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Yellow Fangs

Yellow Fangs (1990)

February. 10,1990
|
6.1
| Adventure Drama Horror

Based on actual events that occurred in Hokkaido, Japan, 1915. Rimeinzu: Utsukushiki yuusha-tachi tells the story of a group of bear hunters that are tracking a 900 pound brown bear nicknamed Red Spots that is terrorising the area. It attacks and kills men, but it feasts only on women.

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Acensbart
1990/02/10

Excellent but underrated film

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Stevecorp
1990/02/11

Don't listen to the negative reviews

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Zlatica
1990/02/12

One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.

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Sarita Rafferty
1990/02/13

There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.

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BA_Harrison
1990/02/14

Produced and directed by none other than the Streetfighter himself, Shin'ichi 'Sonny' Chiba, Yellow Fangs was a massive failure at the box office and cost Chiba dearly: having stumped up much of the budget himself, he lost his home and his restaurant chain, and was forced to sell the Japan Action Club, the training school he established for aspiring martial arts film actors and stunt performers. It's a shame, because the film really isn't all that bad.Apparently based on a true story, the movie takes place in Hokkaido, 1915, where a rampaging bear known as Red Spots has been terrorising villagers, carrying off helpless women for food. Five brave hunters head for the snowy slopes of the mountains in order to find and kill the beast, and are followed by a headstrong young girl named Yuki (Mika Muramatsu), who is looking to settle the score with the bear that slaughtered her family.For his directorial debut, Chiba displays remarkable skill, deftly weaving a romance and familial drama into his animal amok story. His film also benefits from some wonderful visuals, from bleak snowy landscapes, to beautiful sunsets, to blood drenched cabins. Performances are convincing throughout, with relative newcomer Muramatsu more than keeping up with the more experienced Hiroyuki Sanada, who plays Yuki's love interest Eiji.Where the movie does stumble badly is with its bear. Actually, it's less of a stumble, and more of a head-first fall off the edge of a mountain. Wherever possible, footage of a real bear is used, but all too often Chiba is forced to resort to a stand-in, a man in a really unconvincing bear costume, which is hard to take seriously. If only they had found a more realistic solution to the bear problem, I suspect that the film might have been better received.6/10. Worth watching to see just how bad the fake bear is, and for cutie Muramatsu stripping down to a skimpy outfit to lure the creature to its doom.

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