Cops vs. Thugs
- April 26, 1975 (1975-04-26)
Cops vs. Thugs (県警対組織暴力, Kenkei tai Soshiki Bōryoku, lit. "Police vs. Violence Groups") is a 1975 Japanese yakuza film directed by Kinji Fukasaku. It won two Blue Ribbon Awards in 1976: Best Director (Fukasaku) and Best Actor (Sugawara).[1] Complex named it number 6 on their list of The 25 Best Yakuza Movies.[2] Kino International released the film on DVD in North America in 2006.[3]
Plot
In the year 1963, in the fictional city of Kurashima, two yakuza gangs, once sub gangs for a more powerful family are competing for control of the city. They are the formerly Osaka-based Kawade family under Kasumi Kawade, and the Ohara family, under acting boss Kenji Hirotani. The former are allied to ex-boss and current city councilman Masaichi Tomoyasu; the latter have an alliance with the local police force.
After Ohara men raid one of Tomoyasu's bars for a hostess who worked for Hirotani before changing patrons and assigning the blame on a selected Ohara member, Detective Tokomatsu Kuno obtains information on an illegal land auction deal involving the Kawade, Tomoyasu, and the local oil company, Nikko Oil. Acting on this information, Hirotani leaks details of the deal. The land auction is put on hold, and Hirotani manages to gain control of it. He offers to sell it back to Nikko Oil executive Kubo for a price, but the latter refuses. Elsewhere, Ohara members and their police friends get into a fight with a truck driver, who is revealed to have been working for Kawade. He uses this a pretext for an all-out gang war against Hirotani.
With the war in full swing, Kawade, Tomoyasu, and Kubo meet with Police Commissioner Kikkuchi. Kikkuchi has crusading Lieutenant Shoichi Kaida assigned to lead the crackdown against the Ohara family. Kaida sets about ordering the officers - Kuno included - to stop fraternizing with the yakuza, and makes his point by smashing bottles of sake Hirotani had sent to the police one night. Yoshihura, one of the officers under Tomoyasu's payroll, gets into a fight with Kaida, resigns, and joins Tomoyasu's law office.
As the war progresses, Boss Ohara is released from jail. Elsewhere, Hirotani is angered with Kuno when he and his men are no longer being tipped off on upcoming police raids. After a raid at Ohara family headquarters, Boss Ohara is taken in for questioning, and under the advice of Tomoyasu (his sworn brother from years before), agrees to retire permanently, disband his family, and surrender all his rackets to Boss Kawade. Kuno meanwhile lets one of Hirotani's men (one had met at the film's beginning), go free. The man is arrested later however, and he believes Kuno had sold him out. Kuno gets into an argument with Kaida over how they should properly deal with the gangs. Kubo believes working with the gangs is better for the city at large. He gets suspended after picking a fight with Kaida.
Depserate to gain revenge against Kawade and Tomoyasu, Hirotani and his remaining men kidnap Yoshihura and hold him hostage just as Hirotani's arrest warrant arrives. The police mobilize and attempt to besiege the hotel, but all attempts to convince Hirotani to surrender are unsuccessful. Kawamoto, a friend of Hirotani's right-hand man Tsukahara, is killed after unsuccessfully asking Tsukahara to negotiate in Hirotani's place. Kuno is then recalled to defuse the situation, and he manages to infiltrate the hotel, rescue Yoshihura, and subdue Hirotani after the hotel is tear-gassed. Kuno then arranges a deal with Kaida in exchange for Hirotani: the Kawade family will be disbanded, Hirotani and Tsukahara will be given light prison sentences, and Kaida will admit that Kuno was correct about how to deal with the gang. If he refuses, he will leave and threaten to expose the corrupt officers in the police force, himself included.
Kaida accepts the deal and Hirotani has his men surrender themselves and their weapons. As they give themselves up, Hirotani asks Kuno to remove his cuffs, and he obliges. After he is led out, Hirotani breaks free and attempts to take Kaida hostage with Tsukahara. After a tense standoff, Kuno pulls out his pistol and shoots Hirotani several times, killing him. An epilogue states that Kaida resigned from the force two years later and took up a position with Nikko Oil. Kuno meanwhile had been transferred to another city as a patrolman. One night after the end of his shift, he comes upon a crashed car at the exit of a tunnel whilst being followed by a truck. When the truck catches up with him and refuses to obey his signals, it runs over and kills him.
Cast
- Bunta Sugawara as Tokumatsu Kuno
- Hiroki Matsukata as Kenji Hirotani
- Mikio Narita as Katsumi Kawade
- Tatsuo Umemiya as Shoichi Kaida
- Hideo Murota as Tsukahara
- Shingo Yamashiro as Yasuo Kawamoto
- Reiko Ike as Mariko
- Jūkei Fujioka as Ikeda
- Asao Sano as Yusaku Yoshiura
- Nobuo Kaneko as Masaichi Tomoyasu
- Harumi Sone as Kyuichi Okimoto
- Takuzo Kawatani as Taku Matsui
- Tatsuo Endō as Takeo Ohara
- Kunie Tanaka as Kinpachi Komiya
- Toru Abe as Azuma Kikuchi
- Akira Shioji as Chujiro Shiota
- Shotaro Hayashi as Shimodera
- Masaharu Arikawa as Tokuda
- Sanae Nakahara as Reiko
- Yoko Koizumi as Yuri
- Maki Tachibana as Kasumi
- Keiko Yumi as Miya
- Midori Shirai as Chiyomi
- Masako Matsumoto as Mitsuyo
- Gentaro Mori as Tanpo
Production
Tetsuya Watari was originally set to play Hirotani, but had to step down due to illness. The role then went to Hiroki Matsukata.[4]
References
- ^ "Kenkei tai Soshiki Bōryoku". Dejitaru Daijisen Purasu. Shogakukan. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
- ^ "The 25 Best Yakuza Movies". Complex. Retrieved 2014-10-02.
- ^ "Cops vs. Thugs". Kino International. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
- ^ Fukasaku, Kinji; Yamane, Sadao (July 2003). 映画監督深作欣二. Wise Publishing. pp. 324–328. ISBN 4-89830-155-X.
External links
- Cops vs. Thugs at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- Drifting Detective: Tragedy in the Red Valley (1961)
- Drifting Detective: Black Wind in the Harbor (1961)
- Hepcat in the Funky Hat (1961)
- Hepcat in the Funky Hat: The 20,000,000 Yen Arm (1961)
- High Noon for Gangsters (1961)
- The Proud Challenge (1962)
- Gang vs. G-Men (1962)
- League of Gangsters (1963)
- Jakoman and Tetsu (1964)
- Wolves, Pigs and Men (1964)
- The Threat (1966)
- Kamikaze Man: Duel at Noon (1966)
- Rampaging Dragon of the North (1966)
- Ceremony of Disbanding (1967)
- Gambler's Farewell (1968)
- Black Lizard (1968)
- Blackmail Is My Life (1968)
- The Green Slime (1968)
- Black Rose Mansion (1969)
- Japan Organized Crime Boss (1969)
- Bloodstained Clan Honor (1970)
- If You Were Young: Rage (1970)
- Tora! Tora! Tora! (with Richard Fleischer and Toshio Masuda, 1970)
- Sympathy for the Underdog (1971)
- Under the Flag of the Rising Sun (1972)
- Street Mobster (1972)
- Outlaw Killers: Three Mad Dog Brothers (1972)
- Battles Without Honor and Humanity (1973)
- Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Deadly Fight in Hiroshima (1973)
- Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Proxy War (1973)
- Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Police Tactics (1974)
- Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Final Episode (1974)
- New Battles Without Honor and Humanity (1974)
- Graveyard of Honor (1975)
- Cops vs. Thugs (1975)
- Cross the Rubicon! (1975)
- New Battles Without Honor and Humanity: The Boss's Head (1975)
- Violent Panic: The Big Crash (1976)
- New Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Last Days of the Boss (1976)
- Yakuza Graveyard (1976)
- Hokuriku Proxy War (1977)
- Doberman Cop (1977)
- Shogun's Samurai (1978)
- Message from Space (1978)
- The Fall of Ako Castle (1978)
- Virus (1980)
- The Gate of Youth (1981)
- Samurai Reincarnation (1981)
- Dotonbori River (1982)
- Fall Guy (1982)
- Theater of Life (1983)
- Legend of the Eight Samurai (1983)
- Shanghai Rhapsody (1984)
- House on Fire (1986)
- Sure Death 4: Revenge (1987)
- A Chaos of Flowers (1988)
- The Triple Cross (1992)
- Crest of Betrayal (1994)
- The Abe Clan (1995)
- The Geisha House (1998)
- Battle Royale (2000)
- Battle Royale II: Requiem (2003)