Helldriver (Blu-ray) (UK Version) Blu-ray Region B
- This product can only be played on PAL video players.
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| Product Title: | Helldriver (Blu-ray) (UK Version) Helldriver (Blu-ray) (英國版) Helldriver (Blu-ray) (英国版) Helldriver (Blu-ray) (UK Version) Helldriver (Blu-ray) (UK Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Namioka Kazuki (Actor) | Torihada Minoru (Actor) 波岡一喜 (Actor) | 鳥肌實 (Actor) Namioka Kazuki (Actor) | 鸟肌实 (Actor) 原裕美子 (Actor) | 波岡一喜 (Actor) | 鳥肌実 (Actor) | 岸建太朗 (Actor) | 柳憂怜 (Actor) Namioka Kazuki (Actor) | Torihada Minoru (Actor) |
| Director: | Nishimura Yoshihiro 西村喜廣 西村喜广 西村喜廣 Nishimura Yoshihiro |
| Blu-ray Region Code: | B - Europe, Africa, Oceania (including Australia and New Zealand), Middle East, French Territories, Greenland What is it? |
| Release Date: | 2011-10-21 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Subtitles: | English |
| Country of Origin: | Japan |
| Picture Format: | PAL, [HD] High Definition What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | Blu-ray |
| Screen Resolution: | 1080p (1920 x 1080 progressive scan) |
| Duration: | 105 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Bounty Films (UK) |
| Package Weight: | 120 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1025614128 |
Other Versions of "Helldriver (Blu-ray) (UK Version)"
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Japan Version
- Helldriver (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
- US$62.99
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- Helldriver (Blu-ray + DVD) (US Version) Blu-ray Region A
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- Helldriver (DVD) (US Version) DVD Region 1
- US$24.98
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- Helldriver (DVD) (UK Version) DVD Region 2
- US$31.99
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Professional Review of "Helldriver (Blu-ray) (UK Version)"
This professional review refers to Helldriver (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
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Japanese production house Sushi Typhoon returns with more blood soaked insanity in Helldriver directed by Tokyo Gore Police and Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl helmer Yoshihiro Nishimura. Given Nishimura's past works and his background as a special effects wizard, it should come as no surprise to learn that the film is a gibbering gore-fest which basically plays out like one crazed set piece and sees him constantly trying to one-up himself. The film reunites the director with striking Tokyo Gore Police actress Eihi Shiina (who made a lasting impression on audiences in Takashi Miike's Audition, with Yumiko Hara in the lead and support from the likes of Yurei Yanagi (Gothic & Lolita Psycho), Kazuki Namioka (Zebraman 2 and Kentaro Kishi (RoboGeisha), plus the usual cameos from several of the Sushi Typhoon gang.
The film doesn't have a plot, so much as a setup, taking place in a Japan which has been devastated by an alien zombie plague that brings the dead back to life with weird antlers sticking from their foreheads and the expected insatiable hunger for human flesh. The government takes action, sealing off the northern half of the country and containing the ghouls with a huge wall, creating the wasteland of Zombieworld. Sporting a chainsaw blade powered by an artificial heart, high school girl Kika (Yumiko Hara) emerges as the nation's only hope, sent by the government into the badlands to end the horror by killing the zombie queen - who just happens to be her own psychotic mother Rikka (Eihi Shiina). For fans, it should be reassuring to hear that Helldriver is instantly recognisable as both a Sushi Typhoon production and as a Yoshihiro Nishimura film - the trailer and amusingly belated credits sequence announce the film as "Yoshihiro Nishimura's Helldriver" reflecting his position as probably the most prominent figure in modern Japanese gore cinema. The film really does offer up a genuine non-stop cavalcade of carnage, with Nishimura clearly having a great time coming up with some unbelievably bizarre and grotesque creations. The amount of gore spilled and viscera hurled is simply incredible, with quite literally almost every set piece resulting in the screen being painted red. Although the film doesn't really have a nasty or sadistic bone in its body, it very quickly takes on the feel of a kind of gorenography or blood bukkake, and it beggars belief as to just how much slaughter it manages to pack in. It's here that the film does shine, with Nishimura being one of the very best in the business, a genuine mad genius possessed of a wonderfully gruesome imagination and sense of homicidal creativity. The question as to how the film compares with its peers is tricky, not least since it's one which largely defies analysis and is an experience best enjoyed with an appreciative audience and/or alcohol. Thematically, the film falls kind of in-between some of Nishimura's prior outings, combining touches of Tokyo Gore Police style satire and the hyper colourful lunacy of Vampire Girl If anything, it's bloodier and sillier than both (no mean feat), though oddly enough, despite the surreal splatter and utterly excessive tangents it frequently lurches off on, at heart the film is a fairly straightforward revenge road movie and does see him progressing somewhat as a director. Although it would be going far too far to accuse the film of being grounded, this does give it a vague sense of coherence which helps it to hold the attention more than similar gore epics. The film seems to have enjoyed a reasonably high budget, at least by the standards of the genre, and the money was quite wisely piled into the special effects. Whilst these do vary from the repulsively effective to the outlandishly cheap, the sheer enthusiasm of their delivery means that the film keeps jaws firmly on the floor throughout, building to an awesome climax that even Nishimura may find it hard to top. For fans of the form, Helldriver is obviously, and quite literally, a no-brainer, and another worthy entry on Yoshihiro Nishimura's blood splattered CV. Relentlessly entertaining and overflowing with blood and over the top gore scenes, though clearly not for all tastes, it's only real fault is that it sees the director setting himself a fierce challenge in delivering something even more excessive next time around. by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com |










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