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DVD Versand mit riesiger Auswahl und portofreier Lieferung. Filme aus allen Bereichen: Comedy, Action, Drama, ...




The Pinky Violence Collection   




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Artikel: 1179874
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Regionencode [?] 1 - USA (NTSC)
Benötigt Codefree-Player zum Abspielen!
Originaltitel Criminal Woman - Killing Melody
Zenka Onna - Koroshi-Bushi
Diese Box enthält
folgende Filme
  • Criminal Woman - Killing Melody
  • Delinquent Girl Boss - Worthless To Confess
  • Girl Boss Guerilla
  • Terrifying Girls' High School - Lynch Law Classroom
Genre Action / Eastern-Asia
Produktionsland Japan
Herstellungsjahr 1973


Schauspieler Hosei Komatsu, Reiko Ike, Takeo Chii, Miki Sugimoto, Ryoji Hayama, Chiyoko Kazama, Hirohisa Nakata, Kiyome Takemura, Tooru Hanada, Yumiko Katayama, Masami Sôda, Naoyuki Sugano, Keiichi Kitagawa, Seiya Satou, Shinzo Hotta, Hiroshi Date, Bontarô Miyake, Yoshio Hyaku
Regie Atsushi Mihori
Autor(en) Hirô Matsuda, Fumio Konami
Produzent(en) Kenji Takamura, Kineo Yoshimine
Sprache (Tonformat) Japanisch   (Dolby Digital - Mono)
Untertitel Englisch
Covertext Criminal Woman: Killing Melody
(Japanese title: Zenka Onna Karoshi Bushi)
Kicking off the internationally renowned action series known as Zero Woman, Miki Sugimoto electrifies Criminal Woman: Killing Melody with raw sexuality, searing physical prowess and a reckless passion for revenge. The violence is as hard as the women are beautiful and when it comes time for the naked knife-fights - look out!

Terrifying Girls' High School: Lynch Law Classroom
(Japanese title: Kyoufu Joshi Koukou Bouroku Rinchi Kyoushitsu)
Terrifying Girls' High School opens with a female school clique bloodletting a fellow student amidst verbal abuse and harsh accusation. The terrified girl breaks free of the life-draining vacuum syringe and races to the roof, where her tormentors force her off the ledge and stomp on her fingers until she falls to her death. This is all before the main titles! And that clique? They aren't even the real bad girls! This is reform school, and the new crop of inmates (whose apprehension we witness) includes Miki Sugimoto and Reiko Ike. This is like Mean Girls via Caged Heat as written by Jess Franco and directed by Russ Meyer. All those Takashi Miike fans need to check out this film.

Girl Boss Guerilla
(Japanese title: Sukeban Gerira)
Female bikers! Catfights! Gang violence! Sukeban Guerilla expands on classic exploitation "bad girl" archetypes with an explosive abandon. Fans of Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! and Switchblade Sisters should brace themselves for the be-all, end-all and show-all of what's possible in the realms of grindhouse girls gone way-past-wild.

Delinquent Girl Boss: Worthless To Confess
(Japanese title: Zubenko Bancho Zange No Neuchi Mo Nai)
This was the final entry in the Zubeko Bancho series, with sexy-and-sweet Reiko Oshida heading up a cast of gangster-girl wannabes in a go-go dancing maelstrom of Japanese music, fashion and kitsch. Truly a film that defies description, but imagine a Jack Hill production of Hair with an unsupervised Riot Girl cast, and you're starting to get the picture. The result is a delicious example of Japanese pop culture in high transition from the groovy '60s to the dangerous '70s.

About Sukeban
Sukeban is a contraction of the Japanese words "Suke" (female) and "bancho" (boss). The term describes a specific high school archetype which is usually (though not always) associated with juvenile delinquency. The term "Zubeko" (bad girl) is no longer in vogue, but at the time these films were made was a hip slang expression that would more accurately have been translated as "bitch".

The current Kogal (also Kogaru) style of retro-hip soul-sister fashion can first be seen in these films -released two decades before the advent of Kogal culture. In fact these films were among the first to show high school girls (albeit delinquents) in street styles rather than exclusively in the uniforms with which they are so closely identified. This change-of-styles was likely a political statement on the part of the filmmakers (equating the loss of that uniform with the loss of sexual innocence) and it heralded the arrival of Japanese feminism.

The Sukeban films, though released as exploitation, contain strong social commentary. They collectively told a single cautionary tale, and presented for contemporary Japan the same dystopian world that A Clockwork Orange predicted for future England.


Bildformat 2.35:1 Aufbereitet für 16:9 Bildschirme
Laufzeit 342 Minuten
Anzahl Discs 4
Veröffentlichung 23.11.2009


Special Features
  • 4 Separate Audio Commentaries
  • Actress and Director Biographies
  • Original Theatrical Trailers for all four films
  • Poster & Still Galleries
  • Production Notes
  • Custom Insert Sticker
  • Exclusive Box Set Bonus Features: Reiko Ike Sings! An Exclusive audio CD featuring the vocal stylings of the sultry Pinky Violence Icon
  • Toei's Bad Girl Cinema: An exclusive 24 page booklet written specifically for this box set by Chris D. (author of Outlaw Masters Of Japanese Film)

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