BD368-369 Cruel Tales of the Bohachi

Discuss releases by Eureka and Masters of Cinema and the films on them
Post Reply
Message
Author
User avatar
Finch
Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 9:09 pm
Location: United States

BD368-369 Cruel Tales of the Bohachi

#1 Post by Finch »

Image
SPECIAL FEATURES
DISC ONE : 4K UHD - CODE OF THE FORGOTTEN EIGHT - 4K (2160p) UHD from a 4K digital restoration
DISC TWO : BLU-RAY - CODE OF THE FORGOTTEN EIGHT & THE VILLAIN - 1080p HD presentations
Optional English subtitles, newly revised for this release
Original Japanese mono audio tracks
Audio commentary on Code of the Forgotten Eight by East Asian film expert and Midnight Eye co-founder Tom Mes
New audio commentary on The Villain by genre cinema expert Arne Venema and film writer Stefan Hammond
From Codes to Chaos – new video essay on the Bohachi Bushido films and Toei's evolving production strategies in the 1970s by Japanese cinema expert Joe Hickinbottom
Remembering Teruo Ishii – interview with director Shinya Tsukamoto (Testsuo: The Iron Man) about working with director Teruo Ishii
Archival interview with actress Yuriko Hishimi
Archival audio interview with Japanese filmmakers J-Taro Sugisaki and Takao Nakano
Original theatrical trailer for Code of the Forgotten Eight
Quote:
Code of the Forgotten Eight available on 4K UHD – Disc 1

Code of the Forgotten Eight & The Villain available on Blu-ray – Disc 2

Based on the popular manga by Lone Wolf and Cub creators Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima, Bohachi Bushido: Code of the Forgotten Eight is one of the standout films in the career of Teruo Ishii (Shogun’s Joy of Torture), known in Japan as the “King of Cult.” A bloody and erotic samurai tale starring an assassin with a death wish, it paved the way for Takashi Harada’s spiritual successor Bohachi Bushido: The Villain.

Code of the Forgotten Eight sees a nihilistic ronin, Shino Ashita (Tetsuro Tanba, Three Outlaw Samurai), join the sadistic Bohachi clan, a group of corrupt samurai who operate a prostitution ring. With nothing else to live for, he acts as their assassin in a war with a rival clan that poses a threat to their business. Then, in The Villain, the condemned criminal Kyushi Issho (Goro Ibuki, Hokuriku Proxy War) falls in with the infamous Bohachi samurai – and he too is drawn into a world of wanton violence and sexual sadism.

Prime examples of the ero guro jidaigeki (or, in other words, period films with a focus on eroticism and the grotesque), Code of the Forgotten Eight and The Villain are perfect portraits of the shifting depictions of sex and violence in Japanese cinema of the 1970s. The Masters of Cinema series is honoured to present both films for the first time on UK home video.
Post Reply