Sympathy for the Underdog

Sympathy for the Underdog, known in Japan as Bakuto Gaijin Butai (博徒外人部隊, "Outlaw Gambler-Foreign Legion"), is a 1971 Japanese yakuza film directed and co-written by Kinji Fukasaku and starring Kōji Tsuruta and Noboru Ando. It is director Fukasaku's (Battles Without Honor and Humanity, Battle Royale) last film featuring Kōji Tsuruta. Complex named it number 8 on their list of The 25 Best Yakuza Movies.[1] Home Vision Entertainment released the movie on DVD in North America in 2005.[2]

Sympathy for the Underdog
Theatrical release poster
Directed byKinji Fukasaku
Written byKinji Fukasaku
Fumio Konami
Hirō Matsuda
Produced byKoji Shundo
Toru Yoshida
StarringKōji Tsuruta
Noboru Ando
CinematographyHanjiro Nakazawa
Edited byOsamu Tanaka
Music byTakeo Yamashita
Distributed byToei
Release date
January 12, 1971
Running time
93 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Summary

The film's main character, Masuo Gunji, is an honorable old-school yakuza boss whose gang is driven out of Yokohama by a powerful rival from Tokyo. After serving ten years in prison, Gunji reunites with the few men still loyal to him and sets out to rebuild his old organization. However, after setting up a lucrative bootlegging operation in Okinawa, the yakuza family from Tokyo that was responsible for their previous downfall and Gunji's imprisonment comes to the island planning to seize control of the territory. Gunji and his men are soon forced to engage in an epic battle for their lives.

Cast

Production

This is the ninth[3] film in the Bakuto (Gambler) series of films that was produced by Toei Studios and starred Koji Tsuruta (except for the film Gambler Clan, which starred Ken Takakura in his place).[4] Fukasaku had previously directed Bakuto kaisanshiki (Gambler's Farewell), the sixth film in the series.

Set and filmed in Okinawa, Sympathy for the Underdog has similarities to actual real-life events. It was not until several months after the film was released that America gave control of Okinawa back to the Japanese. But yakuza fled to the prefecture in the late 1960s in anticipation of the new business opportunities created once US forces withdrew. This ultimately led to the Yamaguchi-gumi, the largest criminal organization in the country, leading a ten-year war in Okinawa against other gangs. However, this was only just starting when the film went into production.[5]

Inspired by movies about the French Foreign Legion, "and stories about people who cross national borders and ended up fighting in foreign wars," Fukasaku originally wanted to make a film about yakuza that end up in Vietnam, but stated that this ultimately proved "impossible."[5] Fukusaku biographer Sadao Yamane stated that Sympathy for the Underdog was originally developed as a sequel to Japan Organized Crime Boss, a Fukasaku film from 1969 also starring Tsuruta and Ando, until the director saw The Battle of Algiers. It was then that, Yamane thinks, Fukasaku decided to make a film about "foreigners" and "resistance groups" within a yakuza film.[6]

References

  1. "The 25 Best Yakuza Movies". Complex. Retrieved 2014-10-02.
  2. "Sympathy for the Underdog". Amazon. February 2005. Retrieved 2014-10-02.
  3. Chris, D. (May 27, 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9780857715470 via Google Books.
  4. Chris, D. (May 27, 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781845110901 via Google Books.
  5. Macias, Patrick, Sympathy for the Underdog DVD booklet, 2004, Home Vision Entertainment. Retrieved 2014-08-22
  6. Yamane, Sadao (2004). "Interview with Sadao Yamane". Sympathy for the Underdog (DVD). Home Vision Entertainment.
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