162-164 Underworld Chronicles: Three Yakuza Fables by Takashi Miike

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Finch
Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 9:09 pm
Location: United States

162-164 Underworld Chronicles: Three Yakuza Fables by Takashi Miike

#1 Post by Finch »

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The late nineties and early 00s saw director Takashi Miike make the transition from his origins in direct-to-video ‘V-cinema’ to one of the most critically and commercially successful Japanese directors on the international stage. A multi-talented director who would come to work in almost every established genre, it was his often outrageous takes on the gangster genre that first brought him attention outside of Japan. Three of his most notable Yakuza films from this period are collected here, in a landmark new box set.

FUDOH: THE NEW GENERATION

Riki Fudoh (Shosuke Tanihara) is a high school student juggling academic work with a secret life operating as an underworld boss. As the leader of a group of larger than life, school-age assassins, Fudoh is waging a campaign of violence against the entire criminal underworld, as part of a revenge plot against his own father (Toru Minegishi), a high-ranking Yakuza in his own right who was forced to murder Fudoh’s brother. Originally planned for release as a direct-to-video V-cinema title, Fudoh was granted a theatrical release after producers viewed the film, leading to it becoming a festival favourite around the world, and establishing Miike on the world stage as one of film’s great provocateurs and a key figure in ‘extreme’ cinema.

AGITATOR

A yakuza (played by Miike himself in a cameo) is murdered after violently assaulting a hostess on rival turf, providing the catalyst for a gang war between a number of factions seeking a redistribution of power. In this densely-layered gangland drama , the backroom manoeuvring of the senior figures in the yakuza, overseen by Mr. Kaito (Hiroki Matsukata, Rapacious Jailbreaker), are juxtaposed against the actions of the street-level mobsters, as the two sides head towards an inevitable collision. Written by Graveyard of Honor scribe Shigenori Takechi, Miike directed Agitator in arguably the most productive year of his career in 2001, alongside Ichi the Killer, Visitor Q, and The Happiness of the Katakuris. Epic in scope, the film is presented here in its original theatrical version, and in a two-part 200 minute extended version, until now only available on Japanese VHS.

DEADLY OUTLAW: REKKA

Kunisada (played by V-cinema legend Riki Takeuchi) has his world turned upside down after learning of the death of his mentor Sanada (Yuya Uchida, founder of the Flower Travellin’ Band, who also provide the film’s hard-rocking psychedelic soundtrack). Pairing up with his best friend Shimatani (Kenichi Endo, Visitor Q), Kunisada embarks on a rampaging road trip to avenge his fallen father figure, leaving a trail of bullets, blood spatters, and bazooka fire in his wake. A typically bizarre and extreme take on the Yakuza genre, Deadly Outlaw: Rekka is Miike at his most deliriously entertaining.

BLU-RAY LIMITED EDITION BOX SET SPECIAL FEATURES

High-Definition digital transfers of each film on three discs, on Blu-ray for the first time in the UK
Multiformat 4K UHD and Blu-ray presentation of Fudoh: The New Generation
Standard definition transfer of 200 minute extended version of Agitator, presented in its original two-part form for the first time outside of Japan
Uncompressed mono PCM audio
Newly filmed interviews with Takashi Miike on Agitator and Deadly Outlaw: Rekka
Audio commentaries on Agitator and Deadly Outlaw: Rekka by Tom Mes
Audio commentary on Fudoh: The New Generation with Takashi Miike and Shosuke Tanihara
Electric Yakuza, Go to Hell!: documentary on Miike featuring interviews with Kinji Fukasaku, Takeshi Kitano, Shinya Tsukamoto and others (Yves Montmayeur, 2009, 59 mins)
Archival interview with Shosuke Tanihara
Archival interview with Yoshinori Chiba
Trailers
Newly improved subtitle translations
Reversible sleeves featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Time Tomorrow
Limited edition 80 page bound book featuring new writing by Tom Mes and Colin Geddes, and archival writing from Tony Rayns
Limited edition of 5000 copies, presented in rigid box with full-height Scanavo cases and removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings

Released in the UK: 23rd March

Agitator gets a separate BD in the US 24 March
beamish14
Joined: Fri May 18, 2018 7:07 pm

Re: 162-164 Underworld Chronicles: Three Yakuza Fables by Takashi Miike

#2 Post by beamish14 »

Wasn’t Umbrella’s release the first Anglophone territory debut of Agitator’s longer cut?
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swo17
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Joined: Tue Apr 15, 2008 2:25 pm
Location: SLC, UT

Re: 162-164 Underworld Chronicles: Three Yakuza Fables by Takashi Miike

#3 Post by swo17 »

Umbrella simply described it as a "3-Hour Extended Cut." Is it not quite 200 minutes long, and not presented in "two-part form"?
beamish14
Joined: Fri May 18, 2018 7:07 pm

Re: 162-164 Underworld Chronicles: Three Yakuza Fables by Takashi Miike

#4 Post by beamish14 »

swo17 wrote: Wed Dec 03, 2025 7:10 pm Umbrella simply described it as a "3-Hour Extended Cut." Is it not quite 200 minutes long, and not presented in "two-part form"?

I’m a bit confused as well. I thought it was about 200 minutes in length, but maybe there is supposed to be a break in the middle?
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yoloswegmaster
Joined: Tue Nov 01, 2016 7:57 pm

Re: 162-164 Underworld Chronicles: Three Yakuza Fables by Takashi Miike

#5 Post by yoloswegmaster »

The extended version on the Umbrella release is the 200 minute cut according the review on DVDCompare. When it was first released on VHS, it was split into two parts (103 minutes for the first part and 97 minutes for the second). A French company released the extended version on DVD a couple of years ago, which had PAL speedup on it and ran for 194 minutes, which Umbrella then used as the source for their release. There was an issue with the Umbrella version, as they encoded it in 1080i60 despite the fact that it runs at 25fps.
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WrathOfAguirre
Joined: Sun Nov 02, 2025 6:27 pm

Re: 162-164 Underworld Chronicles: Three Yakuza Fables by Takashi Miike

#6 Post by WrathOfAguirre »

I'm a bit unorganized at the moment, and stacked this month's releases on top of a piece of furniture in our office (okay, along with other releases I still haven't shelved). Sometime later, the bottom of this box set caught me off guard :D .
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(Note: Tried embedding the image, but it wouldn't show in the preview, so I've linked it above.)
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