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Hanzo The Razor (3 DVD Special Edition Box Set) (UNCUT) [1972]
 
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Hanzo The Razor (3 DVD Special Edition Box Set) (UNCUT) [1972]

Kenji Misumi , Yasuzo Masumura    Suitable for 18 years and over   DVD
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Directors: Kenji Misumi, Yasuzo Masumura, Yoshio Inoue
  • Format: Anamorphic, Box set, PAL
  • Language Japanese
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Eureka Entertainment Ltd
  • DVD Release Date: 6 April 2009
  • Run Time: 263 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000PFUBMW
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 19,896 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Product Description

Love samurai films? Wish they were... dirtier? Welcome to HANZO THE RAZOR's deranged world of crazy swordplay and sexploitation set to a 1970s funk soundtrack. Uncut for the first time ever in the UK, this cult 1970s Japanese pinku trilogy was seemingly influenced by Dirty Harry and Shaft, but there's no doubt who has the 'longer arm of the law'! Shintaro Katsu (best known as the blind swordsman in the original Zatoichi) stars as Hanzo a rebellious yet obsessively moral samurai police officer who slashes his way through the backbone of crime, uncovers corruption at higher levels, and tortures relentlessly using his own unique techniques. Shocking audiences even today, the hardest man in Edo regularly unleashes his special weapon in the form of his oversized penis, which he uses to 'interrogate' female suspects into pleasured compliance. Despite the knuckle-biting, graphic violence there is an underlying social commentary, testifying to the noble honour of the samurai and emphasising Hanzo's status as the people's champion. In Sword of Justice, Hanzo overturns his own gutless superiors; in The Snare, he breaks into a temple used by local magistrates for the sadistic torture of young girls; in Who's Got the Gold?, the shogunate treasury is being looted by its own officials. From the creator of the Lone Wolf and Cub series (used as the basis for Shogun Assassin, and a direct influence on Tarantino's Kill Bill) the Hanzo the Razor trilogy is presented here for the first time in the UK complete and uncut.


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Amazing Cult Films 13 April 2009
As a fan of some of the cult Asian cinema that has really started to find it's way to DVD in recent years such as Sex and Fury, Bohachi Bushido, Female Prisoner Scorpion, and Blind Woman's Curse, this set is absolutely a must have. The films are very violent, yet have lots of dark humor to keep the mood from being too serious. They are cult classics in every sense of the word and if you enjoyed any of the films I listed above, then you will no doubt love these films too.

The set comes in a very sturdy box and each film has it's own regular DVD case with the original and very beautiful theatrical poster art for the covers. Each film has a booklet with notes and info about the films inside their cases. The transfers are relatively crisp and don't appear to be NTSC to PAL conversions from the US set, and the English subtitles are very easy to follow. The only extras on each disc appears to be a trailer for each film, but the films are easily worth the cost of the set.

If you like Asian exploitation films pick up this set. If you dislike violence, can't stand bloodshed, are insulted by nudity, then don't get these films. These films are a bag of rice humping good time. ;)
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Hanzo is a Handful 16 April 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase
Hanzo(Shintaro Katsu)is a fiercely independent,anti-authoritarian Samurai officer who dispenses justice equally to poor or rich alike with a particularly persuasive interrogation technique for the ladies.
Eureka have put together the three Hanzo films with excellent transfers and informative booklets at a bargain price.
The first in the series - Sword of Justice(now there is a double meaning if ever I saw one)is the pick of the bunch with excellent direction from the celebrated Kenji Misumi - director of three of the epic Lone Wolf series amongst others,with an excellent story and performances.
In fact all three films have excellent production values and even though they are catagorised as exploitation films(part of the pink revolution that took place in Japan from the late 50's until the late 70's,Confessions of a Window Cleaner they are not.
The violence is fairly tepid by today's standards(too many modern reviewers play up the violence when it is not that gruesome- the aforementioned Lone Wolf is far more bloodthirsty)and the sex is alternately bawdy,lurid and parodies itself at every oppourtunity but some may be offended.
Hanzo only ran to three films and you can see why - his "interrogation"technique can only be shown so many times before it loses it's impact but they are all very well done and the first Sword Of Justice is a very good film in anyone's language.
Buy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Trevor Willsmer HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Who's the Edo Police constable who's a sex machine to all the chicks? Hanzo the Razor - Sword of Justice - can you dig it? With his funky theme tune and angry strut, he's the cop who takes no bribes and no excrement from the brass either, firmly on the side of the poor over the big rich who can buy their way out of trouble. He does things his way, whether that means torturing himself to find out how much pain a suspect can take, blackmailing his boss to stay on the force, beating his oversized penis with a wooden club or using it to secure confessions or information from female suspects. Yes, you did read that last bit right. Shintaro Katsu may bear an unfortunate resemblance to Stratford Johns but he's also not pounding a 20th century Tokyo city beat but a 17th century one, and this Police Constable is anything but PC. Even Harry was never this dirty...

Following the Zatoichi and Lone Wolf and Cub/Baby Cart series, Kenji Misumi's film should be deeply offensive or at best a smutty sex comedy - aside from Hanzo's interrogation technique, one female suspect is identified by her lack of pubic hair, observed under particularly perverse circumstances. Yet somehow, through a combination of cynical disillusion with all the old myths of honour in the samurai genre that are roundly condemned in no uncertain terms and some surprising stylisation (how many sex scenes are shot from inside a woman's vagina?), it somehow manages to come out as genuinely subversive and occasionally exhilarating rather than just exploitative. No doubt about it, this is an exploitation film, but a surprisingly classy one that's well aware of the inherent absurdity of grafting the John Shaft or James Bond aesthetic, complete with gadgets, onto a period swordplay film, yet still playing it absolutely straight. Even the plotting is anarchic, with Hanzo spending much of the film unravelling a plot that costs several lowlives their low lives to uncover a conspiracy that is at heart so trivial it goes nowhere, and rather than a showdown with the Man it ends with a surprising assisted suicide sequence that owes nothing to notions of honorable sepuku and more to do with the mercy killing of a complete stranger.

The result is a bonkers-on-paper movie with a surprising integrity, and a remarkable closing shot that promises great things to come, but unfortunately, Misumi didn't return for the second film in the series, Hanzo the Razor - The Snare, and it shows. Where Misumi used a pulp format to attack the pomposity of the genre and the false values they peddled, Yasuzo Masumura just makes a straight out sleazy exploitation film with added nudity, violence and S&M, very little of it especially interesting. The plot is considerably more lurid, with illegal abortions, a convent filled with nympho nuns being used as a brothel and a rapist/thief who, unlike Hanzo, doesn't leave his victims wanting more but in a pool of their own blood, but the execution is uninspired. It's not that Masumura has a poor visual sense, more that he lacks the imagination to lift the film out of the ordinary - no stylistic flourishes this time and despite an okay final twist the plotting is pretty perfunctory this time round. Social commentary is limited to the state diluting gold so they can siphon more of it into their own pockets, in the process devaluing the currency, forcing prices up and leading to a crime wave as the poor try to survive any way they can, but where his predecessor might have used the plot as a means of drawing attention to corruption and hypocrisy, Masumura just uses it as a plot Maguffin.

Despite recycling many ideas from the first film with considerably less panache, it has its moments (Hanzo gets into the convent by getting buried in its grounds and escaping from his grave, while there's a striking overhead shot of a duel on a bridge), but Hanzo spends an inordinate amount of time in the closet (literally) in this one and there's little in the way of originality in the by-the-numbers writing. Too much of the film feels like one of the lazier Dirty Harry sequels when they'd said all they had to say in the first film and from then on it was just about making money.

Curiously the trailer includes what is either a brief deleted scene or, as was fairly common in Japanese trailers, a specially shot scene of Hanzo and the Treasurer's bodyguard preparing to duel.

Worse was to come with Hanzo the Razor - Who's Got the Gold?, the third and not surprisingly last of a series that only took two sequels to run completely out of steam. Directed by former assistant director Yoshio Inoue, it cuts back on the gratuitous sex and violence but doesn't find anything more to replace it than a standard and rather drawn-out plot to replace it involving Treasury gold hidden in bamboo spears, a fake ghost, a blind priest lending stolen cash to impoverished samurai at high interest to fund his drug-fuelled orgies, a dying doctor trying to persuade the local elder to adopt western ways to avoid Japan becoming a foreign colony and the usual corrupt officials on the take. The odd original idea is thrown away and the film shows little enthusiasm even for the character's trademarks, which are given a perfunctory once over as if purely by contractual obligation. They really can't think of anything to do with the main character anymore and he just becomes another clichéd swordsman: the best it can manage is a joke about him possibly turning gay. At times it feels like Hanzo has just clumsily been grafted on to an existing run of the mill script for another period movie. The action scenes are nothing to write home about either. Even at 84 minutes, this tired effort drags its heels terribly, feeling like nothing so much as a film made by people who were bored with their job.

Extras are limited to the original trailer and a booklet for each film. All boast excellent 2.35:1 widescreen transfers with English subtitles, but bear in mind due to negative damage there are a few frames missing from one shot in the first film - very noticeable because a character suddenly disappears from the frame.
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