahn on bass and
vocals by
Abbey Lincoln.The
Cine
Jazz series consisted of three releases on February 23, 2007,
the soundtracks to
Branded to
Kill,
Everything Goes
Wrong and a 2-disk set for
Black Sun and
The Warped
Ones.
The second disc features the Nikkatsu Jazz Group
Track listing
|
Black Sun |
|
The Warped Ones |
| # |
Title |
Length |
# |
Title |
Length |
# |
Title |
Length |
| 1. |
"Scene A" |
5:04 |
1. |
"Scene 1" |
2:02 |
11. |
"Scene 11" |
1:42 |
| 2. |
"Scene A2" |
4:52 |
2. |
"Scene 2" |
2:05 |
12. |
"Scene 12" |
0:47 |
| 3. |
"Scene B" |
5:27 |
3. |
"Scene 3" |
1:32 |
13. |
"Scene 13" |
1:30 |
| 4. |
"Scene C" |
7:02 |
4. |
"Scene 4" |
2:21 |
14. |
"Scene 14" |
4:25 |
| 5. |
"Scene D" |
2:30 |
5. |
"Scene 5" |
0:44 |
15. |
"Scene 15–1" |
0:21 |
| 6. |
"Scene E2" |
10:36 |
6. |
"Scene 6" |
0:56 |
16. |
"Scene 15–2" |
0:36 |
| 7. |
"Scene E3" |
8:28 |
7. |
"Scene 7" |
3:54 |
17. |
"Scene 16" |
0:40 |
| 8. |
"Scene F2" |
4:55 |
8. |
"Scene 8" |
1:33 |
|
|
|
| 9. |
"Scene G" |
2:53 |
9. |
"Scene 9" |
0:50 |
|
|
|
| 10. |
"Scene H" |
2:15 |
10. |
"Scene 10" |
0:21 |
|
|
|
References
- Akira was renamed Al in the Adubon Films English language
dub.
External links