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House of Bamboo (Fox Film Noir)
House of Bamboo (Fox Film Noir)

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Director: Samuel Fuller
Actors: Robert Ryan, Robert Stack, Cameron Mitchell, Brad Dexter, Shirley Yamaguchi
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.98
Buy Used: $4.00
You Save: $10.98 (73%)



New (29) Used (13) from $4.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 28 reviews
Sales Rank: 53589

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), Japanese (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 102
Aspect Ratio: 2.55:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: 2224863
UPC: 024543148623
EAN: 0024543148623
ASIN: B0006UEVVI

Theatrical Release Date: July 1, 1955
Release Date: June 7, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Samuel Fuller came up with one of his gutsiest "headline shots" for House of Bamboo: Mount Fuji, in CinemaScope, framed between the boots of a U.S. soldier lying murdered on a snowy Japanese embankment. Happily, the movie that follows is no letdown. This brutal gangster film was the first American production to shoot in Japan, and Fuller exploits his locations to the max, up to and including a climactic gun battle around a Tokyo rooftop facsimile of the turning Earth. Officially the screenplay is credited to Harry Kleiner, with Fuller cited for "additional dialogue"; in actuality, the 20th Century-Fox movie transplants the basic premise of the Kleiner-scripted Street with No Name (1948) from an American Midwest town to Tokyo, but otherwise the picture is unmistakably Fuller's own. A gang of American expatriates is robbing U.S. military ammunition and supply trains, and using military tactics to do it. They're a ruthless bunch, killing not only any troops and police that get in the way but also their own wounded. Robert Stack has a satisfyingly dark-edged role as an American drifter who's drafted into the gang, and Robert Ryan is mesmerizing as the psychotic crimelord. The action is tough--there's a genuinely shocking killing in a bathhouse--and Fuller's canny deployment of the newly widened screen is just as forceful. It's great to have this early-CinemaScope classic in widescreen DVD. --Richard T. Jameson

Description
In Tokyo a ruthless gang holds up U.S. ammunition trains. Ex-serviceman Eddie Spannier arrives from the States apparently at the invitation of one such unfortunate. But, Eddie isn't quite what he seems.


Customer Reviews:   Read 23 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars A Surprisingly Good Lost Treasure   April 25, 2008
Robert Ryan & Robert Stack (yep, the guy from "Unsolved Mysteries") vie for control of Tokyo's underworld. In reality, it was the Yakuza that ruled the black-markets and pachinko parlors, and the more realistic tales of this plague are told by director Kinji Fukasaku with his "Yakuza Papers" series, or "Street Mobster", "Graveyard of Honor", etc.

But this movie is worth the price for a number of reasons: Principally, for what it gets RIGHT, the scenery (exteriors were shot on location in post-war Tokyo!), the behavior codes. It amazingly doesn't overstep its bounds in presenting something that pretty much couldn't have happened. Sure, you can smile at Robert Ryan's swank Tokyo bachelor pad, where men wear shoes inside (aurgh!) among the awesome mid-century design furnishings, and ignore the geographically-impossible views of Mount Fuji. But marvel at RARE views of post-war Tokyo and rarer glimpses of the Japanese countryside.. at a time when Japan was just starting to pick itself up following being nearly annihilated. Not to mention the exciting climax and money-shot atop what was then Tokyo's greatest modern landmark.

And above all, enjoy a good script, crisp direction and fine performances from Robert Ryan, Robert Stack, Cameron Mitchell and Shirley Yamaguchi. It's as brutal as mainstream American Movies could be at the time.

Dang! Good script, good acting, good visuals: That's a good movie!

Another note about the script: When the Americans mispronounce certain Japanese words and misunderstand culture, I don't think it's a flaw of the script, it's the writers' attempt to reflect how the crude men didn't quite get the local lingo.

Do yourself a greater favor and see "House of Bamboo" in your own living room double-feature with Kurosawa's "Stray Dog", another Tokyo crime story from the same general time-frame. Compare and contrast the depictions of the Tokyoites, the approach to police work, etc. See semi-related stories from the POV of Americans who've maybe been to Ginza, and from the people in the places that Americans just didn't go to.



4 out of 5 stars SAMUEL FULLER, OPUS 8   April 15, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

***1/2 1955. Directed by Samuel Fuller. Tokyo. A military police officer investigates the murder of an American soldier killed by Robert Ryan's gang. Shot on location in Japan, HOUSE OF BAMBOO is a fascinating study of a civilization's clash. Then, observe how, in the first part of the film, Robert Stack is described, although we know he's a cop, as an antipathetic hero, Shirley Yamaguchi and Robert Ryan being the sole interesting characters of the film. The ambiguous attraction felt by Robert Ryan towards Robert Stack is also suggested with subtlety by Samuel Fuller who signed here a very personal film. Recommended.


1 out of 5 stars What a Turkey   April 7, 2008
 0 out of 4 found this review helpful

I love Robert Ryan but even he could not save this boring script.
What could have been an amazing piece of pop action history ends up a boring love story. BUMMER



3 out of 5 stars The location shooting is the real star...   December 18, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Robert Ryan easily outshines Robert Stack in this rigid, brittle noir flick... The script is a bit clunky, but what's most fascinating here is the on-location shooting in an urban Japan that has long since vanished in a cloud of modernity. Like Akira Kurosawa's postwar crime films, this shows crowded, poor neighborhoods filled with tumbledown shacks and wooden sidewalks -- an urban landscape long since covered over with concrete and glass, and all the shiny trappings of the ultramodern, wealthy new Japan. Where Kurosawa shot his crime thrillers such as "Stray Dog" in tight, claustrophobic black-and-white, Fuller chose a more expansive Technicolor, with wide, open shots of the neighborhoods and temples. It has a nice postcard-like effect, and gives a fascinating glimpse at the last vestiges of old-world Japan. The movie's pretty dumb, though: for one, thing, how would all these white guys have cornered the mob action in Tokyo? I'm pretty sure there would have been a little competition from the hometown team. (Joe Sixpack, Slipcue)


3 out of 5 stars .......... "MUSHIE---MUSHIE" ..........   July 22, 2007
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I agree with Zack's take on this movie...I had just returned from two [2] sojourns in Kyoto, Japan [ 1954]...and I found this movie/DVD lacking of any Japanese mystique to a great degree...standard crime movie with the predictable ending, all taking place in Tokyo, Japan [1955]....yes, where were the Yakusa??...Robert Stack and Robert Ryan headline with the charming Shirley Yamaguchi, but that's all you get for your time and effort; incidentally, Director: Sam Fuller lured Shirley Yamaguchi away from her wealthy/socialite lifestyle in NYC...to return to her native Japan for this 20th Century Fox cinemascope picture, she remained onboard for a few more flicks and then, just disappeared from the silver screen forever.

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