Last year around April, Arrow Video assembled a massive nine
film Blu-ray boxed set consisting of Japanese company Toei Films’ V-Cinema
straight-to-video line where budgets were small but the sky was the limit in
terms of what you could get away with compared to more expensive theatrical
features. Spanning between 1989 and
1994, the V-Cinema movement became a lucrative non-theatrical film distribution
business for Toei and it was only a matter of time before they decided to try
and break out into Western markets such as North America.
Co-written by The Grudge and Dark Water screenwriter Takashige Ichise, directed by future Constantine screenwriter
Frank A. Cappello and prominently starring Viggo Mortensen in one of his
earliest roles opposite Audition star Ryô Ishibashi speaking his English
lines phonetically, Toei V-Cinema’s first foray into the North American
marketplace with American Yakuza comes to Arrow Video for the first time
in a new 2K scan of the original camera negative with plentiful extras and is a
solid ultraviolent yarn.
Nick Davis (Viggo Mortensen) is laying low, on the surface
an ex-con seeking refuge in factory work that turns out to be commandeered by a
Japanese yakuza faction. On the job one
day, a raid ensues with many bullets fired and fallen bodies with the head of
the Yakuza family Shuji (Ryô Ishibashi) narrowly evading death when Nick
rescues him in a raging shootout and car escape that rival some of the big
Hollywood action movies.
Taken under
Shuji’s wing much to the chagrin of other Yakuza unkeen on an American entering
their faction, Nick quickly ascends stature in the Yakuza world. Unbeknownst to Shuji and others in tow, Nick’s
just a pseudonym and in reality he is undercover FBI agent David Brandt. Trying to maintain his fake identity and
ingrain himself further into the inner workings of the Yakuza world about to go
to war with the Mafia, Nick/David soon finds himself torn between loyalties to
both sides and is forced to choose between crime, a young Japanese woman he
comes to love and his own bond with the crime boss that grows increasingly
personal and morally conflicted.
Viggo Mortensen is giving 110% in a role that’s
broadly drawn, breathing life and energy into an otherwise strait-laced heroic
character. Ryô Ishibashi’s English is a
little rusty but works for this bilingual English-Japanese crime yarn. Playing the skeptical angry yakuza is The
Karate Kid Part II actor Yuji Okumoto and Michael Nouri as the ruthless
Mafia boss who is all smiles and handshakes publicly but will pay off someone
to assassinate you plays his bad guy part with relish. Anzu Lawson isn’t given a whole lot to do
beyond getting naked with Viggo Mortensen as the love interest but they play
off of each other well enough.
Featuring an audio commentary and interview
with the director, newly filmed interviews with Viggo Mortensen and Ryô
Ishibashi, the new Arrow Video disc is solid and for owners of the V-Cinema box
from Arrow this feels like a trans-continental bonus feature to that set. Viggo Mortensen’s a terrific actor who gave
an A-list action performance in ostensibly a B-movie and Ryô Ishibashi is also
a brilliant overqualified performer in his own right, making this a surprising
and involved low-budget thriller well worth rediscovering in Arrow’s splendid
new edition.
--Andrew Kotwicki




