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Movie Martial Arts Twin Brothers Find Fathers Killer Fbi

2010 American film

Bunraku
Bunrakuposter.jpg

US theatrical poster

Directed by Guy Moshe
Screenplay by Guy Moshe
Story by Boaz Davidson
Produced by Keith Calder
Ram Bergman
Nava Levin
Jessica Wu
Starring Josh Hartnett
Woody Harrelson
Gackt
Kevin McKidd
Ron Perlman
Demi Moore
Narrated past Mike Patton
Cinematography Juan Ruiz Anchía
Edited by Zach Staenberg
Glenn Garland
Music by Terence Blanchard

Production
companies

Snoot Entertainment
Bergman Productions
Picturesque Films

Distributed by ARC Entertainment
XLrator Media

Release dates

  • September 11, 2010 (2010-09-eleven) (TIFF)
  • September 30, 2011 (2011-09-30) (United States)

Running time

125 minutes
Country United States
Languages English
Japanese
Budget $25 million

Bunraku is a 2010 martial-arts action motion picture written and directed past Guy Moshe based on a story by Boaz Davidson. The movie stars Josh Hartnett, Demi Moore, Woody Harrelson, Ron Perlman, Kevin McKidd, and Gackt and follows a young out-of-stater in his quest for revenge.

The title Bunraku is derived from a 400-year-onetime class of Japanese puppet theater, a manner of storytelling that uses 4-foot (1.2 m)-tall puppets with highly detailed heads, each operated by several puppeteers who blend into the background wearing blackness robes and hoods.[1]

The classic tale is re-imagined in a world that mixes skewed reality with shadow-play fantasy. Its themes draw heavily on samurai and Western films.[2]

Bunraku premiered as an official choice of the Midnight Madness department at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival in Canada.[3] [4] A limited theatrical release was slated for September 2011.[five] [half-dozen]

Plot [edit]

In the aftermath of a global war, guns have been outlawed but people still fight, using blades and fists.

Nicola the Woodcutter is the most powerful man e of the Atlantic, a shadowy crime boss who rules with an iron fist and nine assassins called the Killers. His right-hand man is Killer No. 2, a cold-hearted, shine-talking murderer with a red hat and a deadly bract. Forth with his killers is Nicola'south beloved, Alexandra, a femme fatale with a secret past. The citizens live in fear of Nicola'south gang and expect for the hero who tin overthrow them.

One night, a mysterious Drifter enters the Horseless Horseman Saloon and talks to the Bartender. He wants ii things: a shot of whisky and a game of cards, but the but place in town, the russian roulette, controlled by Nicola, just accepts very rich players. Afterward, some other stranger enters; a samurai named Yoshi. Yoshi wants to fulfill his dying male parent'south wish by recovering a medallion that was stolen from their hamlet. Armed with crossed destinies and incredible fighting skills and guided by the Bartender'southward wisdom, the two eventually bring together forces to bring downward the corrupt reign of Nicola.

Later a string of altercations leading the Drifter and Yoshi to injure police officers and Nicola's goons, Killer No. 2 slays Yoshi's uncle and kidnaps his cousin Momoko to send her to Nicola's brothel. In retaliation, the Drifter, Yoshi, the Bartender and an ground forces of freedom fighters invade Nicola's palace. As the Bartender rescues Momoko, he sees his long-lost love Alexandra, but she disappears amidst the debris of the burning brothel. Meanwhile, afterwards defeating Nicola'due south top killers, Yoshi faces Killer No. 2 and fatally stabs him while the Drifter advances toward Nicola, who injures him in the chest with a thrown axehead. Despite his injury, the Drifter slashes Nicola'southward throat with an arrowhead taken from Yoshi while revealing his true motive of avenging his father's death. With Nicola'southward reign brought to an terminate and Yoshi recovering his clan'southward medallion, the heroes part ways, hoping to encounter each other again.[two] [7]

Cast [edit]

  • Josh Hartnett as The Drifter (fighter)
  • Gackt as Yoshi, a swordsman from Japan who speaks a piffling english language
  • Woody Harrelson as The Bartender
  • Kevin McKidd as Killer No. 2, lieutenant to Nicola
  • Ron Perlman equally Nicola "the Woodcutter", crime dominate and the most powerful homo "due east of the Atlantic"
  • Demi Moore every bit Alexandra, a courtesan and Nicola's lover
  • Jordi Molla equally Valentine
  • Shun Sugata every bit Uncle, Yoshi'due south Uncle
  • Mike Patton as The Narrator
  • Mark Ivanir as Eddie
  • Emily Kaiho as Momoko

Product [edit]

Evolution [edit]

Following the completion of his first feature film, Holly, Moshe started working on the initial concept fine art for Bunraku in 2006. The first drafts of the screenplay were largely inspired by Westerns and martial arts movies, of which Moshe is a huge fan.[8] In a 2010 interview, Moshe revealed that he first "sold the script for Bunraku to a production visitor... When information technology became clear that they would not film it, I bought it back."[ix] Moshe was asked in a 2007 interview on the subject field of his future projects. "My next picture is called Bunraku and it is an activity-fantasy circus ride into man's fascination with violence. It has a sort of a Spaghetti Western, samurai picture show feel and it's going to be built and shot entirely on a stage so it couldn't be more than different than Holly, possibly 180 degrees from information technology actually. Similar Holly, it too aspires to go a piddling beyond the pure amusement factor, but I recollect that, all in all, I would like to be the kind of filmmaker who can tell and brand more than one story or one type of genre. I experience similar in the by an auteur was a person who constantly challenged himself, where, today, considering of the tearing competition and growing difficulty of making unlike and unique films, filmmakers can become stuck in a sure style and movie genre and go along recreating the same films. It takes two years of your life to brand a picture show, and to me that's priceless. If I am gonna spend that kind of time pouring my blood and tears into information technology, so I wanna make sure I larn something on the way. That is what life is all about anyway, I guess, growing and learning and then realizing you lot know zip at all."[ten]

The $25m action film is produced past Moshe's Los Angeles-based Picturesque Films and Ram Bergman Productions, and is fully financed by Keith Calder's Snoot Entertainment.[xi] Snoot Amusement was founded in Feb 2004 to independently develop, finance and produce both commercial genre-oriented live-action films and CG animated features with wide audience entreatment.[12] In a 2008 interview, Calder said. "I've ever loved movies in the 'no-name stranger' coming to town and catastrophe upwardly in a bigger struggle (genre)... I remember [Bunraku] is an opportunity to take this genre and spin information technology on its head and bring a unique and strong visual fashion to information technology."[thirteen] Acclaimed production designer Alex McDowell is co-producing the film. Asked most his outset production in a 2009 interview, McDowell said he "met with Moshe, the director of Bunraku, and his producer Nava Levin a couple of years ago, originally to consult with them. His projection was such an interesting and provocative blend of genres and technique that I got hooked and helped them to set up an innovative approach to pre-product that integrated pre-visualization, storytelling and design into a new fluid and low budget workspace for the artistic squad. The story is assault a theatre stage in a folded paper world where Russian gangsters, cowboys and samurai warriors come together in inevitable and never-ending battle. It's an elegantly choreographed dance of revenge, accolade and friendship...It'due south absurd!"[14] IM Global is treatment worldwide sales.[xv]

Visual development [edit]

Snoot FX, a division of Snoot Entertainment, and Origami Digital LLC are responsible for all the animation and visual effects work on Bunraku.[16] [17] The pic will mix CGI and practical sets to create the world of Bunraku. In a 2008 interview, Hartnett, who was instrumental in getting the film Sin Metropolis made, compared the wait of Bunraku to Alfred Hitchcock's Rope, in that it will play out (or at to the lowest degree announced to play out) in i long, unedited accept. Hartnett explained "It's in the vein of Sin Urban center or something like that, where the world doesn't look like reality at all...Some of the scenes are gonna be more Michel Gondry-similar I guess just a lot of them volition be green screen as well...It's not fantasy. Well, I hateful, it'southward not Narnia. Information technology'southward a film that, I don't know how to stick it into a genre, but I would say it's more a moving-picture show similar Sin City than anything else."[18] In a 2010 interview, role player McKidd revealed that Bunraku "is a hybrid of a western and a martial arts film. The world it's set in is almost circus-like in the feel of information technology and it's all origami. The whole universe is constantly folding paper to create a cityscape or interiors of rooms or the sunrise."[19] In a 2009 interview, McDowell, better known as the production designer of major Hollywood successes such as Minority Report, The Terminal or Fight Society, indicated that in Bunraku the production was using "the thought that the movement in the camera work should dictate the set, rather than the gear up pattern in whatever way limiting the activeness. So, if a character performed a kick which needed a physical context such as a wall, that wall would be provided in the design. In this way, the actors should have a total freedom of space in which to work and to requite of their best."[20] McDowell's special value to Bunraku as a salesman has been front end-loaded. The pre-visual content that he fabricated to testify during the 2008 Festival de Cannes helped director Moshe to double the corporeality of predictable investment in the production.[21]

Casting [edit]

Hartnett confirmed his involvement as the atomic number 82 character The Drifter in an interview at the 2008 Sundance Moving-picture show Festival while promoting his flick August. Hartnett stated "I'm going to Romania to shoot this movie called Bunraku...All the bandage isn't set nonetheless, but it's going to exist a lot of actually interesting actors, in this weird kind of papier-mâché world...I've been trying to practice as much artistic fare every bit I can and things that are compelling to watch too...It's a story of revenge...My graphic symbol is called 'The Drifter', and he comes into this world that doesn't look like anything like you've always seen before...[The script] has a lot of fight sequences in it, only it's more about these crazy characters...Like my character, he's a gypsy and he's coming into boondocks and he's got something to prove and no ane really knows what he's most."[18]

In April 2008, Moore was confirmed to exist joining the bandage as the courtesan Alexandra.[22] Interviewed at the 2009 Centre East International Moving-picture show Festival, Moore described Bunraku as a "big action take a chance". "It has tremendous special effects," she enthused.[23] In May 2008, Harrelson and Perlman were appear to exist joining the cast. Harrelson is set to play The Bartender, one of the protagonists while Perlman was signed to the part of Nicola the Woodcutter, powerful warrior and criminal offense boss, who is the central focus of vengeance for the film's protagonists.[13] Bunraku marks the starting time time that Moore and Harrelson have worked together since the 1993 film Indecent Proposal. When asked in a 2010 interview how he had managed to sign two international stars similar Harrelson and Moore onto an experimental picture, Moshe explained "They really liked [Moshe'due south film] Holly and responded immediately to the Bunraku script."[nine]

McKidd plays Killer No. two, the right-hand human being of Nicola and a deadly assassinator. Describing his grapheme in a 2010 interview, McKidd said "I play a very effeminate, chief killer who's almost like a Fred Astaire tap-dancing his way through the motion-picture show. Information technology's so different than annihilation I've washed."[19] McKidd further revealed "It'll be a very interesting flick. Moshe, who also directed, wrote what I thought was 1 of the strangest scripts I'd ever read, especially because the story takes place in an in-depth CGI universe. It'south very emblematic – a mixture of a samurai motion-picture show and a western in a virtual origami universe where everything is made of folding paper, and in that location'due south a lot of martial arts in it...I thought Bunraku was interesting enough to be in. I play the main killer of the movie who'southward hunting downwards Hartnett'south grapheme under the instruction of Ron Perlman'southward character, Nicola. They've been doing the furnishings for the last nineteen months. But then this is an independent film, not Avatar. I'1000 really excited to encounter Bunraku."[24]

On April 23, 2008, Japanese vocaliser Gackt was confirmed for the role of Yoshi, a samurai warrior seeking vengeance confronting Nicola.[25] Although he has starred in Japanese television drama and feature films, Bunraku was his first interim experience in an international-flavored picture show. Gackt came to the attending of Moshe through his office in the 2007 television historic drama Fūrin Kazan, a year-long series produced past NHK. In this serial, he portrayed the heroic warlord Uesugi Kenshin, winning him accolades, not merely for his acting performance, but also for the music single "Returner ~Yami no Shūen~" and the video for the aforementioned that were inspired by his function. Moshe personally went to Japan to convince Gackt to join the projection.[26]

Filming [edit]

Filming for Bunraku began on April 17, 2008 on a budget of $25 million and continued over the grade of 12 weeks at the MediaPro Studios in the boondocks of Buftea in Romania. In a 2009 interview, producer Ram Bergman was asked well-nigh the choice of the shooting location, stating "we needed a lot of stages bachelor because the whole moving-picture show is green-screen and nosotros had to build 30-something sets. Nosotros needed to take control of a space for five months... [Romania] was probably ten%-20% cheaper than Prague. Nosotros did not desire to pay superlative dollar, like you would pay in London or, to a lesser degree, in Prague or Hungary... Media Pro Studios had the most stages available [in Romania]. Bergman continued "nosotros brought in heads of departments only the rest of the [film] coiffure was Romanian.[27]

A wrap-up party was organised at the Terminus Club in Bucharest at the finish of June 2008.[28]

Post production [edit]

Brazilian-born filmmaker Guilherme Marcondes was hired to develop an animated opening sequence for the film, described as a "short [picture] earlier the main feature". Marcondes described the project equally "an interesting project with a lot of blitheness techniques, and the director of the feature Moshe is letting me do my own thing. A rare circumstance, and then I'grand glad to be doing information technology."[29]

Crew [edit]

Release [edit]

Festival screenings [edit]

Consequence Section Location Date(s) Ref.
Toronto International Film Festival Midnight Madness Toronto, Ontario, Canada September eleven, 2010 – September 14, 2010 – September 17, 2010 [xxx]
Fantastic Fest Premiere Screenings Austin, Texas, United States September 26, 2010 – September 27, 2010 [31]
Mumbai International Movie Festival World Cinema Mumbai, India October 24, 2010 [32] [33]
Tokyo International Film Festival Special Screenings Tokyo, Japan October 27, 2010 – Oct 29, 2010 [34]
Dubai International Picture show Festival Cinema of the Globe Dubai, United Arab Emirates Dec 17, 2010 [35]
Hong Kong International Film Festival I See It My Way Hong Kong, China March 31, 2011 – April 5, 2011 [36]
ActionFest Action Cinema Asheville, North Carolina, United states of america April 9, 2011 – April 10, 2011 [37]
AM² W Coast Anime Convention Summer Festival Anaheim, California, United States July 3, 2011 [38] [39]
Otakon Premieres Baltimore, Maryland, United States July 29, 2011 [40]
Lund International Fantastic Film Festival World Cinema Lund, Sweden September 21, 2011 [41]
Boston Film Festival Endmost Nighttime Boston, Massachusetts, United States September 22, 2011 [42]

Theatrical release [edit]

ARC Entertainment, the US distributor for the film, appear on July 5, 2011 that Bunraku volition be available on Video on Demand on September 1, 2011 and in theaters on September thirty, 2011.[43] The official trailer for the pic premiered on G4 TV's Assail of the Prove! which aired on July 20, 2011.[44] [45]

Critical reception [edit]

Bunraku has been met with negative reviews, with a 17% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 23 reviews, with an average rating of 3.96 out of x, and the consensus being: "Bunraku admirably strives for visual panache, but the staging, interim, and furnishings are dismal with a consummate lack of excitement".[46] On Metacritic, the film received a weighted boilerplate score of 28/100 based on 11 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable".[47]

Marking Deming of the AllMovie gave the film 2.v/5 stars, saying, "Bunraku is a movie that's all about visual style, and narrative and character barely fit into the picture ... The picture looks like such a remarkable crazy quilt of themes and inspirations that you lot can't aid but wish that writer and managing director Guy Moshe put half as much effort into his screenplay".[48] Joe Neumaier of the New York Daily News gave the film one out of five stars, maxim, "It should surprise no one that visually quirky, graphic-novelish, pulp-noir activity flicks rarely come up through the sausage machine intact".[49] Dennis Harvey of Diversity likewise disliked the motion-picture show, calling it "a pic that's akin to a terrarium of plastic flowers -- gaudily decorative, but airless and lifeless".[50]

Scott Mendelson of The Huffington Post, however, pointed out that "The moving-picture show is certainly a instance of style over substance, and the utter lack of substance may be fatal for some viewers. Only the picture show boasts a unique visual palette and some interesting ideas ... Bunraku is not quite a good film, but it is surely a bad 1 worth watching for those who know what they are getting into".[51]

References [edit]

  1. ^ NIX (January 31, 2008). "Josh Hartnett to Star in Sin Urban center-like Bunraku". Across Hollywood. Archived from the original on June 2, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-xxx .
  2. ^ a b Theatrical Titles, Bunraku Archived March nine, 2009, at the Wayback Auto, IM Global LLC
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  40. ^ "Rare sneak preview of the martial arts action film BUNRAKU for Otakon 2011!". Otakon Events Premieres. Otakorp, Inc. July half dozen, 2011. Archived from the original on July 12, 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-07 .
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  42. ^ "27th Boston Flick Festival Program Schedule, September xvi–22, 2011". Boston Moving-picture show Festival. Bass Rocks. September 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-28 .
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  44. ^ "The trailer for BUNRAKU will premiere tonight on G4'due south Attack Of The Show". Official Facebook Page for the film BUNRAKU. ARC Entertainment. July 20, 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-21 .
  45. ^ "Exclusive: AICN Premieres The BUNRAKU Trailer Online!". Ain't It Cool News. Nordling. July 21, 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-30 .
  46. ^ "Bunraku (2011)". Retrieved 25 May 2020 – via world wide web.rottentomatoes.com.
  47. ^ Bunraku at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata
  48. ^ Bunraku at AllMovie
  49. ^ Neumaier, Joe (2011-09-xxx). "Brusque Takes: American Teacher, Sarah Palin: Yous Betcha!, Bunraku". New York Daily News . Retrieved 2011-12-30 .
  50. ^ Harvey, Dennis (2011-09-thirteen). "Variety Reviews - Bunraku". Variety . Retrieved 2011-12-30 .
  51. ^ Mendelson, Scott (2011-09-02). "Review: Bunraku (2011)". The Huffington Post . Retrieved 23 Dec 2012.

External links [edit]

  • Bunraku at AllMovie
  • Bunraku at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata
  • Bunraku at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Bunraku at IMDb
  • International Sales (IM Global)

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunraku_%28film%29

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