Sushi Girl

Sushi Girl

Promotional poster for Sushi Girl
Directed by Kern Saxton
Produced by Neal Fischer
Destin Pfaff
Kern Saxton
Suren M. Seron
Screenplay by Destin Pfaff
Kern Saxton
Starring Tony Todd
Noah Hathaway
James Duval
Andy Mackenzie
Mark Hamill
Cortney Palm
Sonny Chiba
Cinematography Aaron Meister
Edited by Kern Saxton
Distributed by Magnolia Pictures via Magnet Releasing[1]
Gryphon Entertainment[2]
Release date
  • June 21, 2012 (2012-06-21) (Canada)
Running time
98 min
Country United States
Language English
Budget $750,000 (estimated)

Sushi Girl is an American crime film directed by Kern Saxton, starring Tony Todd, Mark Hamill, Noah Hathaway, Sonny Chiba and Cortney Palm. Tony Todd also served as a executive producer. It premiered at a TCL Chinese Theatre,[3] played in several festivals and was then released directly to home media in 2012.[4]

Plot

Fish (Noah Hathaway) has been recently released from prison where he was serving time for his part in a diamond heist. He refused to give the authorities any information on his partners in crime nor reveal to them the location of the stolen diamonds. In order to locate and divide the stolen diamonds, crime boss Duke (Tony Todd) invited "Fish" to dinner along with the rest of the gang, including Crow (Mark Hamill), Max (Andy Mackenzie) and Francis (James Duval). The meal is sushi, served on the naked body of a woman, the titular Sushi Girl (Cortney Palm), who must remain motionless and silent for the duration of the night.

When Fish tells the others that he doesn't have the diamonds, they do not believe him. He is tied up, with Max and Crow taking turns torturing him. Duke instructs Francis to take a turn as well, but he refuses. Francis goes to the bathroom and reveals that he is wearing a listening device. The sequences of torture are intercut with flashbacks to the heist, culminating in the gang being run off the road by another car, with Duke shooting the driver in order to escape. Eventually Max loses control and begins to beat Fish savagely, causing him to die.

Max, Crow and Duke begin to argue savagely about who was responsible for Fish's death. Francis comes back from the bath, and wants to leave, saying that Duke wanted all to come here to kill them all, and wrap up loose ends. Duke accuses Francis to be a spy for the police in return. The others want Francis to reveal his shirt and prove that he is not, while Francis insults Duke, and especially Max. Max finally looses control and assaults Francis, revealing his shirt in the process - there is no listening device. A moment after that Francis is shot by Duke.

After more arguing the remaining three eventually draw their guns on one another and shooting breaks out, with only Duke surviving. He returns to the Sushi Girl, telling her that she is to be his 'consolation prize'. He eats a piece of fugu from her body and promptly collapses, whereupon she sits upright and tells him it was poisoned. A final flashback reveals that she was present at the heist's aftermath; it was her husband whom Duke shot, and she who recovered the diamonds after the bag was ripped open. She explains that she used her newfound riches to arrange this night and take her revenge upon the gang, and then she shoots Duke fatally and departs.

Cast

Release

The production team behind Sushi Girl raised the money for the world premiere via crowdfunding site Kickstarter[5] and the film debuted at TCL Chinese Theatre on November 27, 2012.[3] The film has been played at a range of festivals, including Montreal's Fantasia International Film Festival in 2012[6] and Melbourne's Supanova Pop Culture Expo in 2013.[7] The film enjoyed a limited theatrical run in February 2013 following its VOD premiere in November 2012, and has subsequently been released on DVD, Blu-ray and digital platforms.

Reception

Sushi Girl has received mixed reviews. Variety stated that "Sushi Girl makes a strong impression with a lurid, finely twisted plot, but its excessive cruelty leaves a foul aftertaste,"[8] and the Toronto Star gave it two stars out of four and described it as being overly derivative of the work of Quentin Tarantino.[9] Film Threat was more forgiving, likewise identifying it as being derivative but stating that due to "the power of great performances, Sushi Girl had me hooked from beginning to end, and I can’t wait to see it again."[10] HorrorMovies.ca's review praised the film's style, calling particular attention to the torture scenes, which it called "memorable."[11]

References

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