Kamikaze (1986) Poster

(1986)

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6/10
Kamikaze
BandSAboutMovies27 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Didier Grousset, who co-wrote the script with Michèle Pétin and producer Luc Besson, Kamikaze is the story of a man named Albert (Michel Galabru). He's a computer genius, but when he gets fired, he starts to murder television announcers without ever leaving his home. Only Inspector Romain Pascot (Richard Bohringer) can stop him.

This movie is pretty wild, because it's a mix of so many ideas. A satire on media, a comedy, a detective story and plenty of science fiction along the way. Now Albert has a weapon - that seems like something from Phantasm - that he can point at the TV and kill anyone who upsets him. And it seems like nearly everyone upsets him.

There's also a wonderful synth score from Eric Serra who has worked on many films with Besson.

I'd never have seen this movie if it didn't get rereleased on blu ray and I'm so glad I found it. It's really something special, a movie that's a battle between two men who are both incredibly smart at their own unique specialties - Albert computers, Pascot finding criminals - and how the case is logically built to catch the criminal mastermind. And wow - that poster is absolutely gorgeous. Definitely check this out.
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Weird sci-fi black comedy holds up well.
lor_3 January 2011
I was quite surprised to see a Luc Besson production, in fact one of his better ones, uncommented upon in IMDb. KAMIKAZE is an insightful, darkly humorous black comedy that remains immensely entertaining 25 years later.

It's a true showcase for the oddball talents of Michel Galabru, that French character actor who has contributed to dozens of quality films (and hundreds of ephemeral ones) ranging from Costa-Gavras thrillers to LA CAGE AUX FOLLES and even Besson's SUBWAY. I can't recall ever seeing him in the lead role, but he takes it and runs with it in KAMIKAZE.

Galabru is a mad scientist, fired at the beginning of the movie while perfecting, on company time, his Rube Goldberg contraption for removing bottle caps. Now stuck at home, unemployed, with his young niece and her husband, he goes nuts and starts using his sci-fi technology to murder TV presenters -zapping them at their desks in the studio with a secret beam right through his home TV set.

My favorite film in this rarely-attempted genre is the classic CLOSED CIRCUIT by Giuliano Montaldo which I had the privilege of seeing on the big screen at the London Film Festival 32 years ago. Going further back, I once screened the poverty row MURDER BY TELEVISION at our fledgling CWRU Science Fiction Marathon in Cleveland back in the '70s, but KAMIKAZE is far more ingenious.

With blow-dry-coiffed, shiny-teethed TV hosts dropping like flies, Richard Bohringer is assigned the case, immediately coming up against tons of political infighting among his superiors including stern Dominique Lavanant, but steadfastly using his street smarts to track Galabru down. His daughter Romane is cast as his daughter, but for her fans (count me in) she hadn't developed her famous 44DD's yet at age 13 when this was shot. You have to suffer through Leo DiCaprio's histrionics in TOTAL ECLIPSE or that AIDS epic SAVAGE NIGHTS to experience Romane in all her adult glory.

The special effects are minor but well done, and the crazy premise is worked to a fare-thee-well, in developing both its comic and serious potential. A very cruel ending, worthy of Costa-Gavras, is a fitting climax. Galabru is really terrific and quite refreshingly unselfconscious (he doesn't care if the audience hates him) in a role one would have expected to go to a big star like Michel Serrault.

With so much crap being resuscitated (on purpose -the crummier the better seems to be the watchword of slumming video companies) I wish the Blue Undergrounds, Salvations, Mondo Macabros, Code Reds, No Shames and Cult Epicses would get a lapse of good taste and start reissuing excellent works like this one.
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10/10
Amazing movie considering is from 1986
natea_teodor15 January 2023
I have to start by saying I am a big fan of Luc Besson movies. He always makes them special, unique.

I mean let's take this example: who would think to make a movie about a killer which shoots his victims through his TV screen.

I really enjoyed every second of this movie, I absolutely love it. You are always surrounded by suspense and ask yourself "oh shoot what will happen next???" However I can't understand and process the ending of this movie. It happened so quick and shocking that I really can't understand why it ended like this. Sure, it was meant to end somehow but all this was a bit too much.

Anyways, I won't spoil the fun. Really recommend watching it! You will enjoy it!!
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