The Age of Assassins
| The Age of Assassins | |
|---|---|
|  Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Kihachi Okamoto | 
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Rokuro Nishigaki | 
| Edited by | Yoshitami Kuroiwa | 
| Production company | |
| Distributed by | Toho | 
| Release date | 
 | 
| Running time | 99 minutes | 
| Country | Japan | 
| Language | Japanese | 
The Age of Assassins (殺人狂時代, Satsujinkyō jidai) is a 1967 Japanese film directed by Kihachi Okamoto.
Plot
A nerdy young college instructor named Shinji Kikyo returns home one day to find himself the target of a mad assassin. Surviving somewhat miraculously, he fends off other assassins and, with the help of the reporter Keiko Tsurumaki and the car mechanic Bill Otomo, eventually discovers that a "population control" association is really an assassination squad led by Shogo Mizorogi, who has been training patients in a mental asylum to become killers. Along the way, it starts to appear that Shinji may not be the mild-mannered academic he seemed at first, but a well-trained secret agent.
Cast
| Tatsuya Nakadai | Shinji Kikyo | 
| Reiko Dan | Keiko Tsurumaki | 
| Hideo Sunazuka | Bill Otomo | 
| Hideyo Amamoto | Shogo Mizorogi | 
| Keiichi Taki | Ikeno | 
| Seishirô Kuno | Man with crutch | 
| Tatsuyoshi Ehara | Aochi (as Tatsuya Ebara) | 
| Yasuzō Ogawa | Mabuchi | 
| Atsuko Kawaguchi | Yumie Komatsu | 
| Wataru Ōmae | Oba-Q | 
| Shin Ibuki | Atom | 
| Hiroshi Hasegawa | Solan | 
| Masaya Nihei | Pappy | 
Release
The Age of Assassins was released in Japan on February 4, 1967.[1] The film was released in the United States by Toho International with an international title of Epoch of Murder Madness in 1967.[2]
Reception
The critic Chris Desjardins has written that "Age of Assassins is another sharp-edged lampoon that works just as well as an action film, and compares favorably with such other brilliant, tongue-in-cheek mod sixties masterpieces as Elio Petri's The Tenth Victim and Seijun Suzuki's Branded to Kill."[3]
References
Footnotes
- ^ Galbraith IV 2008, p. 236.
- ^ Galbraith IV 1996, p. 95.
- ^ Desjardins, Chris (27 May 2005). Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film. I.B.Tauris. p. 90. ISBN 9781845110901. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
Sources
- Galbraith IV, Stuart (1996). The Japanese Filmography: 1900 through 1994. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0032-3.
- Galbraith IV, Stuart (2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-1461673743. Retrieved October 29, 2013.
External links