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Kamikaze Man: Duel at Noon

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Kamikaze Man: Duel at Noon
Film poster
Directed byKinji Fukasaku
StarringSonny Chiba
Production
companies
Distributed byToei Company
Release date
  • June 4, 1966 (1966-06-04)
CountryJapan
LanguagesJapanese
Taiwanese

Kamikaze Man: Duel at Noon (カミカゼ野郎 真昼の決斗, Kamikaze yarō: Mahiru no kettō) (also known as The Kamikaze Guy[1][2][3][4][5] and The Kamikaze Guy: Duel at High Noon,[6] is a 1966 Japanese crime action comedy film directed by Kinji Fukasaku and starring Sonny Chiba. This was the second film shot by Fukasaku in color, the first being Gang vs. G-Men (1962).

Plot

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Three men involved with the murder of a Taiwanese man receive threatening letters signed with the initials K.M. and a skull. The first recipient, Mr. Yajima, is killed on a ski slope and the prime suspect is the Tokyo pilot Ken Mitarai, also known as "Mr. Toilet". Ballistics clear him but later a diviner tells him that he will travel to Taiwan and the next day he receives a mysterious booking from the dead man Mr. Yajima to fly an MU-2 to Taiwan. The Taiwanese photographer & journalist Koran flies along with him and in the airplane they discover the diviner's body in a trunk belonging to Tianci Rai, the President of Taiwan Tourism and another recipient of the threatening letter.

Upon arriving, they are attacked by Rai's men but manage to escape. Ken is dragged into a brothel, where a kind worker allows him to spend the night. The next day, Ken attempts to leave the country but receives a note from Mr. Kitazawa, the final recipient of the threatening letter, to meet him at the Confucius Temple. Once there, he is told by Mr. Kitazawa that Mr. Kitazawa received the same note, leading them to believe that another attack is imminent. Mr. Kitazawa leaves and his car explodes immediately thereafter.

Koran and Ken confront President Rai, who drugs their drinks to knock them out with plans to have them die in a staged plane crash, but they are saved by a rival journalist of Koran's named Fumio Kuroki, who informs them that the murders relate to 20 billion yen in diamonds seized during the Japanese occupation of Taiwan. Koran and Ken visit a funeral march for Mr. Kitazawa, where they are spotted by President Rai, who sends men to eliminate them. Ken allows them to believe that they have run him and Koran off the road into a gorge, but they secretly hide in the men's trunk, gaining them access to President Rai's hideout, where Koran learns that they are heading to Hell Valley.

President Rai and his men dig up the stolen gems from their hiding spot in Hell Valley but then Rai's assistant Fengying shoots the men and it is revealed that she has been working with Mr. Kitazawa, who faked his own death. They kill President Rai and escape in separate cars. Mr. Kitazawa accidentally kills Fengying while attempting to kill Ken, then escapes into the MU-2 and attempts to smuggle the gems back to Japan. Ken jumps onto the plane and climbs inside while it is in the air, then overpowers Mr. Kitazawa and throws him out.

Ken Mitarai is given a medal at a ceremony in Taiwan, after which Fumio Kuroki admits to him that he is actually the son of the murdered man. Ken and Koran take a flight back to Japan, but when it is announced that the plane will be returning to Taiwan due to bad weather, Ken parachutes out of the plane to avoid returning.

Cast

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Marketing

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The film was marketed as the first of what was planned to be a series of multiple Kamikaze Man films,[7] much in the way that Kinji Fukasaku and Sonny Chiba had previously worked together on multiple Drifting Detective and Vigilante in the Funky Hat films. However, no further films were produced featuring the character Ken Mitarai.

References

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  1. ^ "The Kamikaze Guy (1966)" – via letterboxd.com.
  2. ^ "Japanese Film". UniJapan. November 1, 2002 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Galbraith, Stuart (November 1, 1996). The Japanese Filmography: A Complete Reference to 209 Filmmakers and the Over 1250 Films Released in the United States, 1900 Through 1994. McFarland. ISBN 9780786400324 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ "UniJapan Film Quarterly". UniJapan Film, Association for the Diffusion of Japanese Films Abroad. November 1, 1966 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Tucker, Richard Neil (November 1, 1973). Japan - Film Image. Studio Vista. ISBN 9780289703083 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ Jacoby, Alexander (February 10, 2013). A Critical Handbook of Japanese Film Directors: From the Silent Era to the Present Day. Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 9781611725315 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ https://www.filmposter.net/images/product_images/original_images/Import/kamikaze-yaro-kamikaze-man-20834-movieposter.2352.jpg [bare URL image file]
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