Battle Royale Movie Review
Battle Royale Review
"Battle Royale" Overview

Rating: NR
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Kinji FukasakuProducer : Akio Kamatani,Tetsu Kayama,Masumi Okada,Masao Sato
Screenwiter : Kenta Fukasaku
Starring : Tatsuya Fujiwara,Aki Maeda,Toru Yamamoto,Masanobu Ando,Takeshi Kitano
Consider a parallel world at the dawn of the new millennium. Unemployment is
rampant, national morale is low and the country’s youth are unruly and
dangerous. The government's solution: Banish one school class per year to a
deserted island and force them to kill each other. Three days, no rules, one
winner.
If you've never heard of this twisted action thriller a film that appears to
have strong potential for box-office success it's simply due to American
sensitivities. Since its release in 2000, the Japanese Battle Royale has been
an acclaimed cult hit in its native country… but for obvious reasons of
content, chances for American distribution hover somewhere between slim and
none.
The Japanese Academy nominated this cautionary tale for seven awards, including
Best Picture. While Battle Royale doesn't really sustain a consistent gravity
(or tone) worthy of exalted accolades, the film is still a sinister adventure
that could now be seen intended or not as a dark criticism of the limits
pushed by current American "reality" TV ridiculousness.
Based on a controversial Japanese novel by Koshun Takami, Battle Royale opens
with a spooky, foreboding introduction. Hordes of reporters swarm around a
military vehicle said to be carrying the most recent winner of the brutal
survival game, a member of a randomly selected 4th grade class. The champion
is… a small girl with a bloodied face, clutching an old teddy bear. She smiles
broadly.
Fast forward to the next class (teenagers this time) and about 110 minutes of
death. Popular Japanese actor/director Takeshi Kitano (appearing here as Beat
Takeshi) stars as the core of the game's operation, a vengeful teacher with icy
steel running through his veins. Takeshi’s character is a sadistic lunatic
pushed too far by today's kids a guy who thinks nothing of killing the
children himself to prove a point.
As twisted as it sounds, killing off 41 teens takes a great deal of creativity
and an innate sense of pacing in order to avoid, well, cinematic boredom.
Director Kinji Fukasaku (along with screenwriter/son Kenta) makes a valiant
attempt, providing a barrage of slayings, suicides, and accidents that slowly
whittle the numbers down to a select few. Each death is documented on-screen
like a baseball box score, providing the player's number and name, along with
the number of students left. It's a cold, effective touch, a detached way to
chronicle this government-run Lord of the Flies, a sort of forced version of
Darwinism.
As the plot progresses, the Fukasakus take the time to flesh out characters to
varying degrees, making clear which students will last toward the final
showdown. Even within the tight parameters and seemingly predictable
mini-storylines, the filmmakers are still able to buck expectation and
convention down to the last.
The problem is that Battle Royale delivers a mixed message. The early scenes
especially a howl of a "class orientation" led by Takeshi are a morbid mix of
hardened violence and dark comedy. As the film’s body count climbs during the
competition, there are some insightful and almost touching takes on the general
problems of being a teenager. But the Fukasakus wrap up with a gratuitous,
tacked-on change-of-pace that attempts to deliver a message of empowerment and
solidarity. It ends the bang-bang storytelling with a bit of a thud.
That inconsistent tone eventually takes away from the film's overall success.
Running the gamut of emotions simply doesn’t work for a social commentary as
dark as this one… even if the constant violence tends to get diluted through
repetition (a powerful comment itself), leading some viewers to need more from
the movie.
Regardless, the bigger issue is that these criticisms can be neither
investigated nor challenged by those who might want to, as this film is tough
to find in the States (try a "0" zone DVD copy if you can get one.) More
frustrating is that a sequel is currently being produced, one that, based on
its subject matter, could even be released in the U.S. If so, many viewers may
never know its origins.
Aka Batoru rowaiairu.
Reviewer: Norm Schrager



