| Product: |
Rikidozan: A Hero Extraordinary (DVD) |
| Date: |
19.01.06 (132 review reads) |
| Rating: |
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Advantages: Looks good, a true story of a mans life
Disadvantages: A bit long and Rikidozan is a very mean spritied guy, stops you liking him
There is something about very large men wearing nappies and slapping each other that does absolutely nothing for me! Fortunately Rikidozan – a Hero Extraordinary, the dramatised story of the eponymous sumo wrestler doesn’t subject us to too much these near naked men.
What Rikidozan does show us though is the story, the very, very long story, of Rikidozan, a Korean man who came to Japan in the 40’s to make a career as a sumo wrestler. After suffering an incredible amount of abuse during his training (due to being Korean which made him a lesser person in Japan) he did make it.
The chip on his shoulder and his incredible temper almost certainly contributed to his being suspended by Sumo’s ruling body, though the main reason is said to have been his racial ‘impurity’, and it was definitely the reason behind him being cut down to size in a bar by Harold Sakada (Odd Job in James Bond?), who ran a wrestling class.
Discovering a new career possibility Rikidozan goes to Sakada’s school and learns how to wrestle; he becomes a pro wrestler and is instrumental in bringing it to a mainstream audience in Japan and making it the phenomenon it is in in the country today.
Rikidozan is an interesting character, if not a very likeable one. Maybe if you knew who he was it would make a difference but as he is a complete unknown to me and not knowing his superstar pedigree in Japan he just comes across as an arrogant, foul tempered man who thought that everything revolved around him. His life was certainly packed with incident; even if he mostly caused it itself, and these incidents do make a good film.
The main problem with Rikidozan is that it is way too long, over two hours, and that sometimes its heavy production values get in the way, making the film look too good in places!
The other negative to the film is that Rikidozan himself is such an unlikeable character, he dominates every scene and because of this if you don’t like him it gets a bit tiresome after a while, if you are supposed to feel sympathy for him due to his treatment it failed to elicit anything from me.
Sol Kyung-gu, who plays Rikidozan does so with real quality. The anger he feels at his treatment, his perseverance and sheer guts at surviving through Sumo school comes across superbly. His slow slide into egotism and arrogance really make you wonder why the man is such a hero in Japan.
Overall Rikidozan looks superb, the nightclub scene and the wrestling matches show the care the care the film makers have invested into their movie, but it is just too long, Rikidozan is just so unlikeable that you don’t want to spend too much time in his presence!
I'm not sure whether this has had an actual cinema release at all yet. I saw it at the Cambridge Film Festival 2005. It certainly deserves some sort of showing as it is a well made film, it would be a shame if it just vanished and never made even a minor impact of the cinema going public over here.
Summary: An interesting story of a man unknown(?) to western audiences but a massive star in Japan
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Last comment:
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sylvisinc - 21.01.06 Very good read but I don't think this film would really do much for me. Nice to see you. |
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