Battle Planet Full Movie Part 1

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The first installment of the two-film adaptation of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows follows Harry (Daniel Radcliffe), Ron (Rupert Grint), and Hermione (Emma. Watch Evolution Streaming. That was one hell of an episode of Game of Thrones. So much fire. And even more ice! Let’s try to wrap our heads around everything that happened—if you’ve. Cartoon Network is the best place to play free games and watch full episodes of all your favorite kids TV shows with apps and online videos!

Battle Planet Full Movie Part 1

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  • Cast and credits, user comments, and trivia for the second mini-series.
  • Toyota Soarer and Lexus SC400 technical stuff including exhaust, intakes, air filters, wheels, tyres, links, cold air intakes, performance testing, oil analysis.
  • The battle system is really simple. Characters and creatures have various skills that can be charged during missions to help heal their team or hurt their foes, and.
  • Unicron is the eternal arch-enemy of his twin brother Primus. Also known as the Lord of Chaos, the Chaos Bringer, and the Planet Eater, he is dedicated to consuming.
  • Replicants, superheros, and reboots await you in our Fall Movie Guide. Plan your season and take note of the hotly anticipated indie, foreign, and documentary.

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Battle Royale (film) - Wikipedia. Battle Royale(バトル・ロワイアル,Batoru Rowaiaru) is a 2. Japanese dystopian film adapted from the 1. Koushun Takami. It is the final film directed by Kinji Fukasaku, the screenplay written by his son Kenta, and stars Takeshi Kitano. The film takes place in a dystopian Japan and it follows the story of Shuya Nanahara, a high school student, and his classmates.

Their class has been chosen by the government to take part in an annual game where all the students of the class must fight to the death until only one remains alive. The film aroused both domestic and international controversy and was either banned outright or deliberately excluded from distribution in several countries.[3][4]The film was first screened in Tokyo on more than 2. December 1. 6, 2.

R- 1. 5 rating, which is rarely used in Japan, and during the first weekend it grossed 2. US$1. 8 million).[5][6][7] It was also the highest grossing Japanese language film for six weeks after its initial release, and it was later released in 2.

It received global audience and critical acclaim and is often regarded as one of Fukasaku's best films. Fukasaku started working on a sequel, Battle Royale II: Requiem, but he died of prostate cancer on January 1. Takeshi Kitano. His son, Kenta Fukasaku, completed the film in 2. In the aftermath of a massive economic recession, the authoritarian government has passed the BR Act as a means of population control.

Japanese middle school student Shuya Nanahara copes with life after his father's suicide. Meanwhile, schoolmate Noriko Nakagawa is the only student regularly attending class 3- B. Their teacher, Kitano, resigns after being wounded by another student.

One year later, class 3- B takes a field trip, but they are gassed, fitted with electronic collars, and sent to a "briefing room" in a school building on a remote island. Surrounded by JSDF soldiers, Kitano explains that the class has been chosen to participate in the annual Battle Royale as a result of the BR Act.

A cheerful orientation video instructs the class: they have three days to kill each other until only one remains. The explosive collars will kill any uncooperative students or those within daily "danger zones". Kitano kills two students, Fumiyo Fujiyoshi and Yoshitoki Kuninobu (Shuya's best friend and Kitano's attacker), for horseplay. Each student is provided rations, water, a map of the island, compass, and a weapon ranging in efficiency from firearms to a paper fan. The first six hours see twelve deaths, four by suicide, and most caused by the desperate, psychotic Mitsuko Souma and psychopathic volunteer Kazuo Kiriyama, who soon become the most dangerous players. A transfer student, Shogo Kawada, deliberately lets Shuya go, while basketball player Shinji Mimura plots to hack into the military's computer system to disrupt the Program. Amid shifting loyalties and violent confrontations, Shuya promises to keep Noriko safe, because his friend secretly loved her.

Shuya carries Noriko to a clinic after she collapses, where they encounter Kawada, who reveals that he won a previous Battle Royale at the cost of his girlfriend, Keiko Onuki, whose death he seeks to avenge. When Kiriyama attacks, Shuya entrusts Kawada to protect Noriko and runs off as a distraction. Although saved by Hiroki Sugimura, a martial artist looking for Kayoko Kotohiki, Shuya is wounded. Shuya awakens in the island's lighthouse, bandaged by female class representative Yukie Utsumi, who has a crush on him. Five other girls from her clique have also been hiding out in the building, including Yuko Sakaki, who attempts to poison Shuya out of fear for Tatsumichi Oki who she saw die and believes that Shuya had killed him, only for Yuka Nakagawa to accidentally eat the food. Yuko is the only survivor of the ensuing shootout; horrified, she apologizes to Shuya and commits suicide. Shuya returns to Noriko and Kawada, and they set out to find Mimura.

Meanwhile, Mitsuko and Kiriyama, the two deadliest students, face off, ending with Kiriyama killing Mitsuko. Of the seven students remaining, all except Kiriyama are attempting to subvert the game. Mimura and two others, Yutaka Seto and Keita Iijima, infiltrate the military's computer system, but Kiriyama kills them.

When Kawada, Noriko and Shuya arrive at the hackers' burning base, Kawada confronts and kills Kiriyama, who had been blinded by an explosion rigged by Mimura as he was killed. On the morning of the final day, Kawada, aware of the collars' internal microphones, seemingly kills Shuya and Noriko. Suspicious, Kitano ends the game and dismisses the troops, intent on personally killing the supposed victor. Kitano realizes that Kawada had hacked into the game's system months beforehand, and has now disabled Shuya and Noriko's tracking devices.

The three survivors confront Kitano in the headquarters, and he unveils a disturbing homemade painting of the massacred class that depicts Noriko as sole survivor. He reveals that he was unable to bear the hatred between him and his students, having been rejected by his daughter. He confesses that he always thought of Noriko as a daughter and asks her to kill him, but Shuya shoots Kitano after he threatens Noriko with a gun.

As he falls, Kitano shoots, revealing the gun to be a water pistol. Before he dies, Kitano's daughter calls him, and after a brief argument, he shoots the phone with an actual gun. Shuya, Noriko and Kawada leave the island on a boat, but Kawada dies from injuries sustained in his gunfight with Kiriyama, happy that in the end, he "found true friends". Shuya and Noriko are declared fugitive murderers, and are last seen on the run in the direction of Tokyo's Shibuya train station. Noriko gives Shuya a Seto Dragon Claw balisong butterfly knife before they run off together.

Main characters[edit]Supporting characters[edit]Production[edit]Casting[edit]Roughly 6,0. These finalists were subjected to a 6- month period of physical fitness training under supervision of the director, Kinji Fukasaku, who eventually cast 4. Despite the characters being middle school students, Aki Maeda, Yukihiro Kotani, Takayo Mimura, Yukari Kanasawa were the only four who were actually aged 1. The other members of the cast had all graduated from secondary education, and Tarō Yamamoto and Masanobu Ando were the oldest among the actors, aged 2. Creative process[edit]Kinji Fukasaku stated that he decided to direct the film because the novel it was adapted from reminded him of his time as a 1. World War II. At that time, his class was made to work in a munitions factory.

In July 1. 94. 5, the factory came under artillery fire. The children could not escape so they dived under each other for cover. The surviving members of the class had to dispose of the corpses. At that point, Fukasaku realised that the Japanese government was lying about World War II, and he developed a burning hatred of adults in general that he maintained for a long time afterwards.[1. Beat Takeshi told a documentary crew during filming that he believes "an actor's job is to satisfy the director.. I move the way I'm told to.

I try to look the way I'm told to. I don't know much about the emotional side", before adding, "Mr.

Fukasaku told me to play myself. I did not really understand, but he told me to play myself, as I ordinarily would be! I'm just trying to do what he tells me."[1. When asked in an interview with The Midnight Eye if the film is "a warning or advice to the young", Kinji Fukasaku responded by describing the words "warning" and "advice" as "sounding very strong to me" as if they were actions which one tries to accomplish; therefore the film would not be "particularly a warning or advice." Fukasaku explained that the film, which he describes as "a fable", includes themes, such as crime by young people, which in Japan "are very much real modern issues." Fukasaku said that he did not have a lack of concern or a lack of interest; he used the themes as part of his fable.