PRISON WALLS: ABASHIRI PRISON Trilogy: Eureka Locks Up Ken Takakura For A Trio Of Restored Crime Classics In May!
I missed out on posting about this yesterday when I got the alert, but there’s still plenty of time given the three-month window. For this, you’re welcome to take a gander at what’s in store with Eureka Entertainment’s upcoming Masters Of Cinema Series rollout, director Teruo Ishii’s Prison Walls: Abashiri Prison Trilogy.
The films all star late legendary actor Ken Takakura who became a household name, priming the yakuza genre with the franchise beginning in 1965. There are actually seventeen of these based on the literary work of author Hajime Itō, but Eureka is putting out three of these for the taking, packaged in limited edition O-card slip cases, currently for the first run of 2000 copies.
May 28 is the date for those of you living in the U.S., so mark it and get your pre-orders in if and when you can. More info below!
Constructed in the late nineteenth century to house political prisoners, Japan’s infamous Abashiri Prison served as the inspiration for a popular and prolific run of yakuza movies released between 1965 and 1972. The Masters of Cinema series is proud to present the first three entries in this landmark series, directed by the “King of Cult” Teruo Ishii (Shogun’s Joy of Torture) and starring a titan of Japanese genre cinema, Ken Takakura (The Bullet Train).
In Abashiri Prison, Takakura stars as Shinichi Tachibana, a yakuza sent to Abashiri as punishment for an attack on a rival gangster. He intends to serve his time as a model prisoner until he is shackled to the bullish Gonzo Gonda (Kōji Nanbara), unwittingly roped into an escape attempt orchestrated by Heizo Yoda (Tōru Abe) and forced to face the frozen wilderness of Hokkaidō. In Another Abashiri Prison Story, Tachibana has just been released when he stumbles across a stash of diamonds recently stolen in a heist – and attracts unwanted attention from criminals and cops alike. Finally, in Abashiri Prison: Saga of Homesickness, Tachibana reunites with his former yakuza associates, who are trying to go straight. That is, at least, until old rivals come looking for trouble…
Ken Takakura would reprise the role of Tachibana in another seven films under the Abashiri
Prison banner – all of them helmed by Teruo Ishii – before the series was rebooted as New Abashiri Prison in 1968, leading to a further eight installments with Takakura in the lead. It all began with these early entries, presented here for the first time ever on Blu-ray from brand new restorations of the original film elements by Toei.
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