Pif Magazine - ISSN: 1094-2726
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Branded To Kill (1967) 
Directed by Seijun Suzuki 

reviewed by Nick Burton
  


From the ridiculous to the sublime, Seijun Suzuki's 1967 Branded To Kill has been released recently by Home Vision - and it's stunning. Suzuki turned out Yakuza thrillers like Tokyo Drifter ( also just released from Home Vision) for a studio called Nikkatsu, but when the studio execs saw the complteted Branded, Suzuki was fired.

It's the story of a rice-loving Yakuza hit man - ranked as the number 3 killer - whose life becomes a surreal experience after he bungles a hit because a butterfly lands on the scope of his rifle. This is kinetic, brilliant film making, like fuel -injected Godard, full of bizarre touches (a woman who lives in an apartment covered with pinned butterflies drives in the rain with the top of her convertible down and a real dead bird hanging from her rear view mirror), weird humor, sex, and an almost avant -garde, deconstructed feel.

This is a reminder of how bracing pure cinema can be.





Nick Burton lives in Newport Beach, California. His fiction has appeared in many small press and web publications, inlcuding: Chronicles Of Fiction, Pauper, and of course Pif.











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