Battle Royale

2001 Mystery & Suspense

In a future where society is on the verge of collapse, the government takes drastic action against the problem of rebellious teenagers in this violent sci-fi opus from Japan. In the year 2002, Japan's economy has taken a dramatic turn for the worse, and massive unemployment and inflation have thrown most adults into a state of chaos; the nation's youth culture responds with unprecedented violence, delinquency, and truancy. Desperate to restore order, the Japanese parliament responds by creating the Millennial Reform School Act, in which groups of junior high students are selected at random, sent to an isolated island, and forced to play a rigorous war game, in which all but one of their number are killed. Kitano (Beat Takeshi) is an embittered school instructor who guides the 44 students of the Zentsuji Middle School's Class B through the deadly game known as "Battle Royale," as they struggle to survive against the elements and each other. Battle Royale proved to be both successful and highly controversial in Japan, where it set box-office records and prompted political leaders to call for stricter controls on violence in Japanese entertainment; the film was initially rated R-15 (no one under 15 admitted), unusual for violent films in Japan, though director Kinji Fukasaku later prepared a re-edited version that earned a more lenient classification. more..

Director: Kinji Fukasaku

Starring: Taro Yamamoto, Aki Maeda, Ai Iwamura, Chiaki Kuriyama, Tatsuya Fujiwara

Reviews

  • genius is finding the overlap between teenage dreams and nightmares, between the intensity of first love and the terror of extinction.

    - Village Voice

    19 January 2013

  • American fans of "The Hunger Games" may not embrace - or even be permitted to see - Battle Royale, which is too bad. It is in many ways a better movie and in any case a fascinating companion, drawn from a parallel cultural universe. It is a lot uglier and also, perversely, a lot more fun.

    A.O. Scott - The New York Times

    19 January 2013

  • Departing from two decades' worth of domestic and personal dramas and returning to his roots as Japan's maestro of mayhem, Kinji Fukasaku has delivered a brutal punch to the collective solar plexus with one of his most outrageous and timely films.

    Robert Koehler - Variety

    19 January 2013

  • Kinji Fukasaku's slick, sick nightmare is best left to the quasi-banned realm where it exists as a perfect satire; when brought into reality, it's a touch awkward.

    Joshua Rothkopf - Time Out New York

    19 January 2013

  • This one's a thoroughly campy exercise in teen melodrama and Grand Guignol gore (how gory? it's one of Quentin Tarantino's favorite movies), the other (The Hunger Games) a straight-faced action picture.

    - New York Post

    19 January 2013

Awards

  • Best Editing

    Awards of the Japanese Academy (2001)

  • Best Film

    Blue Ribbon Awards (2001)

  • Kinji Fukasaku

    Sitges - Catalonian International Film Festival (2001)

     
  • Best Supporting Actress

    Yokohama Film Festival (2002)