Bodigaado Kiba: Hissatsu sankaku tobi

(Redirected from Karate Kiba 2)

Bodigaado Kiba: Hissatsu sankaku tobi (ボディガード牙 必殺三角飛び), also known as Bodyguard Kiba 2, is a 1973 Japanese martial arts film starring Sonny Chiba. It is the sequel to the earlier 1973 film Bodyguard Kiba based on an action manga by Ikki Kajiwara.[2][3] Etsuko Shihomi makes her screen acting debut, replacing actress Yayoi Watanabe in the role of Naoto Kiba's sister Maki. Shihomi had previously worked as a stunt double for Watanabe in the earlier film Bodyguard Kiba. The movie is also considered a break-through for Masashi Ishibashi,[4] who would be asked by Sonny Chiba to play a major role in the 1974 movie, The Street Fighter.[5]

Bodyguard Kiba 2
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRyuichi Takamori
Written byRyūzō Nakanishi
Based onBodyguard Kiba manga by:
Ikki Kajiwara
Ken Nakagusuku
StarringSonny Chiba
CinematographyYoshikazu Yamazawa
Music byToshiaki Tsushima
Production
company
Distributed byToei Company
Release date
  • October 13, 1973 (1973-10-13)[1]
Running time
88 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot summary

edit

After Kiba Naoto wins the title at a karate tournament, the Kikoku-ryu school disputes the victory and send a letter of challenge to his master Daito Tetsugen. Kiba wins the illegal duel to the death but his sister Maki is given a blinding injury by one of the opponents and Kiba is kicked out of the Tesshinkai karate school and jailed for participating in it.

Upon his release, Kiba is recruited by Akamatsu, the owner of the Nightclub Plaza, to be his personal bodyguard so that he can sever ties with the yakuza operating as the "protection" in his establishment led by Tatsumi and his goons, including enforcer Ryuzuka of the Kikoku-ryu. Tatsumi is insulted and complains to Karasaki, who insists that there is to be no conflict between him and Akamatsu in order to avoid breaking the promise the three made to each other to conceal a crime they committed years earlier. Kiba develops feelings for an Okinawan singer at the nightclub named Mari but after she is raped by Tatsumi and his men she accuses Kiba of being in league with them.

The Okinawan Nanjo, one of Kiba's former fellow inmates, arrives and is revealed to be an associate of the three men and Mari's lover. Karasaki offers him 30 million yen for his troubles, but he demands a fourth of what they are all worth because they made their wealth from his money while he spent three years in prison. He then threatens to reveal the crime they are all concealing. Akamatsu is reluctant to pay and agrees to work under Karasaki like before in return for his help.

Nanjo deduces that Mari was raped by Tatsumi, so he attacks the other three men with traditional Okinawan usugama at their next meeting. Kiba stops Nanjo from killing them, but when Mira joins in Kiba switches sides and helps the two Okinawans escape. Nanjo explains that he and the others along with a Korean named Kim killed three American MPs years earlier to steal the $420,000 they were transporting. The others paid Kim 1 million yen to kill Nanjo, but Nanjo instead killed Kim with an usugama and was sent to prison, vowing to return to crush the other three men.

Kiba returns to Karasaki, Akamatsu, and Tatsumi and advises them to pay off Nanjo, but Tatsumi's thugs trick Nanjo into following them to a location where they blind and kill him. After Mari and Kiba find the body with the help of the nightclub's heroin-addicted drummer, they confront the three men and their goons, but Karasaki's enforcer Karasuda and the nightclub's drug dealer Mika arrive with Kiba's sister Maki, whose eyes have recovered, and threaten to kill her. The drummer stabs and kills Mika, then Mari, Maki, and Kiba defeat the others. Ryuzuka blinds Kiba by clawing his eyes with metal finger claws, so Mika uses clock times to tell Kiba where to strike, helping him defeat his final enemy.

In the final scene, Mari holds Nanjo's ashes as she takes a boat back to Okinawa. Maki teases Kiba that he was in love with Mari. He denies it, but she says that she can see it. They both laugh as the boat sails away.

Cast

edit

Reception and analysis

edit

In his book Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film, author Chris Desjardins calls the Bodyguard Kiba films "enjoyable but forgettable timewasters."[6] In an interview with Sonny Chiba, Desjardins opines, "The four Yakuza Cop movies and the two Bodyguard Kiba films, it seemed Toei was attempting to groom you into even more of an action star, a character thrown into dangerous situations but often with humor added to the mix." Chiba responds, "Your impression of Toei trying to turn me into a fast-paced action hero is correct."[7] Chiba goes on to explain, "The Bodyguard Kiba movies and before didn't have any Bruce Lee influence."[8]

The website Sketches of Chiba states, "Bodyguard Kiba 2 comes to its conclusion in an entertaining, though not classic, violent climax. If the rest of the film had been as good as the opening and closing fights, this would be a small gem. As it stands, Bodyguard Kiba 2 is more relevant for uniting Chiba, Shihomi and Ishibashi for the first time on screen."[9]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Bodyguard Kiba 2 (1973)".
  2. ^ "ボディガード牙". Kinema Junpo. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  3. ^ "ボディガード牙". Agency for Cultural Affairs映画情報システム. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  4. ^ 石橋雅史 (2008-08-04). "負けるわけにゃいきまっせんばい! 66". 石橋雅史の万歩計. Retrieved 2012-08-25.
  5. ^ 石橋雅史 (2008-08-06). "負けるわけにゃいきまっせんばい! 68". 石橋雅史の万歩計. Retrieved 2012-08-25.
  6. ^ Chris, D. (27 May 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9780857715470 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Chris, D. (27 May 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9780857715470 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Chris, D. (27 May 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9780857715470 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ "Bodyguard Kiba 2". 31 March 2017.
edit