Burst City
Attention!!
Set in a barren, futuristic Tokyo of highways and wastelands, a rowdy group of punk bands and their fans gather to protest slow, boring, Japanese living.
Trailers & Videos

Burst City Original Trailer (Sogo Ishii, 1982)
Cast

Takanori Jinnai
Command Sasaki

Shigeru Izumiya
Kuronuma

Kou Machida
Mad Brother

Shigeru Muroi
Speed Killer

Ken Yoshizawa
Kirishima

LaSalle Ishii
Speed Killer

Takayasu Komiya
Speed Killer

Katsuyuki Shinohara
Man with Mechanical Arms

Kazuo Komizu
Eyepatch Man

Jun Etoh
Dread Man

Kansai Eto
Dread Man

Kōji Wada
Kikukawa's Subordinate

Daisuke Iijima
Auto Mechanic

Tarō Suwa
Factory Manager

Makoto Tezuka
House Guest

George Iida
Oxygen Cylinder Man

Keiko Takahashi
Woman Singing with a Razor
More Like This
Reviews
Walruse
Burst City from 1982 is a punk rock operetta with the polemic stance that is essential for the anarchist strains of punk traditions. Sogo Ishii relies upon and extends punk rock aesthetics to a convincing gesamtkunstwerk that interestingly sits very well between the post-apocalypse of the time and the cyberpunk that is yet to come.
But most of all, I'd say Burst City is a war movie. A war movie where the trenches have been exchanged for a dystopic industrial slum and the main weapons are words, clubs and guitars. The anti-hero protagonists are the dynamic constellations of punk rockers, greasers and local underdog gangsters (assisted by travelling armored warriors in a motorized chariot) that have to put their infighting on hold. They are opposing not only the regular harassment of the "Battle Police" but also the approaching forces of the yakuza affiliated developers that are going to replace the neighbourhood with a nuclear powerplant. It is a David against Goliath battle and also one of anti-authoritarianism and non-conformity against gentrification and corruption that follows with normative society. The basso continuo is the relentless beating of the punk rock war drums and the libretto is emotive rather than narrative, again fully in line with the punk rock culture.
Two hours long and an early movie by the then 25 year old Sogo Ishii but there is barely a slow moment as the narrative keeps pushing toward the explosive ending. With a refresher in post production it could pass as fresh out of the furnace.
Highly recommended.
You've reached the end.



















