Detonation! Violent Games
Detonation! Violent Games
| 15 January 1976 (USA)
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Detonation! Violent Games Trailers

Teruo Ishii's West Side Story, done as a bloody, violent, sexploitative biker gang film. It's the Red Chilis versus the Black Cats, and the chick who just may heal the divide.

Reviews
Senteur

As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.

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PiraBit

if their story seems completely bonkers, almost like a feverish work of fiction, you ain't heard nothing yet.

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Billie Morin

This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows

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Ariella Broughton

It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.

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John Seal

Available through Video Search of Miami under the title Detonation! Violent Games, this is a motorcycle movie that could only have been made in Japan. Two rival biker gangs, the Red Chilis and the Black Cats, are involved in an intense rivalry (we never find out why), but the love of working class seamstress Yuki transcends gang boundaries when she falls for a reformed (?) Chili whilst trying to placate her brother, a loyal Black Cat. The film owes a massive debt to Robert Wise's West Side Story, as the rivals engage in bizarre finger popping face offs accompanied by supper club jazz music that sounds like it was recorded twenty years earlier. In a possible nod to 1976's Taxi Driver, one of the thugs sports a Mohican, and others have DAs. Never fear, though--the frequent topless female nudity and wah-wah guitar breaks soon remind us we're in '70s territory, though the film ultimately conveys an extremely conservative message, as we learn that love conquers all and juvenile crime does not pay. VSOM's print is in 1.85:1, though the somewhat cramped titles hint at an original ratio of 2:1 or more--which, considering this is a Japanese film, wouldn't be surprising. The cycle scenes aren't terribly well filmed, with a lot of projection screen work on hand, and the story is facile at best. Nevertheless, Occidental viewers looking for a cheap and unusual thrill will find plentiful amusement here.

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