hahahaha...i didn't know they had this movie on here. i surely don't consider is horror. i haven't seen it in a while but i remember being captivated because i had no idea what the fuck was going on. don't watch this if you are really tired, you may fall asleep, but this movie got me hooked on miike films
First and foremost, the only reason I didn’t give Izo a perfect or near perfect score is because of the production value. To be blunt, the production value in the first hour is hideous, but it gets a little better as the film goes on. The story itself is pretty amazing, intelligent, but not necessarily original or as weird as people are saying when you understand it. More on that in a moment.
I’m sick of movies (such as Donnie Darko and Oldboy) that think they’re so utterly intelligent when in reality they just rehash old clichés that have been done in movies exactly just like them time and time again. To say it’s been a while since I’ve seen a movie that was actually as intelligent as it thinks it is an understatement. Izo, to my surprise, actually had something somewhat new and practical to say and was never pretentious about it. One of the best lines of the movie is, “He thinks he can find answers by just asking questions! Let’s laugh at him!” which can be interpreted as Miike telling the audience he’s not the egotistical moron like the other “intelligent” wannabe directors.
Izo, for people who are having a hard time understanding, is a straightforward journey of a dead man’s soul questioning everything that brought us as a society to the place we are. Family, sex, love, God, patriotism, government—Miike questions it all, and really leaves the answer up to the viewer. In a way, it almost reminded me of that biblical Proverb that claims everything under the sun is meaningless. In another way, it reminded me of a Greek morality play. Still, despite the things it reminded me of, it was never once just the same old questions you’ve always heard—they’re presented in new, cool, modern ways.
But before you start thinking Izo is just filmed literature, Miike ties all this together with an insane bloody body count. There is very little graphic gore, but there is a lot of blood splatter and kills that kept me interested through the entire movie. Even then, Miike backs up the killing with the statement: “History is built on bloody events, so why wouldn’t I kill to find answers?” It has a really cool pulp literary feel that pleases both the 12-year-old boy who likes blood and action and pleases the old man who likes deep thoughts. What more could you ask from a film like this?
Overall, Izo is a must see if you consider yourself an intellectual person or if you consider yourself a fan of hardcore violence. It’s not run-of-the-mill in any way shape or form, and borders on originality through the entire movie. If only there was better production value . . .
This movie plays out like an episodic anime taking place in feudal Japan. The dialog doesn’t get much better than your standard anime and the movie seems to build to a climax every 20 minutes or so just like a show on TV. So, if you want to see something like Enuyasha in live action. This might be it.
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