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Ikigami : The Ultimate Limit (VCD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) VCD

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Ikigami : The Ultimate Limit (VCD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

If you had only 24 hours left to live, how would you spend it? To encourage productivity among citizens, the Japanese government has introduced its own process of unnatural selection: all people between the ages of 18 and 24 are eligible for a death lottery. Those chosen to die are served an "ikigami", or death notice, 24 hours before their reckoning. Fujimoto Kengo's job is to deliver the ikigami.

Winner of the Best Newcomer award at the 32nd Japan Academy Awards, rising star Matsuda Shota from Hana Yori Dango: Final plays the modern messenger of death in Ikigami: The Ultimate Limit directed by Takimoto Tomoyuki (The Investigation Game). Set in a dystopian Japan where Big Brother is constantly watching, the film both affects and intrigues as it explores the value of life under the cloud of death through Fujimoto's different encounters on the job. Based on Mase Motoro's popular manga, Ikigami features an all-star ensemble cast that includes Tsukamato Takashi (Song to the Sun), Narumi Riko (How to Become Myself), and Yamada Takayuki (Train Man).

© 2009 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Technical Information

Product Title: Ikigami : The Ultimate Limit (VCD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) 死亡預告 (VCD) (中英文字幕) (香港版) 死亡预告 (VCD) (中英文字幕) (香港版) Ikigami : The Ultimate Limit (VCD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) Ikigami : The Ultimate Limit (VCD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Artist Name(s): Yamada Takayuki | Fubuki Jun | Tsukamoto Takashi | Matsuda Shota (Actor) | Narumi Riko 山田孝之 | 風吹純 | 塚本高史 | 松田翔太 (Actor) | 成海璃子 山田孝之 | 风吹纯 | 冢本高史 | 松田翔太 (Actor) | 成海璃子 山田孝之 | 風吹ジュン | 塚本高史 | 松田翔太 (Actor) | 成海璃子 Yamada Takayuki | Fubuki Jun | Tsukamoto Takashi | Matsuda Shota (Actor) | Narumi Riko
Director: Takimoto Tomoyuki Takimoto Tomoyuki Takimoto Tomoyuki 瀧本智行 Takimoto Tomoyuki
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Release Date: 2009-04-24
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Japan
Disc Format(s): VCD
Rating: IIB
Duration: 134 (mins)
Publisher: Edko Films Ltd. (HK)
Other Information: 2VCDs
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1019712529

Product Information

A place, somewhere, that bears a strong resemblance in history and environment to Japan. Its return to prosperity after defeat in war is due to a certain law, the “Special Law for the Maintenance of National Prosperity”. All children, just before they start primary school, are vaccinated. The ampoule for one in every thousand containing a ‘capsule’ that, before they turn 25, will shatter near the heart and kill them. With the tension arising from the awareness that death could come early to any of these children, they are raised day by day with great sincerity and effort. Officially recognized as sacrificial victims, they provide stability to the state. 24 hours before this capsule is to bring about death, an official of the Ministry of Health and Welfare brings a letter announcing impending death, an ‘ikigami’.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Ikigami : The Ultimate Limit (VCD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)"

April 20, 2009

This professional review refers to Ikigami : The Ultimate Limit (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Woohoo! Another based-on-a-manga movie! This trend is getting so extreme that movies based on manga should get their own dedicated cinemas, if not half of the "New Release" shelf at Japanese video rental stores. Created by Motoro Mase, Ikigami features a promising concept about a dystopian Japan where innocents must die to serve the greater good. However, Ikigami is less flamboyant than similar-seeming fanboy favorites like Death Note and Battle Royale, and features TV drama-like pathos and pronounced sentimentality instead of heady nihilism or over-the-top violence. Ikigami is somewhat sedate for a manga-to-film adaptation, but the intriguing concept and the occasional suspense are enough to entertain.

Shota "Son of Yusaku, Brother of Ryuhei" Matsuda stars as Kengo Fujimoto, a newly minted Japanese government official who delivers "ikigamis", or official letters informing citizens of their random selection for execution. Ikigami's citizen-murdering version of the Japanese government pushes the idea that unexpected death will encourage a more productive and prosperous society, and indeed the crime rate has lowered since the ratification of the Special Law for the Maintenance of National Prosperity. Now, a periodic lottery is held to condemn youths between the ages of 18 and 24 to death, with the sentence carried out via a radio-controlled capsule that's implanted in citizens at childhood. When the capsule goes off, the subject keels over and expires, and it isn't always a pretty sight.

Upon receiving the ikigami (or "death notice"), the condemned have 24 hours to live, and receive a free pass to do nearly anything they want short of committing a crime. If they do break the law during their last hours (e.g., go on a shotgun-toting rampage), their family is denied the government compensation money. If they quietly die, they're lauded for serving the state - though obviously, that's not much consolation for their families, or the condemned themselves. Ikigami follows Kengo as he hands out death notices to three individuals, with all three reacting differently to their death sentence. A rising musician (Yuta Kanai) bravely faces his death while making his debut, while a disaffected shut-in (Kazuma Sano) becomes even more distraught and twisted when his councilwoman mother (Jun Fubuki) attempts to use his upcoming death to gain sympathy votes.

In these first two cases, Kengo handles his job obediently but with uncertain emotions. He's not sure how to react to the affected, though he possesses a glimmer of compassion that compels him to consider doing more. Shota Matsuda cuts a striking figure as Kengo, but is sometimes too withdrawn to be a convincingly complex protagonist. Kengo is more of a witness in the film's early going, but eventually acts upon his instinctive disapproval of the National Prosperity Law and becomes more involved with his third ikigami recipient, a working class debt collector (Takayuki Yamada) who's about to buy a new flat for himself and his blind sister (Riko Narumi). The plot and themes here aren't much different than your typical weepy Asian drama, but Yamada and Narumi make a sympathetic pair, and the situations touch upon agreeable, if familiar emotions.

Kengo's third ikigami case also benefits from being the final one depicted in the film, as hopefully by then the audience has developed expectations or opinions towards the film's dystopian world. The film's darker details are potent ones; besides random executions, the Japanese government punishes people for "thought crimes" through radical and probably inhumane reeducation. The world of Ikigami seems near-totalitarian, and the film backs that up some effective details, like the frequent POV shots representing the omnipresent CCTV cameras, which watch over the people in a Big Brother-like fashion. The film portrays a questionably just society where individuals very lives could be forfeit to a dehumanized system. While a familiar enough theme, Ikigami presents an intriguing and human twist on the idea.

However, while there's rich material here, director Tomoyuki Takimoto doesn't completely capitalize. The films edgier themes take a backseat to life-affirming gestures and a pronounced sentimentality that could engender tears or audience alienation. Ikigami may be better in potential than in execution. This is an entertaining, though somewhat slight drama that feels like a set-up for a longer television drama that can better tell the story of this crazy Japan that'll actually kill its people. There's simply too much story to tell here. Unlike American superhero comics, manga frequently have complete stories with a beginning and end, so film adaptations - which try to compress dozens of volumes into just two hours - are understandably shadows of their original inspiration. That's certainly the case here, as Ikigami only hints at a greater, more interesting conflict to come. To get the rest of the story, what we really need is Ikigami 2.

by Kozo - LoveHKFilm.com

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.
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