MartinHafer
Yûsaku Matsuda plays 'Tetsuya Asakura'. Asakura appears to be an insignificant cog in an oil corporation--just a little man who no one would think twice about or believe is a super-criminal. However, throughout the film, time and again he does many things to take down the corporation--and this corporation turns out to be even more corrupt than he is! And, by the end, you find out WHY all this has taken place--by Asakura has two identities, why he has killed so many people and what his ultimate goal was. But, in an interesting twist, he loses it all...This is an interesting film about very corrupt people doing very bad things. In fact, because EVERY SINGLE PERSON turns out to be evil, it's hard to care about any of them--and this does detract from the film a bit. Fortunately, the ending is very good and makes up for this. Also, be aware that there is lots of sex and violence--and even scenes where our anti-hero drugs a lady to get sex! Yes, it's a very BAD sort of film...but rarely dull.By the way, while I've seen this film marketed as a Sonny Chiba film, he's only in a small portion of the film--and then is murdered! Fans of Chiba no doubt will feel ripped off if they invest in the movie as you'd expect a lot more Chiba and his killing-machine persona.
akendrick123
Resurrection of the Golden Wolf is a Japanese crime epic about a seemingly innocent office worker that has a very, very interesting night life, namely killing drug dealers, stealing drugs, selling drugs, sleeping with women, tearing down large corporations, and just about everything else that you can think of.If for nothing else, just watch this movie for the main character. Asakura is simply one of the must cut throat, evil, and simply awesome characters that you will ever see in any movie. Throughout the entire movie, Asakura will display his skills through a series of wonderfully shot action sequences, all of which are accompanied by some great funk music. Every action Asakura makes will disgust you, but it will also fascinate you, forcing you to continue watching, just to see how low he will stoop just for some yen.Honestly, yes this movie does have some problems. The script has a few entertaining lines like "The safest thing to do is convert all my money into heroin,"but to me that just made the movie more enjoyable. There are a few plot holes. You might even be three fourths of the way into thee movie before you even figure out the plot, but in the end that is OK because the main character is so entertaining that you wont even notice. All you really will be doing is sitting on the edge of your seat and wondering what crazy, awesome thing Asakura will do next.Oh, and for all of you watching the version in the Sonny Chiba collection, Sonny is the photographer guy.
UncleBobMartin
I don't know what that other guy's problem with Jun Fubuki is, she's over 50 now but still pretty cute. Unless you live in Japan, where she does a lot of TV, you probably don't know what she looks like now, anyway. Back when this film was made she was hot, as were all the other women in this film. Especially the black go-go chick! Anyway, this movie isn't about eyeballing the ladies, though that's no chore. It's about hating your life because you have some soulless job that your whole life is centered around, and it's about one guy who decides he will break out of that box -- no matter how rotten evil he has to be to make that happen! How Asakura got to be so good with weapons and street-wise with his wheeling and dealing isn't gone into much, we just know he's trained as a boxer. But that won't bother you because you'll just be wondering where he gets the nerve to be so bad! You might also wonder, as I did, whether he'll have a redeeming moment at the end...Some may find the pace a little slow, but even when the story fails to develop in spots, Asakura keeps saying and doing nasty things. Favorite lines of dialog (early in the film, so not a spoiler): "Do you have a family?" "Yes! Yes! Please don't kill me!" "They'll be happier when you're dead." bang.Enjoy!
whatdoes1know
Matsuda Yusaku is awesome, I was told. I rented this movie to see whether this was true. He was awesome--but not the movie. This is the story about a quiet salary man by day and ruthless killer by night. *SPOILER* Besides the fact that the guy is a loner and dances naked in the dark with a golden mask, I didn't really see why the movie was titled "the resurrecting golden wolf". The mid-90's remake tries to come up with an explanation, but it is easily dismissable--except for its end credits. I like the ending a lot, and also the deals and action scenes, but I still can't say I like the movie. The main reason for this is that the female lead in the movie is old now, and I couldn't stop thinking how much she already looked like she's going to look when she gets older then. The same thing happens whenever I see Pierce Brosnan pretend to be James Bond, and I can't stop thinking of his role as Mrs Doubtfire's rival. This is really unfair because the movie had its moments, and they were many--basically all the scenes excluding the woman.