Radiance Films: Black Tight Killers (1966) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Radiance Films

Years before becoming one of Nikkatsu’s top players with Massacre Gun, the Alleycat Rock movies and canonizing the short-lived Nikkatsu Violent Pink movement of roughie Roman Porno films ala Assault! Jack the Ripper and Rape! 13th Hour, Nikkatsu film worker turned auteur Yasuharu Hasebe worked his way up the chain of command including but not limited to an elongated apprenticeship with fellow Nikkatsu troublemaker Seijun Suzuki before making his own features. 
 
Starting out in 1966 with his first directorial effort Black Tight Killers based on the novel Tripe Exposure by Michio Tsuzuki adapted for the screen by Ryuzo Nakanishi, the film was among the first Japanese movies depicting a tight ironclad team of female ninjas while also providing something of an alternative to the multicolored lights of Seijun Suzuki.  At once the least likely Hasebe effort and also a harbinger of things to come in his more extreme later work, Black Tight Killers remained one of the filmmaker’s least seen efforts until now thanks to Radiance Films’ ongoing efforts to license and publish hard-to-find renowned classics of world cinema to the domestic stage.

 
When a former wartime photographer named Hondo (Akira Kobayashi) sees an airplane stewardess named Yoriko (Chieko Matsubara) kidnapped by a team of black skin-tight leather clad female ninja assassins who use everything from swords to vinyl records as weapons, he mounts his own investigation and uncovers a web of co-conspirators including but not limited to the yakuza and American mafia to pilfer a buried stash of stolen WWII gold.  Dodging go-go dancers and mod clubbers of the swinging psychedelic sixties, soon our hero finds himself joining forces with the so-called Black Tight Killers in an effort to rescue his new love of his life Yoriko while bullets and 45rpm vinyl records fly through the air.

 
Spring boarding from the psychedelia unleashed by Seijun Suzuki’s Tokyo Drifter released the same year but far less screwy than Suzuki’s lunatic romps, Black Tight Killers with its slick and ultra-hip female assassins who would feel right at home in Russ Meyer’s Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! and Tura Satana’s black cloaked femme fatale is a wild, funky beast of an action thriller.  Wall to wall with gaudy, garish neon-lit multicolored imagery and strikingly trippy set pieces and even stranger rear projections echoing the antics of Suzuki but unlike Suzuki sporting strong individual female characters fearless of taking on men twice their size on the battleground, the first official feature film of Yasuharu Hasebe is startling for how playful it is.  While, yes, brutally violent, the film has a sharp sense of humor and a cavalcade of spunky female characters unafraid to shake things up and take a few kicks and punches in stride.

 
Sheer visual eye candy lensed in 2.35:1 Nikkatsuscope by none other than Seijun Suzuki’s longtime cinematographer Kazue Nagatsuka, Black Tight Killers when it isn’t slicing, dicing and firing bullets away is a playfully almost hyperkinetic visual delight.  Perhaps the most colorful Hasebe to date whose visual aesthete became increasingly utilitarian with his eventual foray into the Violent Pink movement, Black Tight Killers even without its jazzy score by The Burmese Harp composer Naozumi Yamamoto is a deliciously anachronistic dose of heightened reality.  Akira Kobayashi from Kinji Fukusaku’s Battles Without Honor and Humanity makes a strong male lead and Chieko Matsubara somehow did both this movie and Tokyo Drifter within the same year, though the real starlets are the five assassins play with spunky yet girlish glee by the ensemble cast.
 
Critically and commercially well received and somehow winning the hearts of Nikkatsu studio suits while mentor Seijun Suzuki was getting into hot water with them, Black Tight Killers immediately ushered in Yasuharu Hasebe as a formidable new filmmaking talent for the Japanese filmmaking empire.  Considerably more playfully magical in its mixture of pop manga comic book unrealism and hard blood-soaked yakuza violence, the film is almost something of a sugary sweet lark.  


Almost as fun to look at if not more than the director whose work clearly inspired it, Black Tight Killers is a surefire yakuza ninja assassins escapist delight whose tough and hip sixties mod assassins absolutely had to play a role in what would or would not become Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill: Vol. 1.  All in all, another fantastic home run from Radiance Films who continue to remain at the forefront of the home video boutique label releasing industry.

--Andrew Kotwicki