The story takes place in the outskirts of Tokyo in the aftermath of the Great Kanto Earthquake. Overflowing with orphans and refugees from the disaster, the district gets a visit from the female sumo group Tamaiwa Entertainment. The freewheeling anarchist group Guillotine Company set up an underground cell to hatch a terrorist plot in this neighborhood primed for political agitation, but they fall under the spell of the female sumo wrestlers and become their buddies. (Source: JFDB) Edit Translation
- English
- 한국어
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Native Title: 菊とギロチン
- Also Known As: Kiku to Girochin Onnazumo to Anakisuto , Kiku to Guillotine Onna Zumô to Anarchism , Kiku to Guillotine Onna Zumo to Anarchism
- Screenwriter & Director: Zeze Takahisa
- Genres: Historical, Youth, Sports, Political
Where to Watch The Chrysanthemum and the Guillotine
Ppv (sub)
Ppv (sub)
Cast & Credits
- Higashide Masahiro Main Role
- Kan Hanae Main Role
- Sato Kanichiro Main Role
- Kiryuu MaiTomoyo HanakikuMain Role
- Yamada MahoKozakura HaruSupport Role
- Ohnishi AyakaKatsu KatsutoraSupport Role
Reviews
long and violent
This sprawling movie begins like a documentary, with voice-over and text-over narration, backgrounding a Japan in economic turmoil after the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923, and political turmoil with the rise of socialism and anarchism, and the fascist authoritarian backlash. Many characters are introduced, including a group of young male anarchists who spend their time shouting at each other and botching assassination attempts, and a travelling troupe of female sumo wrestlers, who are at each others' throats as much off the ring as on. The sumo bouts are done well, in a long sequence that was as exciting as the male sumo tournaments I've seen on Japanese television. The women have taken up this life to escape dominating fathers and husbands, seeking the freedom they imagine in developing their strength, but it's illusory and only found in fleeting moments during bouts, as the forces of male authority outside the ring continue to impose on their lives. Apparently female sumo was popular among the proletariat for about a hundred years until about 1960. Eventually the movie focusses on a couple of the anarchists who connect with a couple of the women and hang around with the sumo troupe, and then the plot centres on the authorities' attempts to cover up a recent massacre of Koreans. I hadn't connected with any of the characters or their story, wasn't enjoying the emotional and physical violence, and dropped this movie about 2/3 through.Was this review helpful to you?
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