Five women snatch one billion yen in jewellery from the yakuza, while construction manager Toyama burns for revenge against the mobsters who raped and caused the death of his wife. Before long, the yakuza and Toyama arrive at the women's hideout.
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Reviews
Too much of everything
Such a frustrating disappointment
The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.
Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.
This sequel to the surprise hit Gonin features a largely female cast, but like the first Gonin movie, the blood and slaughter are not gratuitous - a rare thing in Japanese cinema - but rather the inevitable result of somewhat justified anger at a flawed society. Unlike the first film, in which five unemployed men tried to rob the Yakuza out of desperate need, the motivations here are not economic. The women all have grudges related to the role of women in Japanese society and the callousness of those around them. It is the social awareness of gender roles that gives the drama its power here, and makes this movie something other than just another shoot-it-out-with-the-Yakuza thriller. The action centers on a jewelry store in the middle of a robbery, where chance throws five women together; how they respond puts them onto a downward spiral of inevitable violence. The grim tone is well counterpointed by the monochromatic visuals; everything has a dusty look to it, and the world of the film seems always to be in half darkness. Bright lights and friendly colors are for other people, just as happy, fulfilling lives are for other people.
Awful just awful. Some terrible scenes with poor acting bad directing and incomprehensible plot-line. The interesting cohesion between the two plot lines was destroyed by plot flaws in both. Rape scenes and ridiculous pseudo-feminism also add to this movies lack of believability. Awful, just awful.
Disappointed by the original film, I was hoping that Tadashi Ishii would deliver a better rendition and stark contrast to his stylized and dark feature Gonin with this sequel. The premise was promising. Not only did Ishii replace the five desperate men with five equally desperate women but also added Ogata Ken as a sympathetic male ally to the five `angry women'. I guess I was asking for too much. Gonin 2 is every bit as cruel, blood drenched and gloomy as the first movie. What's more, the Five (Yumi Takigawa, Kimiki Yo, Shinobu Otake, Yumi Nishiyama, Mai Kitajima) are basically underdeveloped characters who are just there to window dress and show off their assets at every opportunity. Fans of the Hong Kong `girls with guns' genre may find this movie interesting but those expecting a Japanese version of Set It Off may be disappointed as I was. Ishii's strong points are his cinematic style and hard edged action sequences but those alone could not save this film. Unlike Gonin, Gonin 2 features no real characters we can understand or care about. Sure, the viewer can sympathize with their individual plights and anguishes but we aren't really given the chance to really care for these characters. Gonin 2 could have been and should have been a much better film, if Ishii weren't so consumed with painting his world with blood and gloom.
Gonin 2 suffers from its narrative's aimlessness and implausibilities; paper-thin, mostly unsympathetic characters; and cinematography, lacking the first film's precision and slickness. Ken Ogata is squandered. Bottom line: Notwithstanding a handful of admirable moments, it's a slightly exploitive crime caper flick that appears insipid and sloppy next to the first.