Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance

Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance

1974 ""
Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance
Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance

Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance

6.3 | 1h29m | NR | en | Drama

Lady Snowblood is caught by the police and sentenced to death for her crimes. As she is sent to the gallows she is rescued by the secret police who offer her a deal to assassinate some revolutionaries.

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6.3 | 1h29m | NR | en | Drama , Action , Thriller | More Info
Released: September. 07,1974 | Released Producted By: Tokyo Eiga , Country: Japan Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Lady Snowblood is caught by the police and sentenced to death for her crimes. As she is sent to the gallows she is rescued by the secret police who offer her a deal to assassinate some revolutionaries.

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Cast

Meiko Kaji , Jūzō Itami , Yoshio Harada

Director

Yukio Higuchi

Producted By

Tokyo Eiga ,

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Reviews

kluseba Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance is the very good and often underestimated sequel to the first Lady Snowblood movie released one year prior to this feature. Lady Snowblood turns out to have survived the events of the first film but is hunted down by police forces for her numerous murders. She gets tired of living on the run, stops fighting, gets arrested, tried and sentenced to death. On the day of her execution, the secret police force frees her and offers her to work as spy and assassin for them. Lady Snowblood is supposed to work as maid for an anarchist who has a document that could lead to a turmoil in the fragile country. She is supposed to steal the document, kill the anarchist and prevent a revolution. However, the more time she spends at his house, the more she questions whether she should complete her mission or switch sides. Lady Snowblood soon becomes a key character in the clash between ruthless government officials and desperate anarchists in the beginning of the twentieth century.Just as the first movie, this sequel convinces with a solid dose of realism and social criticism as it shows the rift between rich and poor during Meiji period. Due to its plot, historic setting and characters, this sequel isn't a tale of revenge but rather a political drama with martial arts elements. On one side, this change is quite interesting as this film offers something different from the first film but it also takes away from the first movie's gloomy atmosphere and more personal connection to the main character. The rest is business as usual on a very high level. The film-making is detailed, precise and visually stunning, the fight sequences once again find the right balance between elegance and violence and the acting performances are all excellent. If you liked the first film, it's very likely that you will also appreciate the sequel because it kept most elements that made the first film particularly outstanding and added more historic, political and social components to it.I can highly recommend the recently updated Criterion Collection including both the original Lady Snowblood and this surprisingly solid sequel as well as additional interviews and trailers. It's a shame that there weren't more Lady Snowblood movies because the feminist character is particularly unique and perfectly portrayed by a stunning Kaji Meiko. Martial arts fans and those interested in Japanese culture should be familiar with Lady Snowblood.
WILLIAM FLANIGAN Lady Snowblood 2: Love Song of Vengeance. Viewed on DVD. Cinematography = six (6) stars; choreography = four (4) stars; sound effects = four (4) stars; makeup = four (4) stars. Director Toshiya Fujita's rush-job, cheap-production sequel comes up short in practically all departments starting with a nonsense title and a overly contrived scenario (the latter involves Meiji secret police who usually can't shoot straight!). Fujita and his film-making colleagues would seem to have strained hard to dream up further adventures of a fashion-model assassin-for-hire (now with a price on her head) who is a walking, flamboyant self-advertisement (and not particularly choosy whom she works for at any moment). The Director provides little more than a photo shoot of poses in exotic/unusual settings for lead actress Meiko Kaji with and without eye bags (from too many all-night drinking parties?). Kaji's acting chores are pretty much limited to delivering about 10-12 lines of dialog (she does widen her eyes now and then), but Kaji's character makes up for this with a magic sword that only has to brush against her opponents (or just be in their general vicinity) to kill off countless stunt actors. Inter-scene continuity of successive close ups repeatedly demonstrates the lack of make-up artistic skills, as Kaji's eye bags come and go. The sound track offers a selection of 3-4 standard cries of pain for slashed/stabbed combatants. Alas, sandal walking only gets one, as the sound of foot steps is independent of the surface actors are walking on (unless walking in the ocean). Cinematography (wide screen, color) is fine. There is a spectacular scene early on of ocean waves breaking on a beach followed by a crab's eye view of same! Scene lighting is occasionally on the dark side. Theatrical blood (of which a fair amount is on display) looks like, well, dyed liquid dish-washing soap. Subtitles are okay. The appeal of this Toho Film studio programmer would seem to be limited to die-hard fans of Meiko Kaji. WILLIAM FLANIGAN, PhD.
Coventry The main reason why the original "Lady Snowblood" was such a big exploitation hit (and one of my personal favorites of all time) was because it brought a simplistic and undemanding story in such a fresh and imaginative way! It was the tale of young Yuki, born and raised with the mission to avenge the death of her parents after 20 years of intense sword-fighting trainings, and she fulfilled this mission without keeping anyone alive. So, obviously there was no real reason to come up with a sequel, but since the original became such a success director Toshiya Fujita and leading lady Meiko Kaji were recruited for a follow up film. "Lady Snowblood 2" is a lot less impressive and powerful than the original, likely because the plot is MORE ambitious and the violence is LESS explicit. On the way to her execution for the various murders in her first adventure (37!), Yuki is saved from the hangman's rope by the head of Japan's secret service and forced to serve as a "secret weapon" in the ongoing war with Russia. She's send undercover as the maid of public enemy n° 1 – Ransui Tokunaga – but she teams up with him against the malicious nationalist forces. The script offers a nice and educational slice of Asian history, but it's a lot less exhilarating. You could admire this film for not further milking out the success of the first, but it lacks a proper story itself. Yuki's character clearly cares less about patriotic issues than she did about her own personal vendetta, and this sadly shows in her fights. There are less ingenious killings and bloodshed to admire and the performances aren't as passionate. Still this film contains several memorable moments as well, most notably the scene where a fat, evil bastard loses both of his eyes after a confrontation with one of Yuki's friends. This scene was unquestionably the inspiration for Elle Driver's cruel fate in Tarantino's "Kill Bill Volume 2". It's a very well made and entertaining film, but don't except another outrageous masterpiece.
wierzbowskisteedman As a die hard fan of the original from the first time I saw it, it was only natural for me to hunt down this follow up. While the original had a more simplistic, vengeance orientated plot, this sequel unfortunately bites off a bit more than it can chew as it weaves Yuki in with the politics of early 20 Century Japan and the events of the Russo-Japanese war. Overall it feels like the film is just cashing in on the popularity of Kaji Meiko generated by the first film.That said, it still manages to entertain from the very start, with a wonderful sequence of Yuki hacking her way through a load of bad guys. Meiko lost none of her charisma from the original, which is really essential here as the film itself starts to trip of it's own plot after a while. The fact that politics is the theme here rather than vengeance doesn't give her quite as much to work with, but her ability to convey almost all of her emotions through her eyes is still a joy to watch.Ultimately it is worth watching if you liked the original and find Kaji Meiko's presence to be enough to hold your attention. If you value a gripping plot over tremendous acting you'd be better of skipping this. The fact that the first film had both these elements and the sequel only has one makes it an inferior but still highly entertaining follow up.