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Gozu

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Wikipedia article




is a 2003 Japanese horror comedy crime film directed by Takashi Miike and written by Sakichi Sato. The film blends yakuza stories with ghost stories, bizarre vignettes, and urban legends.

Plot



Ozaki (Aikawa), a mentally unstable yakuza, kills a chihuahua outside a restaurant after becoming convinced that it is actually an attack dog trained to kill gangsters. Seeing Ozaki as a security risk, the head of the Azamawari yakuza clan (Ishibashi) orders fellow underling Minami (Sone), who is Ozakis brother, to kill him and dispose of his body in a company depot.

Minami, reluctant to murder Ozaki, unwittingly kills him when he pushes him to the ground in an attempt to stop him from killing an innocent woman who he mistook for an assassin. After finding the road he was driving along mysteriously replaced with a large lake, he enters a coffee shop to find a phone. Minami is given a complimentary meal that makes him violently throw up in the bathroom and returns to discover that Ozaki's body is missing. When he asks the people in the town, he finds most of them apprehensive and uncooperative. He then sets out to explore the nearly-deserted, run-down suburb of Nagoya in a desperate attempt to recover the body, only to find himself caught in a series of increasingly surreal situations. He meets several strange characters including an elderly innkeeper obsessed with her breast milk, her strange brother who can supposedly channel spirits, a waiter who died three years ago in a car accident and 'gozu' or a man with a cow's head, who appears to him in a dream. Minami tracks Ozaki to a junk yard, where he is told that he was murdered and turned into a skin suit. He returns to his car to find a girl (Yoshino) who claims to be Ozaki. After sharing intimate details of their life, as well as one of his dreams, he believes her.

Minami and the female Ozaki spend the night at a hotel. During the night, Minami hears what sounds like a voice emanating from the female Ozakis vagina while she sleeps. She wakes up and asks Minami if he wants to have sex with her; he rejects her advances.

The next day, Minami drives the female Ozaki back to his gangs office, with the intent of explaining the situation to his boss. However, once they arrive, the female Ozaki claims that she is actually the daughter of another yakuza familys deceased boss, and that she wishes to start working for Minamis boss.

The boss takes the female Ozaki to his office to have sex with her, leaving Minami outside. The boss inserts the handle of a ladle into his anus, as this is apparently the only way he can achieve an erection. Minami sneaks back into the office, and confronts his boss; in the ensuing physical altercation, the boss falls backwards, impaling himself on the ladle achieving orgasm. Minami electrocutes the unconscious boss with exposed wires from a light fitting, then leaves with the female Ozaki.

Minami and the female Ozaki return to Minamis home. Minami gives in to his temptations, and at the behest of the female Ozaki, they begin to have sex. However, as soon as he penetrates her, something latches onto his penis from within the female Ozaki; as Minami recoils in horror, a human hand emerges from the female Ozakis vagina. The original male Ozaki then extricates himself from the female Ozaki as Minami cowers in the corner of the room.

In the final scene of the movie, the two male brothers, along with the female Ozaki, are seen walking down the street together, arms linked.

Cast



* Hideki Sone as Minami

* Show Aikawa as Ozaki

* Kimika Yoshino as Female Ozaki

* Shhei Hino as Nose

* Keiko Tomita as Innkeeper

* Harumi Sone as Innkeeper's Brother

* Renji Ishibashi as Boss

Release



Shot on a low budget, the movie was originally planned for direct-to-video release on DVD. However, its positive reception at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2003 secured its theatrical release overseas.

Critical reception



On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 72%, based on 57 reviews. Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film has a score of 58 out of 100 based on 19 critics, indicating "Mixed or average reviews". In a review for 'The Washington Post', Michael O'Sullivan wrote that "'Gozu' makes little sense on paper. As a film, however, it somehow feels richly, hilariously real, even at its most bizarre familiar." Ty Burr of 'The Boston Globe' called it "creatively unhinged" and referred to it as "not your average midnight movie but something more hermetic." Jay Boyar of the 'Orlando Sentinel' also reviewed the film positively, writing that "there is something compelling about the way this film sneakily taps into our collective psychosexual fantasies."

A. O. Scott of 'The New York Times' wrote that "For Mr. Miike's fans, it will be an indispensable compendium of outtakes and sketches. For others, it will be a mystifying and provocative introduction to his unnerving, wanton and prodigious imagination." Stephen Hunter of 'The Washington Post' wrote that the film "is not in line with [Miike's] best work". G. Allen Johnson of 'SFGate' wrote that the film "is for Miike freaks only (and you know who you are). Everyone else: Stay far, far away." Jeff Shannon of 'The Seattle Times' called the film "an undisciplined mess", writing that it "trades Lynch's nightmare logic for exasperating incoherence".

References




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