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I’m Sorry, I Love You
Ritsu was abandoned by his mother Reiko when he was little, so now he belongs in the lower social strata. One day, Ritsu gets involved in a case and his head is severely injured, so he can die at anytime. Convinced she abandoned him due to poverty, Ritsu attempts to find his mother and be good to her before his death. But when he learns that she is leading a happy life instead, with her pianist son Satoru, he decides to take revenge on his mother. Ritsu then meets Rinka, a girl whom he happened to help in the past, and discovers she is Satoru’s childhood friend.
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Tokyo Knights (1961)
Suzuki rebels against the studio. In a defiant move, he took this story of a high school student who inherits his gangster father’s business, and turned it into a comedy. As a result, actor Koji Wada was strongly chastised for the role.
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Fighting Delinquents DVD 1960 (Original)
This rarely seen gem from master Suzuki casts teenage heartthrob Koji Wada as a young misfit who suddenly finds himself the unwitting pawn in an escalating family feud that ultimately leads to tragedy. Lean, mean, and stylish as always, this tale of youth-gone-wild is both vibrant and touching. Suzuki contrasts tranquil glimpses of traditional regional life with the emergence of the new rock ‘n’ roll youth culture and the greed and seething cynicism of encroaching Westernism. Also released under the title “Go To Hell, Hoodlums!”, this is a melodrama as colorful, shocking, and exhilarating as one would come to expect from Japan’s master filmmaker.
This is 100% Genuine product.
Region: 2
Important: A lot of DVD players around now are region free – which play any DVD region. It completely depends on what DVD player you have.
We actually have a number of regular customers based in the US, Canada and Australia who never have problems with our region 2 discs. -
Fighting Delinquents (1960)
This rarely seen gem from master Suzuki casts teenage heartthrob Koji Wada as a young misfit who suddenly finds himself the unwitting pawn in an escalating family feud that ultimately leads to tragedy. Lean, mean, and stylish as always, this tale of youth-gone-wild is both vibrant and touching. Suzuki contrasts tranquil glimpses of traditional regional life with the emergence of the new rock ‘n’ roll youth culture and the greed and seething cynicism of encroaching Westernism. Also released under the title “Go To Hell, Hoodlums!”, this is a melodrama as colorful, shocking, and exhilarating as one would come to expect from Japan’s master filmmaker.
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