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Wow what a fucked up film! This
movie had been on my must watch list for some time, but since
it’s release back in 2000 up until now it has been incredibly
hard to get a hold of. Ben and I just happened to come across it in the
local video store on DVD and couldn’t forgive ourselves for
walking out of there without it. This film is insanely violent and
incredibly disturbing, and the more I try I just can’t seem to
get this puppy out of my head. I think it’s branded itself on my
brain for all eternity. Why? Well that’s a good question.
I’m a gal with over 200 horror flicks in my collection. I started
watching (and getting desensitised to) these kinds of film at an early
age. But I assure you. Never in my life have I seen anything as brutal
and terrible as this film. But that sick part of me loved it. And yes,
I’ll watch it again.
"At the dawn of the Millennium, the nation collapsed.
At 15% unemployment, 10 million were out of work, 800,000 students
boycotted school. The adults lost confidence, and fearing the youth,
eventually passed the 'Millennium Educational Reform Act'...AKA: The BR
Act." - opening graphics introduction to Battle Royale. As the opening
text suggests, Japan is screwed at the dawn of the 2000, and the kids
have gone crazy. They don’t go to school, they don’t
respect their elders, they are nothing but trouble. So the adults get
together and formulate the Battle Royale act, which basically states
that each year they can kidnap a random class full of ninth grade
students, put them on an island and give them three days to kill each
other. Whoever is left is the winner and gets to go home. Pretty
screwed up right? That’ll put the fear and respect right back in
em!
They start out thinking they are
heading off on a school field trip, but are actually being drugged and
carted off to an island, where they will be equipped with collars
– these collars tell the BR operatives of the wearers location on
the island and whether they are still alive or not. They also contain a
microphone which can monitor their conversations, and if tampered with
in any way, will explode, killing the wearer. They can also be
detonated by remote control. If the wearer is being troublesome, or has
lingered in the danger zones set up on the island for a while or so,
kablammo! Dead as a doornail. Gruesome indeed. After watching a
laughable instruction video on the principles of Battle Royale, the
students are sent out onto the island with a backpack which contains
food, water and a weapon of some sort. Weapons are totally random
– one could wind up with an Uzi, or perhaps even a paper fan.
It’s really kind of hard to focus on characters
as there are so many (some are looked into more than others) and at
times I felt myself getting confused over who was who, but by the end
of the film I think I had it down. And their stories are quite erratic
and all over the place, everyone seems to have a crush on someone, who
in turn has a crush on someone else, and then one of those people dies!
It’s crazy!! The story does tend to focus a little more on Shuya
Nanahara, and Noriko Nakagawa, two of class B’s students. After
the death of his best friend Yoshitoki Kuninobu early on in the film,
Shuya vows to protect Noriko (the girl his best friend had a crush on
– and the girl he is developing a crush on himself) at any cost.
They find protection in the form of “transfer student”
Shougo Kawada (a survivor of a previous Battle Royale) who tells them
he knows how to beat the system. But the odds of survival for the three
are grim with students dropping like flies and the likes of Kazuo
Kiriyama (the other “transfer student” who apparently just
signed up for fun) running round the island with the majority of all
the dead kids weaponry. There’s also the classes queen heartless
bitch Mitsuko Soma, slitting throats with her sickle, so the goings
tough for our young lovebirds. But besides the point, how can they both
live when only one can be the survivor?
Apart from being unbelievably brutal, the film took a
strange look into the human psyche also, the way that behaviour changes
when lives are threatened, and how quickly friendships disappear. A
good example of this is shown by the lighthouse girls. All running
around joking and being friendly with one another, cooking dinner,
cleaning tables and generally looking very at peace and at home with
one another. They looked like they trusted one another. However after
another five minutes have passed all the girls are dead. Killed by each
other. Nope its seems everything was not as okay as they led themselves
to believe and as soon as there was the tiniest bit of doubt between
them, guns were fired and all lives taken. Grizzly, but that’s
human nature. Kill or be killed. We are animals after all.
Battle Royale is a film that gets
better each time you watch it. You pick up things you missed the last
time. You begin to understand the characters, their motives and their
stories a lot more. It is cleverly written, beautifully shot and very
graphically violent, so if you’re into that kind of thing I would
suggest kicking your own arse if you miss out on seeing this movie. If
you don’t think you can handle lots of blood, and seeing a bunch
of 15 year old school kids kill each other, give it a miss.
Personally, I found it to be
extremely entertaining whilst still being daring enough to make me feel
ill at ease. It’s very rare that I can find a film with the power
to do that. The movie was based on a book by Koushun Takami. Funnily
enough Battle Royale has not been offered for distribution in the
United States by the Toei Company due to unknown reasons. It is also
never likely to be sold there.

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