Roaring Fire (1981) Poster

(1981)

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Mixed bag
haildevilman11 May 2007
Martial arts, action, comedy, and even a little sex tossed in.

Sonny Chiba plays his usual "fighter from hell" role here. No real surprises there. But the quick-hit scenes they toss in were more fun than you think.

Japanese nuns? And when one fall over and her habit hike up to reveal her underwear, we hear one of her friends say "Oh the dishonor!" Or something like that.

It's a chase scene that stops for a rest occasionally. Just enough for a quick laugh before more of the usual cartoon like violence.

This was Japanese made, which for the time, was a bit rare.

And don't blink or you'll miss a badly dubbed Abdullah The Butcher making a cameo.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A bizarre, hilarious cult movie with great action scenes
Leofwine_draca2 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Another slice of Japanese cinematic insanity, starring the entertaining tag-team of Hiroyuki Sanada and Sonny Chiba, who appeared in lots of decent flicks during the early '80s. ROARING FIRE dispenses with the period setting, instead offering a modern-day thriller with an international storyline concerning an orphaned Japanese guy who must battle his evil drug-dealing uncle. Really, the preposterous storyline simply serves as a backbone on which to hang a series of increasingly crazed action sequences, delivered by a Japanese crew who must have really been in a party mood when they made this.

Sanada acquits himself well as the hero, dressed as a cowboy and whupping backside all around. He gets to take part in plenty of exciting action sequences, some of which come out of nowhere and seem to have been dropped into the film on a whim. The cross-town chase between Sanada and a group of monk-ninjas is just one example of the insanity on display here, and things are further muddled with the inclusion of real-life wrestler Abdullah the Butcher, a massive, massive black guy who has some fun in a swimming pool before kicking a load of ninja backside in a fight sequence that must be seen to be believed. That he disappears from the film after this fight is a real shame.

The film contains numerous little flourishes that will appeal to the cult movie fan: the evil uncle bad guy has a Nazi henchwoman and sits in front of a Hitler portrait; Sanada has a cheeky pet monkey that tears off a girl's bikini top, the director revelling in the gratuitous nudity as he shoots her running into the camera in slow motion. Other scenes seem to be inspired by RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, a massive hit in Japan the previous year; our hero is trapped in an underground room and must use a whip to climb out, and at the film's climax, he chases a jeep on horseback whilst avoiding bombs being chucked out of a toy helicopter above.

The action scenes are actually great, including a terrific battle against multiple opponents at the climax, including a massive wrestler guy (not Abdullah, worse luck) and my favourite moment when Sanada leaps across between two moving buses in a Jackie Chan-esque piece of stuntwork. Cult film fans should keep their eyes peeled for the ZOMBIE HOLOCAUST film poster, whilst fans of THE STREET FIGHTER movies will see no less than three cast members reuniting from those films; Etsuko Shihomi (SISTER STREET FIGHTER herself) as the blind sister, Masashi Ishibashi (villain Junjo from the first two STREET FIGHTER movies) as Sanada's adoptive dad, and Sonny Chiba himself, playing a minor and bizarre role, an Interpol inspector who moonlights as Mr. Magic, a ventriloquist with a creepy dummy! Action fans will be whooping at the screen when Chiba gets to briefly relive his STREET FIGHTER glory days, breaking the bones of a gang of thugs in a corridor.

To make things even more confusing, about ten minutes seem to be cut out of the old print I saw, as it cuts from Sanada just about to abseil down a skyscraper to his blind sister battling bad guys, then afterwards we see him sitting in a prison cell. Huh? The music is all over the place as you might imagine and most of the crew must have been high on drugs when shooting this. If I've made it sound like a barrel of laughs, that's because it truly is, one of those bizarre, hilarious cult movies that remain mostly undiscovered in the bargain bins of our world.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
When Japan is better than HK...
crisbene13 November 2000
Henry Sanada. Sonny Chiba. These only two names should make everyone eager to see this movie. What can I say about it ? It has no specific genre : it contains extraordinary martial arts fights, the kinds you could not find anywhere even in the best HK movies. Sanada is the hero of this story in which he fights thousand of incredible and terrific foes. It is so inventive, so creative and so funny. There a very japanese mix of genres that makes this meal extremely delicious. I don't know if many people know about this movie. It wouldnt surprise me it's not very known. But this burlesque-violent-funky-martial masterpiece is really worth to be seen !
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Offbeat vehicle for Hiroyuki Sanada
gridoon202431 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
So you want to see "Roaring Fire" for Sonny Chiba? Forget it. He appears for no more than 10 minutes in total and has only 1 fight scene. Maybe you want to see it for Etsuko Shiomi? Forget it again. She has a thankless role and gets killed off halfway through (I very nearly stopped watching the movie at that point, but I went ahead and finished it). Or you could actually want to see it for Hiroyuki Sanada. Well in that case, you might actually be satisfied. I won't deny his physical talents, but he doesn't show enough personality to be the sole lead. The movie is a pretty schizophrenic mess, mixing slapstick comedy, bloody violence, pro-wrestlers, hopping heroes, a blind martial artist, a Nazi lady with a whip, a fight on the top of a moving bus, and Chiba as a narcotics cop who doubles as a magician / ventriloquist....and it still manages to be boring! (*1/2)
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
"You're going on an Auschwitz Special Honeymoon." (WARNING: possible *SPOILERS*)
Gangsteroctopus30 March 2004
This movie is BONKERS - and I do mean that in the best way possible. It opens with the apparent gundown-murder (a la Sonny Corleone) of the film's leading man (Henry Sanada). But, wait, no: it turns out it was his twin brother! Cut to Texas (?!) where the other Henry Sanada (incongruously called 'Georgie' in the English-dubbed version I watched) rides horses and ropes cattle (don't all Texans?) under the tutelage of none other than Milton Ishibashi (villain Junjo from the first two 'Streetfighter' films) who kidnapped Georgie as a child (as it turns out, for his own protection). Adoptive uncle dies, so Georgie goes to Japan to find out the truth of his family. There, among others, he meets up with none other than real professional wrestler Abdullah the Butcher as Spartacus (?!), bodyguard to a bevy of Japanese cuties in bikinis whose tops Georgie's pet spider monkey, Peter, keeps stealing. (Yes, I just re-read that last sentence and I'm still not sure whether or not this movie was the result of a chili-induced fever-dream.) Also, Georgie comes into contact with his blind, piano-playing, martial arts expert sister, played by - who else? - Sue 'Sister Streetfighter' Shiomi. She is under the protection of her seemingly kindly uncle who (SPOILER) turns out to be the man behind Georgie's parents' deaths (uncle gave the pilot of Georgie's parents' airplane coffee with an overdose of sleeping medicine - this is all related to Georgie and the audience by Mr. Magic and his hideous ventriloquist dummy, in a scene that baldly borrows from 'Hamlet', a play whose story this film's does bear some more than superficial resemblances). In case we weren't sure, we know that the uncle is REALLY bad because he fetishizes Nazis and Beethoven, hanging a portrait of Der Fuhrer himself in his secret bad guy HQ and having one of his evil henchwomen dress in something like a combination of Gestapo-meets-cheap hooker lounge wear (this character is the one who utters the above "honeymoon" line). The film's tone varies wildly, from deadly serious and bloody to drippingly maudlin to Benny Hill-style comedic (watch for the 'wacky' chase involving a cadre of ninja-monks going after Georgie through the streets of Tokyo, a chase which, at one point, has Georgie and his pal stealing a tandem bike from a pair of gay men necking by a fountain - I'm not making this up, really - and knocking over some nuns in full habits, one of whom is wearing red lace panties). Rappelling must have been big in 1982 because this movie features more than its fair share. Then there's the Hong Kong final showcase showdown which plays like a martial arts video game, with Georgie taking on wave after wave of variously armed and abled hench-dudes until his evil uncle finally clues into the fact that he'd better make a run for it. The final chase owes more than a little to the previous year's "Raiders of the Lost Ark", with Georgie pursuing the jeep-driving baddies on horseback while contending with other hench-dudes throwing bombs from a helicopter. When he finally faces off against his evil uncle (SPOILER), Georgie delivers the death-blow by karate-punching a 140-karat diamond into his uncle's eye socket (the pain of which causes uncle to fatally hurl himself off a cliff). With a theme song sung by Sanada and fight scenes directed by Sonny Chiba himself, this is one for the ages. And did I mention the lounge where they hang out called 'Casablanca', whose owner dresses exactly like Bogart from that movie?
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A CONVOLUTED MESS! DON'T MISS IT!
EL BUNCHO17 December 2001
I love Sonny Chiba movies, and knowing that he was in this, I had to rent it. If you can make heads or tails out of the incomprehensible plot, I'll eat both of my legs right in front of you! And the saddest part is that Sonny isn't even the star. That burden falls on the shoulders of his protegee, Hiroyuki Sanada. But what other movie can you name where you get Sonny Chiba as a gambler/magician/cop?
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
This has it all!
BandSAboutMovies23 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Roaring Fire is everything wonderful and perfect and wild and needed in movies. It truly is the very thing that keeps my brains moving, that makes me keep loving film, that says to me that there will always be something new to discover and I ask you, please start your own search for the movies that will blow your mind and share them with the world.

Director and co-writer Norifumi Suzuki also made School of the Holy Beast, a Japanese nunsploitation movie which makes my mind scream in the most perfect joy sounds that can't be translated into sound, ten of the Torakku Yaro movies and The Great Chase, which is a lot like this movie in that it's a delight.

Just as we watch the mob execute Toru Hinoharu (Hiroyuki Sanada) in Hong Kong, we also discover that he has a twin, a Texas cowboy named Joji Hibiki (also played by Sanada), who learns that his father is dying and that he was kidnapped eighteen years ago and must come back to Japan to meet his sister and twin brother, who we just watched get shot.

Joji is in Japan for just a few hours when his monkey Peter - yes, the hero has a pet primate - pulls off a girl's bikini top and that leads to Joji fighting Spartacus, who is Abdullah the Butcher, and at this point, there's no way I could dislike this wild film. As these things happen, the battle gives the two some mutual respect and as Joji has just had his wallet stolen, he's soon off on an adventure to find it.

After his uncle Ikeda Hinokaru (Mikio Narita) finds him, our hero meets his sister Chihiro (Etsuko Shihomi, Sister Street Fighter) who can use sound and wind to fight like Zatoichi. He also meets a ventriloquist named Mr. Magic (Sonny Chiba) who uses his puppet to inform Joji not to trust his uncle who soon proves that he's evil by sending an American boxer and a staff fighter to smash him after he overhears his plans.

Man, this movie feels like the best video game you never played, with German soldier-dressing evil women with whips sending our hero into gas-filled chambers that drive men insane before being defeated by a well-thrown monkey, ninja gangs, bad guys bad enough to shoot heroic women up with heroin, numerous heroic sacrifices and an ending chase that takes up the entire last third of the movie, with Joji not stopping, walking through gunfire, multiple martial arts experts and end boss after boss before throwing a tomahawk at a helicopter, punching a diamond through a man's eye and then learning how magic can defeat handcuffs.

New Line Cinema released this movie in the United States in May 1982 and changed Hiroyuki Sanada's name to Duke Sanada. I wish I had seen this when I was ten years old because I would have literally lost my entire ability to speak, walk and display emotions.

You may never want to watch another movie after you see this. It's that good.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed