 
BATTLE ROYALE
40 kids go in - only one comes out
Ever
watch a reality TV show like Survivor (or Big Brother or The
Real World) and wonder what it would be like if, instead of getting voted
off the island, contestants would be put to death? In the Not Too Distant
Future, an economic collapse, followed by rocketing unemployment and school
boycotts, results in the government passing the Millennium Education Reform
Act, allowing the creation of the Battle Royale Survivor Program. Orphaned Nanahara (Tatsuya Fujiwara) finds
that his middle school class trip is a ruse his class is the latest to be
abducted for this years BR tournament. Drugged, they awake in different sort
of classroom, each of them wearing metal collars. Soldiers surround the
building. Their grade 7 teacher Kitano (Beat Takeshi Kitano) appears,
introducing two transfer students: older juvenile delinquents Kawada (Taro
Yamamoto) and Kiriyama (Masanobu Ando). He explains the situation to them:
Class B has been isolated on a small deserted island. Their instructions are to
kill each other until only one is left. To demonstrate the seriousness of the
situation, he executes a girl for whispering during the lecture. If they try to
escape, or fail to leave the constantly shifting danger zones in time, the
collars will explode. If there is no winner by the third day, all the collars
will explode. Kitano demonstrates this on Nanaharas unruly best friend Nobu.
Each student is given a survival kit and a random weapon. Some immediately
begin sniping, picking the others off. Some commit suicide. Others band
together to defy the game for a while, but mostly to kill stragglers more
easily. Nanahara joins with his girlfriend Noriko (Aki Maeda) and tries to
figure some way out of the situation. But everyone is inevitably drawn into the
bloodshed.
Based on a best-selling novel, Battle Royale
takes the darkly comic tone of RoboCop and turns the lights down a few
notches darker. Though the book places the story on an alternate world where
Japan won World War II, our own universe is sufficiently violent for the story
to work. If it were made about a group of adults, this would have likely been
picked up for distribution in the USA immediately. But a film in which fifteen
year olds run around stabbing and shooting each other is a bit beyond what most
Americans can handle, even with Lord of the Flies being taught as a
literary classic in our schools. As time goes on, the killing is less frequent,
but increasingly savage. Even amid the violence, the teens continue their petty
crushes and disputes. Even friendships are formed, despite the fact that they
may be forced to kill each other when the time comes. Taken as science fiction,
action-adventure, or social commentary, Battle Royale is a terrific
film, full of engaging ideas, thrills and surprises. The traditional mainstream
music soundtrack only makes it more effective.
Gunfights;
explosions; sword fu; blood; heads roll; p-star Kitano.
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