Cromartie High – The Movie

Cromartie High – The Movie (Japanese: 魁!! クロマティ高校 THE★MOVIE, Hepburn: Sakigake!! Kuromati Kōkō The Movie) is a 2005 Japanese surreal comedy satire film directed by Yūdai Yamaguchi (who had previously made Battlefield Baseball) and starring Takamasa Suga. The film is based on the manga Cromartie High School by Eiji Nonaka which had also been previously adapted as an anime series.

Cromartie High – The Movie
Theatrical release poster
Directed byYūdai Yamaguchi
Written byItsuji Itao (structure)
Shōichirō Masumoto (screenplay)
Eiji Nonaka (manga)
Based onCromartie High School
by Eiji Nonaka
Produced byChikako Nakabayashi
Shin Torisawa
StarringTakamasa Suga
Mitsuki Koga
Kai Atō
Kenichi Endō
Hiroyuki Watanabe
Tak Sakaguchi
CinematographyShuji Momose
Music byToshiyuki Omori
Production
companies
King Records
The KlockWorx
Media Arts
Suplex
Distributed byMedia Suites
Release date
  • 23 July 2005 (2005-07-23)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot synopsis

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The film opens with a black-and-white documentary-like section which recounts the checkered past of Cromartie High, built in 1920 and destroyed six times since then. Then on to the present day school full of violence and thugs, a school so desperate for students, they even enroll a gorilla and a bad-tempered robot. Takashi Kamiyama (played by Takamasa Suga), a top student, comes to the school to try to join his hapless friend Yamamoto (Tak Sakaguchi in a cameo role) but Yamamoto can't even pass the entrance exams for Cromartie so Kamiyama is left to go it alone. His efforts to improve the school include starting a Global Defense Force to protect earth from aliens. The aliens when they do arrive are space apes Gori (screenwriter Shōichirō Masumoto in a furry suit) and Lla (both straight out of the 1971 TV series Spectreman) and the plot becomes a series of parodies of science fiction films, martial arts movies and high school comedies among others.

Production

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Director Yamaguchi has said that the author of the original manga, Eiji Nonaka told him to "Do whatever you want" when he learned that a film was to be made of the manga. Yamaguchi took him at his word and did not read the manga or look at the anime version before directing his film. Because of the episodic nature of the original manga, the screenplay took a year and a half to write.[1]

The name of Cromartie High School was taken from the American baseball player Warren Cromartie who was a star player in Japan for a number of years. Cromartie was unhappy that his name was being used for a school of thugs and delinquents and in 2005 filed an injunction to delay the screening of the movie. The film's director Yamaguchi was able to reach a compromise with Cromartie to allow screening of the film as long as a disclaimer was added that no real person was involved. Cromartie said he still intended bringing a civil suit.[1]

Cast

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English voice cast

Release

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Cromartie High was shown at the 9th Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival on July 17, 2005.[1][2] The movie was released theatrically in Japan on July 23, 2005 by Media Suites[3] and the Japanese DVD was issued on January 2, 2006 by King Records (キングレコード).[4]

The New York premiere of Cromartie High School was in June 2006 at the 2006 New York Asian Film Festival, presented by Subway Cinema.[5] Soon afterwards in July 2006, an English-subtitled and English-dubbed DVD was released by Tokyo Shock as Cromartie High - The Movie.[6]

Reception

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Todd Brown at Twitch Film gave a very positive review calling the film "deliriously fun stuff" with a "fantastic visual style" and "jammed with bursts of stylish action, visual gags, film references and as much plain old oddity as Yamaguchi can possibly jam in there."[2]

However, Josh Ralske at AllMovie was disappointed by director Yamaguchi's "haphazard approach to his source material" and lack of focus but does say the film "provides a few genuinely clever and amusing off-the-wall moments".[7]

Another reviewer is more positive but stresses that the film is mainly for devotees of the manga and anime series and that the uninitiated may be unimpressed. The review concludes: "As sophomoric and cheap-looking as it is, Sakigake! Cromartie High School is also good, clean, impenetrable fun. Just make sure that you're a fan".[8]

The reviewer for Mania gives the film a B− rating but also maintains that it is mostly for fans and that it "needs some familiarity in order to really enjoy a lot of it.[9]

Another take is the review on CinemaEye which gives it 4 stars with the comment "CROMARTIE HIGH SCHOOL doesn't make sense whatsoever. That is the true charm of it. The team behind this knew exactly what they were doing. Extremely entertaining on every level if you just roll with it. It is too bizarre but they sure make you laugh."[10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Ben (July 18, 2005). ""Cromartie" Legal Woes End UPDATED: Civil Suit Against Franchise Presses Forward". news.toonzone.net. Archived from the original on February 22, 2013. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  2. ^ a b Brown, Todd (July 17, 2005). "Fantasia Festival Report: Cromartie High School". Twitch. Archived from the original on February 22, 2013. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  3. ^ "魁!!クロマティ高校 THE★MOVIE" (in Japanese). AllCinema. Retrieved 2009-09-21.
  4. ^ "魁!!クロマティ高校 THE★MOVIE 通常版 DVD" (in Japanese). 2 January 2006. Retrieved 2009-09-21.
  5. ^ "CROMARTIE HIGH SCHOOL (Japan, 2005) New York Premiere". www.subwaycinema.com. Archived from the original on 2009-05-05. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  6. ^ "Cromartie High - The Movie (2005)". Amazon. 11 July 2006. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  7. ^ Ralske, John. "Cromartie High School Review". AMG. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  8. ^ "Sakigake! Cromartie High School: The Movie". Love HK Film. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  9. ^ Beveridge, Chris (July 31, 2006). "Cromartie High School: The Movie (Live Action)". Mania. Archived from the original on July 4, 2009. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  10. ^ "Cromartie High School: The Movie (2006)". CinemaEye. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
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