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      Bullet Ballet

      1998 1h 27m Drama List
      Reviews 75% Audience Score 500+ Ratings A director (Shin'ya Tsukamoto) becomes insanely obsessed with guns after his longtime lover kills herself with one. Read More Read Less

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      Bullet Ballet

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      Critics Reviews

      View All (3) Critics Reviews
      Grant Watson Fiction Machine This is cinema-as-punk-rock, filled with twentysomething thugs with attitude and a resentment towards authority. Rated: 8/10 Sep 10, 2019 Full Review Nathanael Hood Unseen Films Like Tsukamoto's best films...Bullet Ballet is both cultural polemic and gruesome Scorsesian criminal Bildungsroman Rated: 7/10 Jul 22, 2019 Full Review Robert Strohmeyer Filmcritic.com Rated: 3.5/5 Oct 19, 2004 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (48) audience reviews
      Becca S Shinya Tsukamoto's most grounded work and his absolute best! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/06/23 Full Review Audience Member My expectations and reaction were colored by my mistaken belief that I was watching a Seijun Suzuki film (somehow got this mixed up with Pistol Opera). Didn't realize til now, it's from the guy that made Tetsuo - The Iron Man (the use of industrial-esque music makes waaaaay more sense, now). Don't know if I would have enjoyed it more, but I would have been less disappointed... maybe. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/18/23 Full Review Audience Member Tsukamoto (Tetsuo) is back with another hyperkinetic and colorless experimental film. It was incredibly difficult to get a gun in Japan before 3D printers! Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Audience Member While being photographed in muted monochromatic tones Shinya Tsukamoto's follow up to the intense Tokyo Fist is no less chaotic and livewire. A jittery handheld camera and relentlessly claustrophobic cinematography plunge us directly into the miserable life of our protagonist Goda (Tsukamoto), an unremarkable jobsworth shaken out of his routine by the unexplained suicide of his longterm girlfriend. Becoming transfixed with the revolver she used to take her life Goda stalks back alleys and internet forums to try and obtain the same gun. He crosses paths with a young street gang who give him frequent beatings and abuse. As indirect revenge for his girlfriend's death - and to prove his worth - he is determined to take them down. This feels like an incredibly personal project for Tsukamoto that plainly explores his own troubled psyche and difficulty accepting his impending middle-age. Continually mocked by the young, cool street thugs, Goda barely mourns the loss of his partner and instead becomes psychotically obsessed with obtaining a handgun and regaining some control and power in his life. There are plenty of interesting themes here but for me, with its stylistic approach and wild ambiguity, it ends up being a collection of memorable scenes with little to get your teeth into emotionally. Within it there are a handful of moments of pure tension and adrenaline, so it's far from being a chore - but eventually it falls on the side of pulp while often hinting at something of more substance and depth. Tsukamoto directs himself well as the snivelling, impotent Goda, capturing a palpable feeling of desperation and isolation in the grainy, imposing city environment - but he's the kind of manic unsympathetic protagonist it's impossible to really stay with, leaving us as bystanders in his dark spiralling tale. The slimline narrative affords Bullet Ballet a purity and a focus on its central character throughout, so although it has a frenetic pulsating madness there is a considered cohesion to draw us through. Storytelling falls by the wayside but the overpowering mood constructed in the grey city environment becomes a character in itself, and twinned with the director's raw physicality and tangible violence there is more than enough here to satisfy superficially. Intentionally messy and chaotic it's far from conventional and requires a few leaps of faith along the way - but within Bullet Ballet there is something honest about urban solitude and the onset of age, presented in an energetic, spiky thriller that falls somewhere between arthouse and schlocky trash. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Audience Member An exceptional movie, an exploration into self destruction and depression..visually stunning Violent into its approach! Shot in intimate black and white exhibiting a graphic visceral use of the camera ..it's a must see!!! Author signed!! Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/16/23 Full Review Audience Member So much "meh," so little time. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A director (Shin'ya Tsukamoto) becomes insanely obsessed with guns after his longtime lover kills herself with one.
      Director
      Shin'ya Tsukamoto
      Screenwriter
      Shin'ya Tsukamoto
      Genre
      Drama
      Original Language
      Japanese
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Apr 29, 2020
      Runtime
      1h 27m
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