The 9 Month Wait
or (How Skipping a Day of College and a 2 Hour Bus Journey Can Enhance Your Feelings for BR)

At around late December 2000, a visit to Aint It Cool News reported on a "sick" new Japanese film called "Battle Royal" (sic). Captivated by the idea of a large group of students forced to kill each other, I would spend the next 6 months researching the movie, looking for anyway humanly possible to see it (other than visiting Japan or the US... I ain't that well off!). 6 months of Japanese fansites that I couldn't understand a word of, reviews from various sources and a lot of bad, misleading information. I opened a file on my hard drive titled "br" and threw every picture, file, webpage, soundclip, trailer I could get my hands on from the movie. Downloading the trailer for BR was the first real domino to fall in a chain reaction that would continue up until today...

It was 1min 48secs. It was completely in Japanese. It was simply fantastic. I watched it and watch it and watched it. You're probably thinking to yourself "Jesus! This is one sad man!". Its not as if I sat in front of the computer and literally played it over and over but anytime I'd need reassurance on the film, I'd open Media Player and let it rip. By this stage I was devoted to BR and I'd go out of my way to see it no matter what....

Then the ray of light I had waited for. June 1st 2001. DDDHouse make a preorder for a VCD available! Being an avid online shopper, ordering from a store I'd never used before in Hong Kong didn't stop me from "Proceding to Checkout". 2 weeks of impatient emailing and my disc arrived. Friday 15th June 2001. I watched it. I loved it. You can probably guess the rest of the story. Since then I've seen it countless times (literally... I've actually lost count!) The VCD was my saviour and I was a happy camper. I never thought I'd get to see it in a theatre.

Roll on September 14th 2001 and Battle Royale finally gets a release in the UK and Ireland. A very limited release... but a release none the less! So limited in fact that it was playing in ONE cinema in the whole of Ireland. And so I had a new goal... After the tragedy in New York, there was a day of mourning and so that cinema was closed (and rightly so, it is a deeply saddening ordeal). So I waited a week.... a l-o-n-g week, I tell you! But Friday came and the only choice I had was to skip college and make the journey to the Irish Film Centre in Temple Bar, Dublin.

After a tiring and arduous bus journey (ok, so it wasn't that bad.... I slept and listened to a walkman, I'm just trying to liven up a particularly boring tale!) I had arrived at the capital and met with a friend who lives there. Another Battle Royale fan, who has as much a love for it as I do (and an unhealthy love for Kiriyama might I add.... Barry! Get a room! .... Just kidding...don't kill me)

So we took our seats at 4.20 and sat through some of the most mind-numbingly bad adverts I've ever seen (although the trailer for "The Iron Ladies" looked interesting) There was a small group present there. About 20 or so in the whole theatre. Mostly middle aged people as well. "Eh?" I asked myself. I didn't think BR had that appeal. Go figure. And then it started. The Toei Logo hit the screen and BOOM! Verdis "Requiem" blasting out over all the speakers. I knew I had never seen Battle Royale properly before at this moment. Goosebumps rose on my arms and the hair stood on the back of my neck (No, I'm not kidding.... sad isn't it?) Constant grin on my face for the next hour and fifty-three minutes. The small gathering reacted to all the scenes appropriately. The most interesting reaction was at the Kiriyama/Kusaka & Yukiko "Call For Peace" scene. At the line "Yukikos always had a crush on you..." there was laughter from the audience which was suddenly halted by the sound of gunfire. I'm glad there were no "Gore-hounds" there. The kinds of people who get off on violence. My feeling is, is that if you watch Battle Royale simply for the violence, then you're missing the point of the whole thing. Other high points of the showing: the incredible bass when Kitano threw the knife at Fujiyoushi; the rear surround channels were a treat considering I had been weaned on a bad quality VCD; staying for the credits and finding out from the credits that Takeshi Kitano actually painted that painting.

I had seen BR many times before the IFC showing (some would say too many times) but seeing it on a big screen with surround sound is one of the most memorable cinema experiences I've had. Its heightened my feelings for the movie and sparked an even greater interest in the film for me. Since the theatrical release, this site has recieved a huge boost in hits and I'm very grateful for them. Its nice to see the site getting recognition after 5 months of being online!

So in closing... I'll say this. See Battle Royale in a cinema. Forget VCD. Forget bootlegged copies. They may tide you over, but this is a theatrical experience and is intended to be seen in all its glory. Run... don't walk to the cinema, slap your hard earned cash on the counter and buy as many tickets as possible.

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Written on 28th September 2001 by
webmaster - < bawp-sherep >