Kanto Street Peddlers: Violent Fire Festival (1971)

ALL 02/13/1971 (ja) Action, Drama, Crime 87 Min
  • Release
    02/13/1971
  • Production
    Toei Company
  • Rotten tomato
    0%
  • Original title
    関東テキヤ一家 喧嘩火祭り
  • Original language
    ja
  • Production Cost
  • 0.00
    -

Overview

The fourth film in the Kanto Street Peddlers series. The protagonist, played by Bunta Sugawara sides with female boss Yumiko Nogawa to fight evil Hiroshi Nawa, who at one point employs rebellious young hood Tsunehiko Watase and Kagawa. Tatsuo Umemiya also shows up as a cool, leather jacket gunman who gains Sugawara’s respect despite playing for the opposing team. What eventually keeps this film from being as good as the first is the loose script that doesn’t really tie all the fun stuff into a coherent package. Much is forgiven however when the last 20 minutes arrives with several visually striking set pieces (including one death scene stylized to the point of ridiculousness) and a terrific final massacre. This was Suzuki’s last contribution to the series; the fifth and final picture would be helmed by Takashi Harada.

  1. Norifumi Suzuki

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Kozo Horiike

    Editor

  4. Producer



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Casts

Full Cast & Crew

Casts : 11 , Crews : 5

Keyword

Kanto Street Peddlers: Violent Fire Festival (1971) 87 Min

ALL 02/13/1971 (ja)
Action, Drama, Crime
  • Release 02/13/1971
  • Production
    Toei Company
  • Original title 関東テキヤ一家 喧嘩火祭り
  • ja
  • Revenue0.00

Overview

The fourth film in the Kanto Street Peddlers series. The protagonist, played by Bunta Sugawara sides with female boss Yumiko Nogawa to fight evil Hiroshi Nawa, who at one point employs rebellious young hood Tsunehiko Watase and Kagawa. Tatsuo Umemiya also shows up as a cool, leather jacket gunman who gains Sugawara’s respect despite playing for the opposing team. What eventually keeps this film from being as good as the first is the loose script that doesn’t really tie all the fun stuff into a coherent package. Much is forgiven however when the last 20 minutes arrives with several visually striking set pieces (including one death scene stylized to the point of ridiculousness) and a terrific final massacre. This was Suzuki’s last contribution to the series; the fifth and final picture would be helmed by Takashi Harada.

  1. Norifumi Suzuki

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Kozo Horiike

    Editor

  4. Producer