Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell Bastards! (1963) Poster

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7/10
Japanese Pop Cinema
conranp10 August 2004
Having seen no comment for this film, I decide to put up my own. This is the first Suzuki film that I saw, What struck me about the film was how accessible it was to western audiences. It really was a 60's crime thriller, Joe Shishido could easily be the Japanese James Bond. Another thing that struck me was the music, having become accustomed to hearing traditional chants and whistle tunes in Chambara films, I was surprised to hear a song that could effortlessly be converted to English. Not only that but I really did like the music in the film, I also have a feeling that Suzuki is a man of music, as it seems to be a crucial element in all his films.

Although by no means a masterpiece, I do think that this is a light, enjoyable film, not as heavy going as some other Japanese films. If you are interested in discovering Japanese Pop Cinema, I think that this is an easy beginner's step but that's just one man's opinion, check it out for yourself.

7/10
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7/10
Another frenetically paced, fun-filled crime film from Suzuki
agboone715 May 2015
Seijun Suzuki is, without question, one of a kind. I've never agreed with the popular perception of him as a cinematic genius, but he's an original, unique, innovative filmmaker that deserves respect.

"Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell Bastards" stars Suzuki's number one man — the actor he cast for the lead of so many of his films — Jô Shishido. I've never cared for Shishido. His ridiculous ultra-cool, ultra-tough guy routine is so transparent that it's impossible for me to take him at all seriously. Fortunately, in this film, we don't have to take him seriously. We're meant not to. And so all the things that normally get under my skin about Shishido work here to enhance the film's overall enjoyability. For the first time I was really able to enjoy him as an actor.

Suzuki, on the other hand, I always enjoy. He doesn't have Ozu's spiritual, emotional potency or formal mastery; he doesn't have Mizoguchi's palpable atmosphere or incredible sense of mood and tone; he doesn't have Ôshima's political conscience or unflinching psychological deconstructions of human self-destructiveness; he doesn't have Teshigahara's deeply philosophical genius, or Imamura's profound comic satire based in existential discontent. Standing next to the true geniuses of Japanese cinema, Suzuki isn't really an artist at all. He's more of, well, a confectioner. But there's nothing wrong with a little treat sometimes, and I personally deeply enjoy Suzuki's brand of confection.

Frankly, I think Seijun Suzuki is a wonderful filmmaker. Not a brilliant one, mind you, but a wonderful one. His films are filled with an energy and an unpredictability that shouldn't be difficult for anyone to appreciate. They are narratively erratic, visually stunning, and completely off the wall. "Detective Bureau" is no exception. In fact, it's probably one of his most outright delightful works.

Here we find Suzuki at a place somewhere between the studio fare he had been making previously and the more radical, completely unhinged cinema we'd see in the years to come. Consequently, this may have been the film that elevated him to auteur status and gave him his own, unique identity as a filmmaker. The film was made at Nikkatsu, one of Japan's biggest film studios at the time. Nikkatsu had started churning out a lot of crime films in the '50s. Influenced largely by French and especially American film noir, films such as Kurahara's "I Am Waiting" and Masuda's "Rusty Knife" were quality films, but were very formulaic and lacking any real authorial stamp from their directors. Suzuki had been directing films for Nikkatsu since his 1956 debut film, and in 1960 he released "Take Aim at the Police Van", which was one such crime film. It's the only Suzuki film I've seen that was released before "Detective Bureau". Essentially a studio hand, Suzuki was clearly not the auteur then that he would later become. And yet, there were a few moments in that film that foreshadowed his distinct style — one moment in particular, in which the film bounces to life as a prostitute is chased down the street to the sound of a classic rock-and-roll tune on a nearby jukebox.

It's these moments that distinguish Suzuki as a filmmaker, and "Detective Bureau" is chock-full of them. One sequence actually has Jô Shishido standing up in a nightclub and unexpectedly taking part in a musical number that sounds like something out of a Jacques Demy film. It could be hokey and atrocious, if it weren't for Suzuki's immense gift for turning everything absurd into wonderful, playful farce. Another scene involves Shishido and the film's female lead at another nightclub, where a rock band with a female Japanese vocalist plays music that is so laughably non-Japanese that it's hard not to giggle at the circus of Americanized cultural overload that Suzuki presents us with (Suzuki didn't explore the theme of postwar westernization to the extent that many of his contemporaries did, but he certainly highlighted this sudden change in the Japanese landscape in his own, inimitable way). And then, of course, there is the scene with several half-naked Japanese girls dancing to "When the Saints Go Marching In".

Suzuki spins a decent little crime yarn here, but in that department this really is a pretty subpar effort. It's the incredible moments of pure cinematic elation that make the film the joyous experience it is. The plot is not very interesting, but that's the beauty of Suzuki's cinema: It never has to be. "Youth of the Beast", "Tokyo Drifter", "Branded to Kill" — in all these films, Suzuki pulls you along through a visually astonishing, absurdist Japanese landscape in which nothing is predictable and everything is preposterous. There are immaturities in his films, of course -- they lack any real substance or depth -- but Suzuki's strength is his ability to transcend the necessity for those things. His films are always completely unconventional and always completely enjoyable, in spite of their shortcomings.

Suzuki was undoubtedly the most stylistically experimental of the Japanese New Wave directors. There wasn't much there in terms of content, but formally, he was a true master. His high-energy, genre-bending, pop art style was very unique, and his films were always aesthetically pleasing. "Detective Bureau" doesn't have the stylistic supremacy of, for example, "Tokyo Drifter", but there is some really great fluorescent lighting and some hot windows, et cetera, that, visually speaking, really make it a pleasure to watch.

This is not a great film, but I feel about it much the same way I feel about Suzuki in general: not brilliant, but wonderful in his way. It is a good film, because it is a fun film. Right from the fast-paced, high-energy rock-and-roll song that underlines the opening credits, all the way through that same song accompanying the film's fantastic final shot, this film is a blast. It's charismatic, charming, and full of life.

RATING: 7.33 out of 10 stars
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8/10
Unique cocktail
colaya25 November 2014
What happens when you mix Adam West's Batman with James Bond, jazz music and pop art? Well... this movie. It's plain fun, full of primary colors, with a stylish hero in silk suit who doesn't take himself too seriously, clever deception tactics, gangs with samurai swords, pow! biff! bang!

Add Suzuki's usual game that transforms "continuity goofs" in virtue... Your usual "time" and "space" will be challenged. This is an acquired taste. If you are fan of Suzuki then this is a must. All of his trademarks are already there. And if you want to taste a new drink, this is a good chance.

Suzuki would be fired some years later since for the president of Nikkatsu Studios "we don't need a director who makes movies nobody understands". Suzuki's reply? "Why make a movie about something one understands completely? I make movies about things I do not understand, but wish to."

This film might serve as an aperitif for a different type of cinema. It will stimulate your appetite.
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6/10
Better title than movie.
jellopuke5 August 2023
A detective goes undercover with the yakuza in an effort to expose their criminal ring. He's got a crew with him but is found out pretty fast. He has to think on his feet to stay alive and catch the bad guys.

Jo Shishido and his giant chipmunk cheeks swaggers through this movie, and even gets to sing and dance, but the story itself is pretty slight and the action is a little bland. It's was obviously meant to start a series but didn't pan out. It's certainly not terrible but it is a little on the meh side. If you love yakuza movies on the lighter side or have to see every Shishido movie then you'll probably dig it, otherwise it's a skipper.
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7/10
Raw title alert!
DanTheMan2150AD24 January 2024
I swear there must be a rule that, when making a crime film for Nikkatsu, one's title must go hard as hell, cause you're gosh darn right I watched this purely for the title alone. An ultra-stylish, rapid-fire yakuza thriller, Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell, Bastards! Plays almost like an anarchic parody of the genre, from its eye-popping colours, wild comedy and even a bloody musical number. Suzuki's send up of post-war greed this has got to be one of his loosest and goofiest, directing it all with the tongue-in-cheek attitude that, while certainly has lost its bite today, makes for a rip-roaring good time. An unholy cocktail of Adam West's Batman, Connery's 007, Warhol's pop art and swinging jazz.
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7/10
Hideo Tajima against the yakuza empire Warning: Spoilers
In a society governed by the tyranny and greed of the mob, the police don't do anything nor want to do anything. Then the best thing is leave the dirty work to a detective, but one who's as tough, cunning and brave as Hideo Tajima.

1.963 becomes a new period for Seijun Suzuki, who has spent six years working at a frantic pace for his company, Nikkatsu, enduring limitations and poor budgets. He's well-adapted to teen melodramas and his wit stands out in the exotic "borderless action films", especially in "noir". When the previous year ends with the nerveless "Ore ni Kaketa Yatsura", the producer, who wants to turn Jo Shishido into an action star, prepares his jump and Suzuki, with whom he worked as a support actor (he never wanted to give him a leading role...), has to take care of it; this event marks a series of collaborations between both that will conclude in the memorable "Branded to Kill". Iwao Yamazaki adapts a novel written by Haruhiko Oyabu, specialized in criminal and detective stories, and the result seems to be infallible.

In the line of exoticism and desire to adopt the american imagery of that kind of "exploitation" cinema that Nikkatsu carried out, the beginning of "Tantei Jimusho 2-3" cannot follow this trend with more determination. A black man silently watches in an American base two yakuza gangs (some of them shooting from a Pepsi-Cola truck) fighting over a cache of weapons; shots, explosions and a "pop jazz" soundtrack set the tone for this film, which introduces us to the adventures of Tajima, a detective in the tradition of "hard-boiled" anti-heroes, to unmask the yakuzas who have stolen the weapons. Suzuki has already dealt with these characters, but now he adds a note of absurd humor, and that in addition to the self-confidence and swagger of the main character, is given by the intervention of supposedly cartoonish secondary characters (such as Tajima's assistants, come from a comic). Far from being a handicap, the filmmaker balances it perfectly with the violence, intrigue and action of the plot, which starts after the arrest of the young Manabe, a member of the organization that has stolen the weapons and is threatened by other yakuza gangs.

The sequence where we see all the savage gangsters in front of the police station waiting for Manabe is a clear example of Suzuki's technique skills. Tajima takes advantage of the situation, and interferes, saving the boy's life with the help of Inspector Kumagai to work as undercover on his group and recover the weapons...and taking a good sum of money, since opportunism and deception guide the story; together with the detective we immerse ourselves in an atmosphere violent and dark, suggestive and exotic, according to the director's vision, who begins to bet on visual and aesthetic risk instead of obey the traditions of the genre. He would break'em very soon, but there's a taste for the strangely enthralling and "avant-garde", always inspired by european and american cinema. While Tajima tries to avoid being unmasked, we can see the police (here showed in a pathetic and incompetent way) involving in any side of society, and melodrama comes through the intervention of Chiaki, the girl of chief Hatano; inevitably this tragic character will conquer the heart of the tough and cynical detective (although nothing matters for the plot), who strives to stand out whenever he can, either by facing villains or seducing women.

John Carr, Elmore Leonard and Don Siegel mix with Umetsugu Inoue, Jean-Pierre Melville, Jean-Luc Godard and the James Bond universe, and the final cocktail is fun, fast-paced and exciting, 'cause Suzuki knows something: combine the pure entertainment with the charm of its characters, which oscillates between cliche and the comically grotesque; at the end "Tantei Jimusho 2-3" is a "noir fiction" pocket edition and aims to move quickly between lies, betrayals and fatal romances while the director takes a look at japanese society of the moment, tainted with the enthusiasm of youth, that adopts the american models (the sequence in the disco exemplifies it). The tart and carefree essence of Oyabu's text is perfectly captured. Shishido, who operated his cheekbones to have a more star appearance, surprises with his vitality in a role that seems entirely a parody of the Hammett's Continental Op, showing he has a talent for action and spectacle (unforgettable when we see him dancing in the club with Naomi Hoshi); his character and physical energy will be his hallmark. He's supported by Nobuo Kaneko, the great Kinzo Shin, Tamio Kawaji (again as an obnoxious asshole) and the beautiful Reiko Sasamori.

The success of the film, where stands out the Takeharu Sakaguchi's talent in artistic design, was really big that soon after Nozomu Yanase would direct a sequel, and gave Suzuki the definitive lead actor for his "thrillers", being "Youth of the Beast" (the next project also based on an Oyabu's novel, with a very similar plot) the best example of this union. This would be the turning point in the director's career, as he would begin to risk much more in his style and aesthetics, which didn't please the Nikkatsu executives at all ...
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7/10
Not a great film but great fun.
christopher-underwood20 December 2020
Not really an early film for Seijun Suzuki but he is at last unleashed into the world of 'A' features and begins to make his mark. This is a truly wonderful, brilliantly coloured widescreen print on the Arrow Blu-ray and if the director is only beginning his playfulness with splashes of vivid colour and idiosyncratic, almost surreal moments, it is a good start. The story itself preposterous but with guns blazing this barely stops with action throughout, much of it around what must be Yokohama with wharves and warehouses a plenty. If not all the cast are up to the level of charismatic Jo Shishido his performance is pretty much enough to carry this. Used to the odd musical number in yakuza films, here we get three scorchers on a Christmas theme complete with bikinis (!) and Diamond Guy, Shishido even joins in. Not a great film but great fun.
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9/10
Straightforward Suzuki is still awesome
zetes31 May 2009
This was made slightly before the time when Suzuki began to experiment with the medium more radically. That would be Youth of the Beast. This one is more straightforward. Yet it is not any less entertaining. The guy was a heck of a director, even when he was apparently bored with what he saw as generic assignments. Jo Shishido stars as a private detective. He is hired by the police to infiltrate a yakuza gang to help them stop their gun running ring. The story doesn't always make a ton of sense, but it moves along so quickly that you might only realize it later. Shishido is awesome, and the film includes three wildly colored musical numbers (at night clubs - it's in no way a musical). Jo Shishido even joins into one of the numbers, which is just orgasmic!
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8/10
Yet another Suzuku film that stars a human squirrel!
planktonrules30 October 2010
I have no idea why, but Japanese actor Jô Shishido apparently had plastic surgery in order to give him squirrel-like cheeks (you know--filled with acorns)!! This is according to IMDb and I have wondered why he would do this and why the director would keep starring this odd man in his films. I assume Suzuki just had some sort of cheek fetish! Regardless, it's pretty weird.

The film begins with some Yakuza (Japanese mobsters) being viciously gunned down during an illegal transaction of guns. Who did this is unknown--and a private detective (Mr. Squirrel) offers to solve the crime if the cops pay him and give him a new identity. Apparently there is another guy who is a mobster and part-time chipmunk, so they give him fake i.d. for that guy and agree to the rest of his terms. I didn't realize that cops accepted freelance commissions! The film, quite honestly, then gets a little confusing--something I noticed in other Suzuki films. But, the style is so cool and the story so full of neat little twists, that I didn't terribly mind. I am not sure why, but they cast a deliberately bad actress who apparently talks through her nose and dresses like a man as Squirrel-boy's assistant. Why?! I guess it's just another weird touch in a generally weird film. Another thing you do need to say about this film is that it has fantastic music--very 1960s and very cool. It's sort of like James Bond music, cool jazz and Beach movie music combined! And in addition, there are some very kooky music numbers in nightclubs that you just have to see. Weird and fun.
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9/10
Detective Bureau goes to hell.
morrison-dylan-fan22 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
In the middle of viewing Arrow's two box sets dedicated to the film maker,I decided to check what other Seijun Suzuki titles had come out on disc. To my surprise,I found Arrow has put out a separate disc for a film which comes in the middle of the run in their sets! Leading to me joining Bureau.

View on the film:

Equalling the presentations in the sets, Arrow present a terrific transfer, with the colours on the print kept sharp,and the soundtrack remaining clean.

Descending into hell with a opening dialogue free shoot out between two gangs, directing auteur Seijun Suzuki reunites with his regular cinematographer of the era Shigeyoshi Mine and enters hell by making a huge progression in Suzuki's major recurring motif, that melts the hard edges of Film Noir into the ultra- stylisation of surrealist Pop-Art.

Hanging at the back of smoke-filled corridors covered in moody Art-Deco grey and blacks that Tajima becomes surrounded in, Suzuki twirls the dark corridors and thick trench coats into starling colour,splashing swift whip-pans and rugged zoom-ins onto the sharp reds darted across the screen as the gang wars are given a high kick, with delightfully unexpected Musical numbers at hip Jazz clubs (a major recurring location in Suzuki's credits.)

Keeping Tajima somewhat out of the loop from the police force by being a private detective who visits the station to listen in on tips from the cops, Iwao Yamazaki's adaptation of Haruhiko Oyabu's novel takes Tajima into the post WW-II Noir black market underworld of Japan with a wickedly biting comedic cynicism, as Tajima plays a sleight of hand on all the gang leaders who have their eyes on taking Manabe down, a move Tajima commits not for morals, but the hope of wiggling cash and a new identity out of the hands tied behind their backs police.

Gliding on Harumi Ibe's silky Jazz score, Jo Shishido gives a great performance as Tajima, who Shishido holds with a cocky swagger of a devil may care loner who goes to hell.
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