![]() ![]() This time that spark is S&M loving yakuza named Hanada, of Hanabishi family. ![]() Similar to its predecessor, it’s more about the spark that started the fire than it is about delivering the juicy stuff. Not to say that it isn’t, but Outrage Coda is a slow burner that fails to ignite. All this considering, it was reasonable to expect that the final chapter of Kitano’s warring yakuza clans saga should be every bit as violent, with the needed amount of blood, bullets and bakayaro’s. The first Outrage surprisingly turned out great considering that the plot was just wrapped around a thrilling number of imaginative cold blooded executions devised beforehand. It’s been five years since his slightly weaker, more dialogue, less action Outrage sequel was released, still feeding the fans with a nice pile of yakuza bodies scattered around Tokyo. With Outrage Beyond being his first sequel and a notable box office success earning twice as much the original did, Outrage Coda was a logical move (at least to a producer’s logic) that would complete the first trilogy of this filmmaker’s career. “Outrage Coda” Japanese Theatrical PosterĬast: Beat Takeshi, Nao Ohmori, Ken Mitsuishi, Ren Osugi, Tatsuo Nadaka, Ikuji Nakamura, Toshiyuki Nishida, Hakuryu, Sansei Shiomi, Hiroyuki Ikeuchi, Pierre TakiĮven before he would go on to direct his senior citizen “yakuza” comedy Ryuzo and the Seven Henchmen, easily his least memorable effort, Kitano said that the producers wanted him to make another Outrage movie. ![]()
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