词条 | Naked Seven |
释义 |
| name = Naked Seven | image = Naked Seven.jpg | image_size = | caption = Theatrical poster for Naked Seven (1972) | director = Yasuharu Hasebe[1] | producer = | writer = Atsushi Yamatoya Yasuharu Hasebe | narrator = | starring = Mari Tanaka | music = Hajime Kaburagi | cinematography = Masaru Mori | editing = Akira Suzuki | distributor = Nikkatsu | released = December 27, 1972 | runtime = 80 min. | country = Japan | language = Japanese | budget = | gross = | preceded_by = | followed_by = }}{{nihongo|Naked Seven|戦国ロック 疾風の女たち|Sengoku rokku nayate no onnatachi}} aka Sengoku Rock: Female Warriors and Warring States Rock: Gale-Force Women is a 1972 Japanese film in Nikkatsu's Roman porno series, directed by Yasuharu Hasebe and starring Mari Tanaka. SynopsisIn Japan's Sengoku period, a group of beautiful women warriors are on a mission to deliver a sacred scroll to a distant lord. On the way, they help a small village in its fight against bandits.[2] Cast
BackgroundThe screenplay to Naked Seven was written by the cult film director Atsushi Yamatoya, who had helped write the screenplay to Seijun Suzuki's cult classic Branded to Kill (1967). Yamatoya is best known for his own noir crime-thriller-cum pink film Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands (1967).[4] The plot of Naked Seven is an obvious take-off on Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai (1954), which it satirizes.[5] American arthouse audiences could appreciate the parody of Kurosawa,[2] but to Japanese audiences the film also served as a reference to director Yasuharu Hasebe's own popular Alleycat Rock series (1970–71) from the pre-Roman Porno era. This series featured actress Meiko Kaji in stories about a female motorcycle gang.[6] Having been a director at Nikkatsu since before the Roman Porno days, Hasebe was uncomfortable with the pink film genre, and mixed his first two Roman Pornos with other genres to create interest. Besides the historical-adventure style of Naked Seven, he departed from standard pink style with his next film, Sukeban Deka: Dirty Mary (1974), a tribute to the Dirty Harry films.[7] Naked Seven was successful at the time of its release, and, in their Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films (1998), the Weissers give the film three points out of four.[8] Because Naked Seven and Dirty Mary, Hasebe's first two films in the Roman Porno series, had both departed from standard pink themes, Hasebe did not consider them to be Pink Films.[9] After departing Nikkatsu for television, he returned to the studio to direct controversial rape-themed films in the "Violent Pink" genre.[10] Hasebe considered the first of these films, Rape! (1976), to be his first true sex film.[9] Through the "violent pink" genre, Hasebe had the creative freedom from the strict sex formula, and created such controversial films as Assault! Jack the Ripper (1976) and Rape! 13th Hour (1977). Though Hasebe's films in this genre are generally considered his best work, they remain controversial.[11] Naked Seven was a showcase for Nikkatsu's top starlets of the time. Mari Tanaka, as leader of the gang, had made news headlines through her association with the controversial and persecuted Love Hunter (1972) and its sequel, and was an idol of the anti-establishment.[8][12] Genshū Hanayagi was a classical ballerina who came to Nikkatsu's attention through appearance in a television commercial.[5][8] Her major role in director Noboru Tanaka's later Nikkatsu Roman Porno Secret Chronicles: She-Beast Market (1974) created news in Japan.[8]AvailabilityNaked Seven was released theatrically in Japan on December 27, 1972, and played in U.S. arthouse theaters in the 1970s.[1][8] It was released on DVD in Japan on December 21, 2007, as part of Geneon's tenth wave of Nikkatsu Roman porno series.[13]BibliographyEnglish
Japanese
Notes1. ^1 {{cite web |url= http://www.japanese-cinema-db.jp/details/11914 |script-title=ja:戦国ロック 疾風の女たち|accessdate=2009-09-23|publisher=Japanese Cinema Database (Agency for Cultural Affairs) |language=ja}} {{Yasuharu Hasebe}}2. ^1 {{cite web |first=Robert |last=Firsching|url= http://www.allmovie.com/work/245214|title= Sengoku Rokku Hayate No Onnatachi|accessdate=2009-09-23|publisher=Allmovie}} 3. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.kinejun.jp/cinema/id/29649|script-title=ja:戦国ロック 疾風の女たち(邦画)|accessdate=2009-09-23|language=Japanese|publisher=Kinema Junpo}} 4. ^{{cite book |last=Weisser|first=Thomas|author2=Yuko Mihara Weisser|title=Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films|year=1998|publisher=Vital Books : Asian Cult Cinema Publications|location=Miami|isbn=1-889288-52-7 |pages= 210–211}} 5. ^1 {{cite journal |last=Fentone|first=Steve|year=1998|title=A Rip of the Flesh: The Japanese 'Pink Film' Cycle|journal=She|volume=2|issue=12|page=5}} 6. ^Weisser, pp. 40-41, 284-285. 7. ^Weisser, p. 422. 8. ^1 2 3 4 Weisser, pp. 284-285. 9. ^1 Hasebe, Yasuharu. (1998). Interviewed by Thomas and Yuko Mihara Weisser in Tokyo, 1999, in Asian Cult Cinema, #25, 4th Quarter, 1999, p.39. 10. ^{{cite book |last=Sharp|first=Jasper|title=Behind the Pink Curtain: The Complete History of Japanese Sex Cinema|year=2008|publisher=FAB Press|location=Guildford|isbn=978-1-903254-54-7 |page=128}} 11. ^Weisser, pp. 327-328. 12. ^{{cite web |url=http://es.geocities.com/eiga9/articulos/obscenity.html|title=Obscenity and Article 175 of the Japanese Penal Code: A Short Introduction to Japanese Censorship|accessdate=2009-09-25|last=da Silva|first=Joaquín|date=2006-10-24 |quote=|archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://es.geocities.com/eiga9/articulos/obscenity.html&date=2009-10-25+03:18:25|archivedate=2009-10-25}} 13. ^{{cite web |url=http://www2u.biglobe.ne.jp/~p-g/dvd/romanporno/romanporno.htm|script-title=ja:ジェネオン エンタテインメントよりDVDリリース|accessdate=2011-09-26|language=Japanese|publisher=P.G. Web Site}} 6 : 1972 films|Japanese films|Films directed by Yasuharu Hasebe|Japanese-language films|Nikkatsu films|Nikkatsu Roman Porno |
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