Gang vs. G-Men (Japanese: ギャング対Gメン, Hepburn: Gyangu tai G-men) is a 1962[1] Japanese color crime thriller film directed by Kinji Fukasaku starring Kōji Tsuruta, Shinichi Chiba, and Tetsurō Tamba. In an interview with Chris Desjardins contained in the book Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film, Fukasaku called the film "the story of an ex-yakuza who becomes an undercover policeman."[2]

Gang vs. G-Men
Japaneseギャング対Gメン
Directed byKinji Fukasaku
Written byAkira Murao (as Sakae Tajima)
Produced byShigeru Okada
StarringKōji Tsuruta
CinematographyYoshikazu Yamazawa
Music byKōichi Kawabe
Distributed byToei Company
Release date
  • November 2, 1962 (1962-11-02) (Japan)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot

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Unable to make and headway in a case, Detective Ogawa asks former yakuza member Ryoji Tojima to go undercover to obtain more information. This would mean pretending to return to the yakuza in order to investigate the former yakuza Tatsumura, who now presents himself as a legitimate businessman but is suspected to still be involved in crime. Tojima is reluctant to return to the world of the yakuza at first but ends up agreeing after his friend is beaten. His nephew Osamu is eager to join in but Tojima refuses his help. Tojima assembles a crew with criminal backgrounds and special skills to take on the job. Together they investigate several clubs and bars owned by Tatsumura to determine if he has undeclared sources of income from crime. Tojima is almost killed outside of one of the clubs but is saved by Masao Kuroki, the younger brother of a man Tojima killed five years earlier, because Kuroki wants kill Tojima himself. Kuroki decides to accompany Tojima during his investigation of Tatsumura in order to protect his intended target. Tojima and his men eventually discover that the establishments owned by Tatsamura are fronts for an illegal moonshine operation at work. Meanwhile, Osamu recklessly takes it upon himself to investigate further and ends up captured by Tatsumura's men, who also kidnap Tojima's wife. Tojima struggles to find a way to take down Tatsumura while also protecting his loved ones.

Cast

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Production

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Gang vs. G-Men is the fourth in the Gyangu series of films[3] and the first in the series to be directed by Fukasaku.[2] Fukasaku went on to also direct the seventh film in the series, League of Gangsters (1963).[4]

Gang vs. G-Men was the first film shot by Fukasaku in color.

Sequel

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The film was followed by a sequel, Gyangu tai G-men: Shudan kinko yaburi,[5] sometimes known in English as Gang vs. G-Men 2, that was released February 23, 1963. The sequel was directed by Teruo Ishii.[6]

Reception, analysis, and legacy

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Yukio Mishima, a close friend of Okada,[7][8] often came to Toei's preview room.[9] He also previewed Gang vs. G-Men and praised it.[10] Years later, when Fukasaku was directing Mishima's play Black Lizard, he said to Mishima, "You praised Gang vs. G-Men, which saved my neck."[10]

The film was a hit,[11] and the company's confidence in Fukasaku, which had been falling, was restored.[12][11]

In the book Historical Dictionary of Japanese Cinema, author Jasper Sharp writes that, along with Wolves, Pigs and Men and Greed in Broad Daylight, "Gang vs. G-Men (Gyangu tai G-men, 1962), in which a disparate group of former criminals are assembled by the police to take on a vicious gang [ . . . ] established Fukasaku's pattern for contemporary action and crime dramas inspired by the French New Wave and American noir, featuring realistic portrayals of violence and often set in chaotic, working-class milieux."[13]

Kimihiko Kamata of eiganokuni.com wrote, "The all-star movie Gang vs. G-Men, spearheaded by Shigeru Okada himself, the director of Toei Tokyo Studio, is a nostalgic G-Men movie inspired by the American TV drama The Untouchables."[14]

References

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  1. ^ "Japanese Films". Association for the Diffusion of Japanese Films Abroad. November 9, 1963 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b Chris, D. (27 May 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9780857715470 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ "Wild Realm Reviews: "Gyangyu" yakuza series". www.weirdwildrealm.com.
  4. ^ Chris, D. (May 27, 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9780857715470 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ "Shudan Kinko Yaburi (ギャング対Gメン 集団金庫破り) | Play It AgainPlay It Again".
  6. ^ "Gang and G-Men 2 (1963)" – via www.imdb.com.
  7. ^ 『任侠映画が青春だった 全証言伝説のヒーローとその時代』、9頁。
  8. ^ 岡田茂(東映・相談役)×福田和也 (March 2006). "東映ヤクザ映画『黄金時代』を語ろう 『網走番外地』『緋牡丹博徒』『仁義なき戦い』の舞台裏は". オール読物. 文藝春秋: 216.
  9. ^ 山平重樹 (2015). 高倉健と任侠映画. 徳間書店. pp. 11–12. ISBN 978-4-19-907028-0.
  10. ^ a b 深作欣二山根貞男 (2003). 映画監督深作欣二. ワイズ出版. pp. 111–114. ISBN 4-89830-155-X.
  11. ^ a b 『映画監督 深作欣二の軌跡』、151頁。
  12. ^ 山根貞男・米原尚志 (2005). 仁義なき戦い」をつくった男たち 深作欣二と笠原和夫. 日本放送出版協会. p. 152. ISBN 4-14-080854-3.
  13. ^ Sharp, Jasper (13 October 2011). Historical Dictionary of Japanese Cinema. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810875418 – via Google Books.
  14. ^ "映画の國 || コラム ||". www.eiganokuni.com.
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