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Director : Noboru Iguchi
Producer : Yoshinori Chiba, Satoshi Nakamura
Screenwriter : Noboru Iguchi
Starring : Asami, Honoka, Ryôsuke Kawamura, Yûya Ishikawa
The Machine Girl is one of those movies that is successful only because it tries
to be bad. (Remember Snakes on a Plane?) Of course, that doesn't make it good. Ninjas,
flying guillotines, drill bras, a girl with a machine gun for an arm -- how could
you not want to watch this movie after viewing the trailer? Unfortunately, Girl i
s also one of those movies with a trailer that shows all the best parts, rendering
everything in between underwhelming by comparison.
Want to have a good time? Don't watch the trailer, gather a bunch of friends, and
sneak some forties into this movie. The trailer spoiled all the best parts for me,
but I can certainly imagine how outrageous this movie would've been had I walked
into it blindly. The conundrum here is that most people probably would have no interest
in watching this movie without seeing the trailer. And if you have seen the trailer,
well, I guess the movie is still worth watching, but I'd either try to sneak in through
the fire exit or wait for it to come out on DVD.
Whew. With that said and done, Girl is a Japanese revenge fantasy that revolves around
Ami Hyuga (Asami), whose brother is brutally murdered by bullies for lunch money.
In a Kill Bill-like fashion, Hyuga starts hunting down his killers one by one. But when
she confronts the ninja/Yakuza family responsible for her brother's death, she's
outnumbered and captured. Rather than killing her, the family chooses to torture
her, first slicing off her fingers and then her left arm. She manages to escape and
seeks refuge with a friend who engineers a machine-gun arm for her to aid her in
her revenge quest.
You'll get everything you want out of a movie with this premise. It's a 90-minute
splatterfest with enough blood spraying to fill a swimming pool. The bad guys are
so bad they're not just senseless killers; they're also necrophiliacs. It's always
fun to see how far the Japanese will go with the bizarre and the grotesque, and clearly
in this movie there's no limit line.
Director Noboru Iguchi made a wise decision by not taking the movie seriously. The
over-the-top visuals and cheesy lines like "What would Mom and Dad say, before they
killed themselves over murder allegations?" make it clear this movie is a big joke
aimed to amuse in the cheapest ways possible. Takashi Miike made the mistake of trying
to make a serious movie out of Ichi the Killer, which was about a sexually repressed man
who fights with blades that come out of his shoes. That movie is as repugnant as Gi
rl but is lacking the laughs, which makes it feel more like you're watching a snuff
film. Awkward.
Aka Kataude mashin gâru.
Reviewed at the 2008 Hole in the Head Film Festival.
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" Weak "
Rating: NR, 2008