Rainbow Kids
Rainbow Kids | |
---|---|
Directed by | Kihachi Okamoto[1] |
Produced by |
Kishu Morichi[1] Yosuke Mizuno[1] Miwakawa Okamoto[1] |
Written by |
Kihachi Okamoto (screenplay)[1] based on novel by Makoto Tendo[1] |
Starring |
Tanie Kitabayashi Ken Ogata |
Narrated by | Minori Terada[1] |
Music by | Masaru Sato[1] |
Cinematography | Masahiro Kishimoto[1] |
Edited by |
Akimasa Kawashima Akira Suzuki |
Distributed by |
Toho Company (Japan) Geneon Entertainment (USA) |
Release dates | January 15, 1991[1] |
Running time | 120 minutes[1] |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Rainbow Kids is a 1991 Japanese film. Its original Japanese title is Daiyūkai (『大誘拐』). It was directed by Kihachi Okamoto.
Plot
Three recently released criminals decide to kidnap an 82-year-old woman, Toshiko Yanagawa (Tanie Kitabayashi), the wealthiest woman in the Osaka prefecture. They stake out her mansion, observing her for two months. During that time, Toji occasionally leaves the mansion to go on mountain hikes with her chambermaid Kimi. It is on one of those hikes that the three kidnappers make their move. Toji calmly negotiates with the kidnappers to let Kimi go.
But once they have Toji in their car en route to the hideout, she begins giving them advice on how to avoid the police, convincing them to take her to a former servant's house instead of to their hideout. There, Toji is insulted to hear the kidnappers say her ransom is only 50 million yen (about 350,000 in American dollars of the time), and demands they raise it to 10 billion yen (a conversion to $6,666,666 is explicitly stated in the film). The kidnappers are aghast, but ultimately they comply. Furthermore, Toji also orchestrates how the ransom note will be delivered, how her family will get the money together, and how the police will deliver it.
Police inspector Daigoro Igari (Ken Ogata) takes a special interest in the case because of Toji's charity towards him in the past. He addresses the kidnappers on TV to express skepticism that Toji really is safe. Toji arranges a TV broadcast from an undisclosed location, to show that she really is safe and to instruct her family on how to sell off some of their land so that after taxes there is enough money to pay the ransom.
Ten billion yen turn out to take up a lot of space, so much so that a helicopter loaded with it barely has room left for the pilot. A second helicopter follows the ransom helicopter, but after setting down in a mountain pass, the ransom helicopter disappears. After flying an erratic path all over the wilderness, the pilot is found in a cave, drugged to sleep.
Meanwhile, one of the kidnappers has fallen in love with a local woman and decided to become an honest man; he refuses his share of the ransom. Another kidnapper does take his cut, but he takes it to mean what he was originally promised, ten million yen. And the kidnapper who came up with the idea in the first place decides to go to work for Toji as a carpenter. His first task is to repair a shrine. Inspector Igari shows up to let Toji know he has figured out most of her plan and its purpose: to evade taxes and prevent "her" mountains from falling into government ownership. Igari suspects most of the ten billion yen are hidden in the recently repaired shrine, but he also indicates he won't pursue the matter.
Cast
- Tanie Kitabayashi as Mrs. Toshiko Yanagawa[1]
- Toru Kazama as "Lightning" Kenji[1]
- Katsuyasu Uchida as "Wind" Masayoshi[1]
- Hiroshi Nishikawa as "Rain" Heita[1]
- Ken Ogata as Daigoro Igari[1]
- Kirin Kiki as Kura Nakamura[1]
- Shigeru Koyama as Kunjiro Yanagawa[1]
- Kumi Mizuno as Kanako Yanagawa[1]
- Ittoku Kishibe as Daisaku Yanagawa[1]
- Nami Tamura as Eiko Yanagawa[1]
- Minori Terada as narrator[1]
- Hideyo "Eisei" Amamoto as Kushida[1]
- Kiminobu Okumura as Anzai[1]
- Raita Ryu as Sakuma[1]
- Mami Okamoto as Kuniko[1]
- Kyusaku Shimada as Tokyo[1]
- Fujio Tsuneta as detective[1]
- Yu Fujiki[1]
- Koichi Ueda[1]
- Ichiro Nakaya[1]
Reception
Rainbow Kids does not yet have a rating from Rotten Tomatoes.
In the United States, the film has been released to DVD (region 1) by Geneon Entertainment.
Awards
At the Awards of the Japanese Academy, Tanie Kitabayashi won for Best Actress, Okamoto won for Best Director, and the editors won for Best Editing.[1] Ken Ogata was nominated for Best Actor but did not win. Kitabayashi won two other Best Actress awards, from the Kinema Junpo Awards and from the Mainichi Film Concours.[1][2]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Stuart Galbraith IV (16 May 2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. Scarecrow Press. p. 375. ISBN 978-1-4616-7374-3.
- ↑ "Awards for Daiyukai". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2009-01-20.
External links
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