Horror Movie Reviews
Karaoke Terror: The Complete Japanese Showa Songbook: Horror Movie Reviews
Title: Karaoke Terror: The Complete Japanese Showa Songbook (2008)
Format: DVD
Score:
Starring: Ryuhei Matsuda and Masanobu Ando
Director: Tetsuo Shinohara
Rating: Unrated
Runtime: 112 minutes
Hits: 146
Favorite:
Review of Karaoke Terror: The Complete Japanese Showa Songbook
Everything I buy from Amazon is top quality, except for this product. I received this costume in an open package, with nothing in the bag except a folded up costume. (There was no label or picture on the bag)I think it was used and returned. Anyway, when I took it out of the bag, hoping for the best, the size was definately not standard! The robot body itself is so HUGE that it goes past my knees and I could probably get another person inside the costume and still have room to move. The robot head is enormous, so that when I put it on my head and lean just a little forward, it falls off so easily, and when you turn your head from side to side, it moves so much because there is nothing to keep it stable. I don't think anyone's head could fit in there snugly, since there is so much room! Perhaps a large child robot costume would fit a standard size adult. This definately was only made for giants! Even my 6'3" husband who is 210 lbs. says it is HUGE!
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Comments for Karaoke Terror: The Complete Japanese Showa Songbook
- Posted on 2009-05-20
Almost good enough to recommend!
If this movie had been made in USA or the UK as an indie product, one suspects it would have been a big hit, ala 'Trainspotting' or 'Donnie Darko.' Of course it would have been an entirely different movie but I put it out there that the script writer shares a similar dark fame due to his novel 'Coinlocker Babies', among other things.
This movie has a wonderfully absurd premise: Revenge warfare between two karaoke societies one composed of young adult males and the other of 'middle-aged' (mid to late thirties) women, both of whom sing songs from the Showa period. Quick history note, the Showa period ended in 1989 but the songs referred to in this movie are from the '60's and '70's a time when Japanese popular music was defined by sugary and almost stomach-turningly maudlin tunes (I believe schmaltzy is what the Jewish people call such things).
Although based on a very strong premise--a series of increasingly macabre and violent assassinations between the two gangs--the story line is weakly developed. Partly because the director put a whole lot more effort into the costumery, sight gags and visually interesting bit players, than he did in making sure that the story worked as a contiguous whole.
For instance one important character in the film, with the most compellingly odd face you will ever see, plays a part that really has no connection to the movie other than to propel the story along by identifying an otherwise unidentifiable murderer. Yet she continues to make appearances throughout in a way that disturbs the flow without it ever being clear just what her part is to mean.
Perhaps the original author intentionally created her as one of a series of surreal non-sequiters to build a story around. Either way, the story does flail a bit when it might have been a truly wonderful confection of preposterous violence decorated with absurd cultural referents (think Austin Powers meets a slasher movie), and it is because either director or the writer failed to meld the disparate parts into a coherent whole:
It was a great idea that didn't come off well.
- Posted on 2009-03-16
Sadness in the form of a happy song
Written by Ryu Murakami(AUDITION), I knew I was in for a dark excursion into counter-culture madness. KARAOKE TERROR is the satirical tale of two groups of societal misfits waging war against each other. These battles are all set to a soundtrack of retro karaoke hits.
It's the group of young slackers, content on doing nothing but play video games and writing Amazon reviews. Oops, I mean play video games and scoping out the ladies. After one kid gets insulted by a middle-age divorcee, he retaliates by slitting her throat. Her lady friends unite and devise their plans for revenge.
This movie starts off excellent, with some startling and stylistic murders that I totally loved. It delves into the idiosyncratic tendencies of the two different generations, with a spiritual unrest and mounting feelings of insecurity. The Showa-era songs and the violence seem to unite them within their own groups.
Unfortunately the battles escalate into some comical buffonery that I didn't really care for. It felt like a Miike rip-off. It isn't believable in the least, with bazookas and homemade atomic bombs. Some might enjoy it, I just lost interest after the first half of bloody, realistic murders. Still not bad.
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