Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

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Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

Post by HungFist »

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Premiered at Yubari last week. I'll try to have my review ready by tomorrow!
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Re: Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

Post by HungFist »

This is a bit of a hastily put together review, but here goes:

It's good for a film to show its true colors in the very beginning. Maniac Driver opens with a leather-gloved, motorbike-helmet wearing killer stalking a naked woman who is touching herself in the shower. "A Japanese Giallo" appears on screen before the killer pulls out his knife out and rams it through hear breast, after first slicing her nipple in half. All is set to an unmistakably retro 80s score and against a psychedelic colour design.

It's a little questionable if a film that features little mystery, and reveals the killer's identity in its opening scene, matches the expectations of a "pure" giallo. But that's debatable. What's more important to note is that Maniac Driver isn't going to challenge Deep Red, or really even Tenebre, but rather Strip Nude for Your Killer. Director Kurando Mitsutake has clearly set his aim at the sleaziest genre film imaginable, and in that regard, oh boy, does he deliver.

The film's title driver is a mentally disturbed Tokyo cabbie searching for a sacrificial victim to die with. Flashbacks reveal his wife fell under the knife of a masked killer. Now the driver has gotten himself an identical outfit and a blade, and is seeking to perform an ecstatic knife murder that would provide him with a release and let him also take his own life.

Mitsutake is best known for his genre-celebrations. The samurai spaghetti tribute Samurai Avenger: The Blind Wolf (2009) crumbled under the weight of its near-endless genre references, but the subsequent Gun Woman (2014) and Karate Kill (2016) found a voice of their own while paying loving tribute to other films. Now Mitsutake goes heavy on borrowing from his influences again. The New York Ripper and other gialli are present here, as are Maniac (1980) and its remake (2012). Evil Dead Trap (1988) comes to mind in one scene, and the helmet is probably sourced from Nightmare Beach (1989). There's even a brief samurai swordfight, that soon turns into Nikkatsu style SM-sleaze featuring a "noble lady" (actually hostess, but the costume and attitude are about the same) not too different from Flower and Snake. (1974) or Wife to be Sacrificed (1974).

Pink films are the film's 2nd important reference. There are two long sex scenes (complete with slow-motion bouncing boobs) and two shorter solo-sex scenes, in addition to which all women (every single one, minus the extras) lose their robe, particularly at the time of their death. Some might feel inclined to call the director a misogynist! But this isn't a film for them anyway. And the skin springs from deeper down the film's production roots. Mitsutake says he was originally offered a pink film to direct, with supposedly unlimited artistic freedom. However, the financing fell apart on the last moment when the company fully realized what Mitsutake was about to shoot for them and started imposing restrictions. Mitsutake walked out and shot the script as it was without the studio, with producer Mami Akari pulling the necessary funds out of her own pocket. The cast remained unchanged, explaining why every actress in the film is an AV performer (and not quite A-listers either).

The resulting film is, uhm, a maniac mixture of sleazy sexsploitation and low-budget knifing. The filmmakers identify Maniac Driver as a giallo, and in that regard the film sets itself against some cinematic masterpieces whose production values it couldn't dream of approaching. For instance, the lighting in the murder scenes is pure 70s Argento, but with the limited production values it comes out more like Hobo with a Shotgun. That's not saying the scenes aren't fun to watch, however, as Mitsutake rocks at mixing music with images. What we have here appears even more impressive once you learn Mitsutake had to shoot the film in just 4½ days (the last shooting session was 50 hours non-stop, he says)!

Another weakness is that the film doesn't invest as much in suspense as it does in totally overdone exploitation. Maniac Driver is actually at its best in some of its quieter moments, such as when the melancholic cabbie is cruising in the Tokyo night (with some great time-lapse footage) or practicing his knife combos in from of a mirror gleaning in red and blue. Only Mitsutake he had exercised similar restraint in the murder scenes and refrained from having the driver appear butt naked behind a victim's door and then chase her while rock music plays and his balls are hanging out (though an admirable scene on its own, sort of!), the suspense might have been on a whole different level.

Thematically one of the film's most interesting aspects is - the way I perceived it at least - is just how much the main characters comes out as homicidal incel. I wonder if it was a pure coincidence that the maniac, whose narrator voice babbles about the mad society, men and women, and his desire to kill people before he takes his own life, commits his first murder in mid-October 2019. That about a week after incel landmark film Joker opened in Japanese theaters. Perhaps a coincidence.

Maniac Driver is a bit of a tough one to evaluate. It takes its exploitation to the point of being ridiculous, feasts in low-budget aesthetics, and really dives deep in the pink end of the pool. There are bits that I think miss the mark, such as the convoluted climax and closing the film on a pink note. Gialli have been done better before, including the Japanese one (Zoom In: Sex Apartments, 1980). Yet, it's impossible not to enjoy such a frank, no-holds-barred exploitation filmmaking that we have here. There are scenes where Mitsutake paints the screen red from the bottom of his heart, does it without resorting to CGI splatter, and even manages to pull odd fascination from the film's messy doom's day mixture of genres and influences. And there's no denying the beauty of the film's more atmospheric moments, a testament to just how good Mitsutake can be. You won't be bored for a moment! I wasn't, and I've seen it twice.

Reviewed at Yubari Fanta 2021 Online Edition

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Tom Mes! Another passenger I spotted on the back seat in another scene was Yubari Programming director Tokitoshi Shiota!
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Re: Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

Post by HungFist »

I know some of you won’t have the time to read the full review above, so here’s a capsule version:

Maniac Driver (マニアック・ドライバー) (Japan, 2021) [Yubari Fanta 2021] – 3/5
Kurando Mitsutake's madcap giallo pastiche, jam-packed with sleaze. It opens with a leather-gloved, motorbike helmet wearing killer stalking a naked woman who is touching herself in the shower. He proceeds to ram a knife through her breast, after slicing her nipple in two. Mitsutake isn't challenging Deep Red here, but rather Strip Nude for Your Killer. The film originated as a pink film production, from which Mitsutake walked out, but shot the script as it was with all sex intact. The storyline follows a taxi driver looking for people to kill. Maniac and its remake, New York Ripper and other gialli, Evil Dead Trap and even Naomi Tani films are present here, though it's debatable how pure a giallo tribute is a film that reveals the killer's identity immediately and lacks mystery. The film feats in low-budget aesthetics (the colour use is pure 70s Argento, but comes out more like Hobo with a Shotgun due to low production values) and ridiculously overdone exploitation (the samurai fight is rather dumb), but also features hugely atmospheric quiet moments and a kick-ass score. It’s such sincere exploitation you can't help but to enjoy it. Only if Mitsutake had refrained from having the killer appear butt naked behind a victim's door and and then chase her while rock music plays and his balls are hanging out, the suspense might have been on a whole different level.

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Re: Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

Post by Guro Taku »

HungFist wrote: 23 Sep 2021, 14:35Evil Dead Trap (1988) comes to mind in one scene
Wouldn't surprise me. Mitsutake did a commentary for the recent US BD release, so he must be a fan.
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Re: Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

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Guro Taku wrote: 24 Sep 2021, 12:03
HungFist wrote: 23 Sep 2021, 14:35Evil Dead Trap (1988) comes to mind in one scene
Wouldn't surprise me. Mitsutake did a commentary for the recent US BD release, so he must be a fan.
Oh, I didn't know about that. But I heard the US BD has a subtitle timing issue (subs going severely out of sync in the middle of the film). I have the Japanese BD but I haven't checked if it's the same or different.
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Re: Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

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Website:
https://www.maxam.jp/maniacdriver/

Trailer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zK3oXkDfJkM

Somehow the trailer makes it look maybe cheaper than it is, with some of the more stylish shots omitted, but at least they are being honest, lol.
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Re: Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

Post by Guro Taku »

English-friendly BD/DVD release in Germany on March 15th:

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Extras:

- 60-page booklet with text by Nando Rohner and an exclusive interview with Kurando Mitsutake
- Original Soundtrack CD
- Audio Commentary by Kurando Mitsutake
- Making Of-Feature (Japanese with optional English and German subtitles)
- Slideshow
- Trailer
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Re: Maniac Driver (2021) - Kurando Mitsutake's Japanese Giallo!

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Japanese DVD and BD releases coming out March 25.

BD Unrated Version
https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B09Q6H9VL8

BD Unrated Version with Soundtrack CD
https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B09NNSLYCD

DVD
https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B09Q6JTVW1

The "unrated" thing here is rather confusing... It says "the retail BD is the unrated version with special features" (making of doc) whereas the DVD is listed as being bare bones and apparently not "unrated". Looking the website and theater pages, none of them display an age rating for the film so I'd guess the theatrical version is the "unrated version" and the DVD / rental releases may be a censored version (the film is certainly pushing the ratings limits with its sleaziness and brief full frontal nudity).
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