
Be warned. Takashi Miike's is a difficult, troubling and just plain weird film. That seems like a strange warning to put on a Miike film – after all, has he not built his reputation on being precisely those things? – but it's a warning aimed particularly at Miike fans. Izo is the most artistically ambitious of Miike's films, an intentional 'big issue' film that may have some recognizably Miike shots but is so different in tone and content that it will be hard viewing for most, particularly here in the west, and a familiarity with Miike's early work may actually be more hindrance than help. The gleeful madman is gone entirely, replaced by … well, it's hard to say exactly.
The story of a vengeful spirit back from the dead to wreak bloody vengeance on the world that spawned him the film is difficult to approach on two counts. First, it assumes a very strong knowledge of Japanese culture that most here simply will not have. Many figures that would be instantly recognizable within Japan – the title character himself is borrowed from earlier films and was once played by Shintaro Katsu – crop up throughout without any explanation and you may, like me, frequently hear the whizz of references zinging past overhead. And it's not just characters, it's entire time periods … Izo has come unstuck in time and flits about from period to period, region to region, seeking out the powers that be without any warning or explanation, the only clues as to where and when he is being the modes of dress: again, things recognizable to a native Japanese but not so much outside of Japan.
The second difficulty lies in the structure of the film. I will confess to giving up after forty five minutes the first time I watched the film, returning only after watching the lengthy Secrets of Izo special feature – which goes a long way to helping contextualize the film while also giving a good behind the scenes look at its making – and hearing Miike describe the film as a sutra. This is a film that completely abandons conventional narrative and story in favor of symbols and concepts. The world is overseen by some mystical panel of experts – Beat Takeshi and Ryuhei Matsuda among them – that immediately brought to mind the Illuminati, though these seem purely conceptual and have a reach across time. The film loops and curls back upon itself, constantly repeating scenarios in different time frames as Miike strives to demonstrate that nothing ever truly changes. The film follows its own rules entirely and you must be prepared to leave your preconceptions at the door and let it take you where it may.
With its intense anti-violence message – the film has been described as the most violent anti-violence film ever – and its hero bouncing through time the only obvious point of comparison for this is Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five, but this is far more abstract. Izo exists as a primal urge, simply lashing out at whatever is around him, and Miike uses the repetition and brutishness of the violence, which he seldom glams up, to argue that violence is senseless and accomplishes nothing other than breeding more violence. It seems an odd position for a director like Miike, whose international reputation is based entirely on his flair for on screen violence, to be taking, but there it is and you have to wonder if his current move into family film (The Great Yokai War, the upcoming Ultraman) and more serious drama (the upcoming Shark Fin Soup) since the making of Izo represents some sort of philosophical change in the man himself. Could Izo be Miike breaking from his past?
So, it's a difficult film, one that you watch more for interest than entertainment, but it seems far from the failure that early buzz labeled it as when approached on its own terms. And with their coming DVD release Media Blasters has done a solid job of giving the film some context in which to succeed on these shores.
The first disc contains the film itself in an anamorphic transfer with an English dub as well as the original Japanese audio and English subtitles. The transfer itself is solid but it shows the limitations of the source as the film was shot digitally and originally intended for a direct to video release, so the budget and effects are not what they would have been for a film targeted to theaters from the beginning. The interesting materials fall on the second disc in the form of a Making Of doc and the aforementioned, and very lengthy, Secrets of Izo doc. The Secrets segment is made up of behind the scenes footage, some production diary styled footage, and interview footage with the director and cast talking about both the making of the film and the intended meaning. Given that the film is idea driven rather than plot driven and thus nearly impossible to 'spoil' per se, I would actually recommend watching this doc before watching the film itself to get yourself up to speed with the basic intentions and concepts of the film.
There has never truly been a Miike film for the masses and Izo is not about to break that string. High on concept and rather heavy handed in execution it likely does not stand a chance of making any new Miike fans while also polarizing the current batch. This is not the crowd pleasing Miike of Zebraman or The Great Yokai War, nor the gleeful trangessor of Ichi the Killer, but something else entirely. This is Miike experimenting as an artist rather than a craftsman and while it is not entirely successful it is an interesting attempt.

Is this that movie with the bloody awful guitarist? I think I might have seen a bootleg of this maybe a year back and just couldn't wrap my head around enough of it to enjoy myself. Normally I can either puzzle out what's going on in Miike's stranger movies or simply just have fun but this movie left me cold and feeling kind of dense.
I sat through this once and ended up frustrated more than anything else. The action scenes didn't have alot of OOMPH and perhaps in the message Miike is trying to deliver this was the point but it was a bit too repetitively dull for me. The lack of subs on the lyrics through the overly long musical scenes was pretty annoying as well..Media Blasters got subs for the lyrics at all? I remember near foaming out the mouth at the prospect of a Miike and Kitano collaboration but this really wasn't what I expected..a bit too puzzling - even for Miike.
'There has never truly been a Miike film for the masses'
come on, wasn't the 'rock on the head' scene in Visitor Q one of those great movie moments everybody - from children aged 3 to Bae Yong-Joon/obsessed okasan - can enjoy? ;)
and let's not forget the milk!
Sounds fun, might pick this up.
Blice: Sure Jess Franco is an artist, why wouldn't he be? I don't see how that detracts at all from the artistic value of Izo...
i liked this film, how does this disk compare to the Japanese disk that was bootleged picture wise?
Blice: Miike has made far, far worse films that are utter rubbish, like SILVER.
That you dismiss IZO in such an off-hand and foaming-at-the-mouth way says more about you than it does about Miike or IZO.
Just because it didn't do what you wanted it to do does not mean it's trash. It means you were unable or unwilling to engage with it because your expectations closed your mind to it
Man, I couldn't disagree with your second sentence more, Ichi. This is absolutely, 100% meant to be a serious film. There's none of the normal Miike tongue in cheek stuff in here. This is absolutely a message film, built entirely around the point he wants to make ...
Adam: No, your opinion is very wrong. If something is trash, like in the real world, you can't transfer it to something "higher&" by telling some shitty talks like "Just because it didn't do what you wanted it to do&". Haha, no offence, but that's a laughy sentence. I was very open minded - and I mean very - to Izo before seeing it. Nontheless I can't help it, even such a good director like Miike can make a trash movie and this IS trash. Live with it.
Well.. One person's trash is anothers treasure. I personally liked it. And I am by no means a Miike Fanboy.
Just finished watching it. Totally INSANE and it is completely in a class of its own. The first half is really weird, the usual Miike... but at the half way point, the violence picks up heavy and never lets go. I love this film.
blice, you cannot state your opinion as fact. Geez how old are you?
liked gozu, visitor, ichi and the katakuris. could not like izo, though i tried and watched it twice. after the first session i was sure that i must´ve missed something...the second session proved me wrong...pseudo intellectual boredom. hillariously pretentious (the whole nietzsche stuff / god is dead). endless repetition of killing without any visible point or purpose. the first ten minutes wrap up what the whole movie is about, the following hour and fifty minutes are superfluous...(unfortuantely) not violent enough. should have been more drastic taking into consideration that miike wants to illustrate the neverending urge of man to destroy (himself)...
btw: i envy miike for his hardcore following, just go to the imdb board and see how this movie is overinterpreted to the max and everyone who criticizes it brutally bashed...michael bay anyone (adam´s post)...
Izo is attracted to and kills people who spout off bad philosophy. If you ever spout off totally ripe & hamfisted dialogue, then Izo will totally show up and smack your ass with a bad prop sword. Every time Izo shows up and kills some authority figure that spouts a bunch of crap it takes about 2 to maybe 10 mintes. This happens over and over again with very little variety for feature length time. Some bad folk singer provides padding. Izo just called and said you're a bunch of dumbasses.
I no longer masturbate to my own movies. No, I have found something far grander and enticing to masurbate to! This, my friends, is a little movie I'd like to call IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZZZZZZZZZZZOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!! This would be an excellent forum to announce my remake starring Orlando Bloom.
Fuck shiznit yo, Miike can fuckin kick it old school with JC & Felliznit. Muthafuck. See you on the loading dock, kickin back fo'ties with Mike B.
Is this the one where the guy intends to eventually kill everyone in the world? I'm thinking not, and I thought it was. Does anyone know what film I'm thinking of? Thanks.
blice: This is not art film, this is BAD directed series of random scenes making no sense at all.
Dear Blice, take no insult, but IZO is masterfully directed series of thougtfully connected scenes that make perfect sense, at least to me. Miike is in all his movies very craftfull in disguising himself as an trash/splash author, while he is, actually, not just an artist, but a hell of an intelligent and educated one - proving this in almost each frame of Izo. There are so many layers of meaning in this movie, and references to both eastern and western philosophy/religion/history/politics, that one needs to watch it with his finger on the pause/play, and have a dozen of books beside him in order to comprehend it all. Every time I watch it, I find something that I missed the last time. I saw it last night again, and this morning searched the web for more insight, because for me, the first time I watched it, it was clear that Miike is WAY above me in his level of education and understanging the world. So, I found some other people's comments that might be useful to you, as they were for me:
http://filmthreat.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-3447.html
http://www.midnighteye.com/reviews/izo.shtml
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