Arrow Video: Play it Cool (1970) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Arrow Video

Arrow Video have been gradually working through curating and publishing the filmography of Yasuzo Masumura, director of Blind Beast, Red Angel, Irezumi and Afraid to Die.  Their latest pickup and release of the director’s extensive oeuvre comes in the form of a little-seen pinku-eiga sexploitation crime drama Play it Cool which sees Japanese singer Mari Atsumi in the leading role of a college girl hastily navigating her way through Tokyo’s male dominated nightclub culture.  At once a mixture of Roman Porno, yakuza yarn, geisha study and portrait of strained female agency touched upon in such fare as The Shape of Night, the film makes it’s English language blu-ray disc premiere via Arrow Video in a new special edition featuring an audio commentary moderated by Jasper Sharp and Anne McKnight as well as a video essay on the film and Masumura by Mark Roberts.

 
Yumi (Mari Atsumi) is a young college fashion student residing with her alcoholic geisha mother Tomi (Akemi Negishi) and ineffectual stepfather Ryoichi.  While Tomi is working as a hostess in a local bar, Ryoichi sexually assaults Yumi and when the news reaches Tomi she retaliates by murdering Ryoichi.  Landed in jail, Yumi is left to forage on her own as she unwillingly inherits her mother’s former place of employment as a geisha, being kicked and pushed around by leering men wanting to manhandle her before crumpling her up and throwing her out.  Solace seems to finally come in the form of a former lawyer Nozawa (Yusuke Kawazu) who rescues her from a violent thuggish gangster and introduces her to a ritzier classier world.  However, it too has its own subset of dangers and pitfalls threatening to swallow her whole again as she awaits her mother Tomi’s impending release from prison.

 
Hip and cool for how it depicts a geisha’s daughter falling into a deep dark pit and her subsequent digging of herself out of the mire, Play it Cool is a wildly entertaining journey of a strong and resourceful heroine navigating worlds which treat their women like disposable playthings.  Co-written by Yoshihiro Ishimatsu, Masayuki Toyama and Masumura himself, the ensemble piece featuring legends like Akira Kurosawa regular Ko Nishimura, Yusuke Kawazu and Sei Hiraizumi.  Essentially boiled down to two principal characters Yumi played brilliantly and fearlessly by singer Mari Atsumi and her mother Tomi played by Akemi Negishi, the film is an unusual cocktail of geisha endurance and yakuza yarn wrapped together as social study of women fraught between worlds where they’re taken advantage of. 

 
Featuring a rousing score by Lucky Dragon No. 5 composer Hikaru Hayashi and expressive scope widescreen 2.35:1 cinematography by Fires on the Plain cameraman Setsuo Kobayashi, Play it Cool while more modestly sized and pictured than say Blind Beast which was a phantasmagorical piece from top to bottom nevertheless finds its own unique footing as a mid-sized pinku-eiga/yakuza-geisha tale anchored by Mari Atsumi who is at once vulnerable, alluring and eventually cold and stern as she gains further control of her situation.  Masumura has tended in his work towards portraying tough female characters navigating largely male dominated social ladders and Play it Cool is no exception. 

 
One of three features directed by Masumura in the year of 1970, the other two being Yakuza Masterpiece and The Hot Little Girl, Play it Cool kind of comes in under the radar compared to some of Masumura’s other more striking works.  Still, as a mixture of pinku-eiga and action crime drama the film is unique and Masumura’s heroines are always thrilling to watch take on male adversaries.  The Arrow Video release is solid and while the film is something of a quickie in the director’s filmography it nevertheless leaves an impression like a sting that won’t stop ringing with pain.  Masumura would eventually make a foray into Japanese television in the late 1970s into the 1980s but at the beginning of the decade he was churning out confrontational portraits of men and women locked in some form of mortal combat, either falling in and out of love or racing each other to death.  Play it Cool will never come close to the outlandish horrors of Blind Beast or the satirical wit of Giants and Toys but it’ll still pack a punch.

--Andrew Kotwicki