Wild 7 (2011) Poster

(2011)

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Not as wild as it could have been but it was solid!
chrichtonsworld21 December 2017
Wild 7 is the live action adaptation of a Japanese manga series (1969 - 1979). The series is about a special Counter-terrorist Motorcycle unit consisting of reformed convicts who are to combat the rising criminal and terrorist activities. What makes them so effective is that they basically have been given a licence to kill. Let me put it to you straight. They are a death squad.

The film starts off with the Wild 7 dealing with a group of armed robbers. It certainly made me look forward of what was to come. But very soon after this introduction one of the main flaws of this film gets exposed. The weak and generic plot. When it comes to action films I usually am very forgiving when it comes to storytelling as long as the action itself is good and enough motivation is given for that action to be extra exciting. The problem is that there is not that much action to begin with. For some reason Wild 7 wants to preach about this kind of law enforcement and how it's inhumane. There is nothing wrong with that of course. Except Wild 7 never gives you that substance to chew on. Apart from a couple of conversations the audience is never shown why this death squad was deemed necessary. Had they shown or explained that crime was rampant and that people's lives were being threatened to a point that life was impossible then at least that would have given some context. Instead the film distracts us with a subplot concerning a mysterious stranger and a mostly unremarkable criminal mastermind who does his best to be menacing but fails to impress. You would think that they at least would tell us more about these reformed convicts and what makes them so special. Although at times seems like the whole purpose of the film is to point out that these team members aren't that special and can be replaced at any time with someone else. Naturally the Wild 7 members are special. Unfortunately we are only told what makes them unique instead of actually showing us. For me who is not familiar with this manga that is a real mistake since I truly wanted to learn more about them. Despite the characters lacking depth you do root for them. But that is because the actors do their best to make their characters likeable. Plus there are scenes where the members are shown to be noble and honourable. It wouldn't surprise me if the original manga was inspired by The Dirty Dozen. But I can't make that claim since I couldn't find facts to collaborate that. Although I assume that the original manga went deeper into describing who the characters are and what the dynamics were since usually that is what makes most anime so loved.

Wild 7 was a little underwhelming for me since I was definitely expecting more action and violence. However I can't deny that I did enjoy the film since the action that was present did deliver. It's now been almost 7 years and no sequel or follow up has been announced or made. I wished they did already since the premise (while simple) is an effective one and could lead to real great things.

(Note: Just in case you got it in your head that it's similar to Suicide Squad. Don't go there. You can't compare the two since this is far superior.)
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
One of the best action movie from Japan
ebiros28 July 2012
Based on a comic by Mikiya Mochizuki, Wild 7 is a story that seems to reemerge every decade with a modern twist to its characters. The original comic appeared in 1969, so it has over 40 years history behind its lore. The comic has been translated into TV drama, animated series, video releases, and now this full feature length movie.

The good of this movie is that Japanese action movie has finally caught up with the quality of Hong Kong action movies. When it comes to physical action, Japanese movies just didn't have it. But this movie showed action scenes that are notch above those of traditional Japanese movies.

Although the plot was somewhat mundane, acting of Eita and Kyoko Fukada was pretty good. CG was pretty good too, and other special effects were all way above par that translates to surprisingly high quality of this movie.

If this is the direction they're going in, the future is bright for Japanese action movies.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Nice fun action movie
kosmasp17 December 2012
Don't expect too much (as in morality tale or in the story department) and you will be more than satisfied. The action is more than decent and for a movie with so many characters it never loses its focus (which can't be said about all movies). There are quite a few fancy scenes (camera movement reminiscent of big budget US movies) and the action is more than solid throughout.

There are a few flaws and bumps along the ride, but overall you can have a lot of fun watching this, if you don't take it seriously. It is very predictable (relationship/connections between characters could be called cliché) and not very demanding.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
a modern day 'magnificient 7' plus 'the dirty dozen' in Japanese style
rightwingisevil29 May 2012
more like adapted from a comic book that didn't need too much logic. the production is quite serious but regretfully very pretentious since the screenplay is traditionally ridiculous that most Japanese movies in such genre would not easy to avoid. judged from the the scene settings, the manpower, the costumes, the mechanic and technique invested and implemented, this movie obviously got a huge production budget, but sadly it again, turned out to be shallow and ridiculous, especially with the background of modern day tokyo and japan. since the screenplay is so comically crafted, all the characters/roles in this movie just looked so pretentious, not one second not to show overly ballooned formatted coolness. the screenplay inevitably shot itself to its own foot and turned more ridiculous when the wild 7 could easily terminate the 'kiru' of the psu(not portland state university) in the evening party. why when you could so easily wipe him out in the party and let him walk? why these wild 7 got to do the hard way to attack the psu headquarter in the living daylight and to face the whole force in order to get one person from his working place? there were so many over the top stupid plots constructed on a ridiculous stupid scenario spitted out from a stupid screenplay, yet the Japanese investors would blindly throw in so much Japanese yens to produce it. this is myth that could only explained when the way of thinking of the Japanese movie industries and their consumers are more and more, deeper and deeper addicted to the Japanese comic books that 'logic reasoning' is the only thing that the comic books and those in-house high school graduated comic books writers/creators never need to worry about. by just looking at the volume of such ridiculous movies adapted from their comic books, you'd know how serious the problem is. when American politicians ironically questioned their opponents with "WHERE IS THE BEEF?", i have to ask the Japanese movie industries a similar question: "WHERE IS YOUR LOGIC?", and at the same time, asking the viewers who gave this movie a high '8' rating score: "WTF?"
4 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed