Golgo 13 (film)
{{More sources|date=January 2025}}{{Infobox film
| name = Golgo 13
| image = Golgo 13 (film).jpg
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = Junya Sato
| writer = Takao Saito
K. Motomitsu
| based_on = Golgo 13
by Takao Saito
| starring = Ken Takakura
| producer = Koji Shundo
| editing = Osamu Tanaka
| music = Chūji Kinoshita
| cinematography = Masahiko Iimura
| distributor = Toei
| released = {{Film date|1973|12|29|df=yes}}
| runtime = 104 minutes
| country = Japan
Iran
| language = Japanese
Persian
| gross = {{JPY|1.1 billion}} ({{estimation}})
}}
Golgo 13 ({{langx|ja|ゴルゴ13|Gorugo Sātīn}}; {{langx|fa|گلگو ۱۳|translit=Golgo Sizdah}}) is a 1973 Japanese–Iranian action film directed by Junya Sato, starring Ken Takakura as the international assassin Golgo 13. It is the first live-action movie based on the Japanese manga series Golgo 13. It was filmed almost entirely in the Imperial State of Iran, with an almost entirely Persian supporting cast. It was followed by the film Golgo 13: Assignment Kowloon (1977), starring Sonny Chiba.{{cn|date=August 2024}}
Plot
The secret police of a certain country get information that Max Boa, the boss of an international crime organization, is in Iran and sends their agents to Tehran to arrest him, but they are killed one by one by Boa's henchmen. Also, since Boa uses many decoys, even his subordinates do not know his real face. Flanagan, the police chief, calls the hitman Golgo 13 and asks him to assassinate Boa for a reward of $500,000 ($3,454,346.85 in 2024). He arrives in Tehran by plane. Catherine Morton, a female secret police agent, follows Golgo and meets up with him. Meanwhile, Boa's men also learn that Golgo is in Iran and searches for him.
Golgo's collaborator, a private detective named Egbali, informs him of the whereabouts of Mr. Wine, a nightclub manager who knows the gang's information, and that Boa is a bird lover, but one night, Boa's men encounter Egbali at a hotel and kills him. Golgo, who was present, becomes a suspect in Egbali's murder and is pursued by the Tehran City Police. In addition, Mr. Wine, who was told by Golgo 13 that the Boa Gang has a hideout in the Old Town, is erased by his men.
There are many cases of kidnapped women in Tehran, and Sheila, the wife of city police inspector Aman Jafari, is also abducted by the Boa Gang. Aman picks up Sheila's coat that has fallen on the street, and suspects an Asian man (Golgo) who happened to be nearby to be Egbari's killer, and surrounds the hotel where he and Catherine are staying. Golgo 13 manages to escape and Catherine is interrogated by Aman for aiding Golgo's escape. Meanwhile, the police capture a henchman of Boa's close aide, Douglas, and learn the truth behind the disappearance. The Boa Gang engages in human trafficking and attempts to sell the abducted women overseas. Boa, who ignores the investigation, orders the women to be secretly moved to another hideout in Isfahan, but the Tehran police also obtain the information. Golgo discovers the gang's hideout based on Mr. Wine's information and shoots a man with a small bird on his shoulder, believing it to be Boa, but it is a trap set by the Bao gang using a decoy, and he is captured by his henchmen. Golgo seizes the opportunity to escape and takes revenge on the blind assassin Walter and his other henchmen.
The gang plants land mines on the main road in an attempt to eliminate Aman and his police force as they head towards Isfahan. Golgo takes the initiative and shoots the mines before Aman arrives, detonating them and obtaining explosives. He arrives at Boa's hideout (a luxury mansion) and takes advantage of Boa's lookalikes having daily breakfast outdoors with many gangsters guarding them, but there are many decoys in the courtyard. To find out which one is the real Max Boa, Golgo shoots at the birdcage and tries to kill any decoys who approach the released small bird, thinking that it is a Boa, but is caught up by his minions and fails in his sniping. Catherine, who appears to protect him and provide cover, is taken by Boa's men and becomes part of the human trafficking victim.
In order to lure Golgo out, Boa takes the women to the ruins of the temple in Persepolis and threatens to kill them one by one if he doesn't show up. During the standoff, Douglas kills Catherine as she said in her final words that she loves Golgo. Aman catches up with them and recognizes his wife Sheila, and while commanding the gang to surrender, he heads to the hostages alone and succeeds in freeing them, but is shot by the gangsters and dies from his wound as Sheila holds his hand, crying at the sight of her dead husband. Golgo chases the fleeing Boa in his car but is blocked by a helicopter piloted by Douglas. He is cornered in a desert area and manages to kill Douglas and shoot down his helicopter. Having lost his car in the attack, Golgo walked across Dasht-e Kavir for days without food or water, making his way through the desert. Lakeside at dawn, Boa, who was having breakfast on the terrace of his hideout and enjoying tea after dinner with his mistress, was shot and killed by a sniper bullet along with a small bird. After witnessing Boa's death from the opposite shore, Golgo walks away toward the rising sun, finally ending in tracking down the man who is responsible for kidnapping innocent women and avenging both Catherine and Aman.
Cast
- Ken Takakura as Duke Togo/Golgo 13
- Mohsen Sohrabi as Inspector Aman Jafari (voice: Yasuo Yamada)
- Pouri Banayi as Catherine Morton (voice: Michiko Hirai)
- Nosratallah Karim as Richard Flanagan (voice: Kyōsuke Maki (ja) )
- Ahmad Qadakchian as Max Boa (voice: (Kōsei Tomita)
- Jaleh Sam as Sheila Jafari (voice: Haruko Kitahama (ja) )
- Yadollah Shirandami as Walter (voice: Shûichirô Moriyama)
- Jalal Pishvaian as Douglas (voice: Takeshi Watabe)
- Arezu as Yvonne (voice: Kachiko Hino (ja) )
- Atorashii as Simon (voice: Hidekatsu Shibata)
- Arash as Alvard Johnson (voice: Ichirō Murakoshi)
- Dariush Asadzade (fa) as Mr. Wine (voice: Ayao Wada (ja) )
- Ramezani as Hotel clerk (voice: Isao Sakuma (ja) )
- Gorgii as Inspector Egubari (voice: Mahito Tsujimura)
- Rezā as Jude (voice: Kouko Kagawa (ja) )
- Mashinchan as a Police officer (voice: Akira Kamiya)
- Arahyori as Hotel waiter (voice: Keiichi Noda)
- Ali Dehghani as Agent Evan (voice: Shingo Kanemoto)
- Nasser as Bodyguard (voice: Ritsuo Sawa (ja) )
- Abbas Mokhtari as Jack (voice: Eken Mine)
- Carmen as a Woman at the police station (voice: Kazuko Makino (ja))
- Mohammed Norjii as Claude (voice: Yonehiko Kitagawa) (uncredited)
- Hassan Rezali as Billy (voice: Kazuo Harada (ja) ) (uncredited)
Other voice appearances
The credit title will be displayed in the second half, including the voice actors listed above. Below are voice actors other than those mentioned above.
- Kaneta Kimotsuki as Auto repair shop owner
- Shingo Kanemoto as Pedro
- Osamu Saka, Eken Mine, Ritsuo Sawa, Isao Sakuma, Kouko Kagawa, Kazuko Makino as Additional voices
Production
{{Unreferenced section|date=December 2024}}
With the success of Kinji Fukusaku's Battles Without Honor and Humanity
Director Junya Sato said, ``A certain person who travels between Japan and Iran approached us with the idea that ``the Iranian government and military will fully cooperate,
= Casting =
Manga artist Takao Saito wrote the screenplay and also directed the production. However, producer Koji Shundo said that Saito's screenplay is "short and boring." It may be interesting to read, but to fit it into the two-hour time frame of a movie, it needs a twist of drama.
The script written by Saito was published in the Big Comic Extra Edition Golgo 13 Omnibus Vol. 6 (ビッグコミック増刊 ゴルゴ13総集編 Vol.6), and regarding the fact that it was not filmed according to the script, Saito said, "The movie turned out to be completely different from what I had originally envisioned.
= Filming =
The entire film was shot on location in Iran, and Junya Sato stated that the entire film was shot on location in the country, but Weekly Eiga News (週刊映画ニュース, Shūkan eiga nyūsu) reported that "After shooting the location Iran, some filming took place at a Japanese studio." Since it was the time of the Pahlavi dynasty, filming on location would not proceed unless we talked to the Pahlavi family about everything. It is a valuable video material that shows Iran before the Iranian Revolution in 1979, such as the cityscape, the customs of eating pork and drinking, and women walking around the city without wearing a hijab as the country is beginning to change.
It started in Tehran, then went to Isfahan, Persepolis, and other locations for about 45 days, and it took a lot of time to travel by trucks and helicopters. Ken Takakura performs the role in Japanese, and all of the foreign actors
Release
The press conference was unusually lackluster for a New Year's blockbuster, and the sports newspaper cameraman decided to use a cabinet (120mm x 165mm) photo handed out at the table, saying that it would not work as a picture. If the Iranian location was decided before the press conference, Iran
At the press conference, Koji Shundo said, "There are some great love scenes in the play, and the image of Mr. Takakura will be quite different from the previous image.
Since Ken Takakura did not attend this press conference, various speculations arose due to his long-standing bad relationship with studio.
In Japan, it was released as a double feature with Female Prisoner Scorpion: 701's Grudge Song'. The background music for the domestic trailer uses parts of Yakuza Wolf
The film received ¥404 million ($2,771,238.00) ranked it 7th in Japanese film distribution revenue in 1974, but the revenue was low.
It was the seventh highest-grossing Japanese film of 1974, earning a distribution rental income of {{JPY|404 million|link=yes}} in Japan.{{Cite journal |year=1975 |title=1974年度日本映画/外国映画業界総決算 |journal=Kinema Junpo |issue=1975年(昭和50年)2月下旬号 |page=108 |publisher=Kinema Junposha}} This was equivalent to an estimated box office gross revenue of approximately {{JPY|{{#expr:404*(117107/44484)/1000 round 1}} billion}}{{cite web |title=Statistics of Film Industry in Japan |url=http://www.eiren.org/statistics_e/index.html |website=Eiren |publisher=Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan |year=1974 |accessdate=7 June 2020 |quote=1974 (...) Box Office Gross Receipts (...) in millions of Yen (...) 117,107 (..) Distributor's Income (...) in millions of Yen (...) 44,484 |archive-date=5 May 2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050505192057/http://www.eiren.org/statistics_e/index.html |url-status=live }} ({{US$|{{#expr:1100/271.7 round 2}} million|long=no}}),{{cite web |title=Official exchange rate (LCU per US$, period average) - Japan |url=https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/PA.NUS.FCRF?end=1973&locations=JP&start=1972 |website=World Bank |year=1973 |accessdate=7 June 2020}} which is equivalent to approximately {{JPY|{{#expr:1.1*(1258/500) round 1}} billion}} ({{US$|{{To USD|2800|JPN|year=2012|round=yes}} million|long=no}}) adjusted for inflation in 2012.{{cite web |title=Statistics of Film Industry in Japan |url=http://www.eiren.org/statistics_e/index.html |website=Eiren |publisher=Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan |year=1974 |accessdate=7 June 2020 |quote=Average Admission Fee (...) Yen (...) 1973 (...) 500 (...) 2012 (...) 1,258 |archive-date=5 May 2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050505192057/http://www.eiren.org/statistics_e/index.html |url-status=live }}
Home media
In the UK, Golgo 13 was released on Blu-ray by Eureka Entertainment on 17 July 2023.{{cite web |url=https://eurekavideo.co.uk/movie/golgo-13/ |title=Golgo 13 |publisher=Eureka Entertainment |access-date=2023-12-21}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb title|0174699|Golgo 13}}
{{Junya Sato}}
{{Golgo 13}}
Category:1970s crime action films
Category:Live-action films based on manga
Category:Japanese action films
Category:1970s Japanese-language films
Category:Iranian multilingual films
Category:Japanese multilingual films
Category:1970s Persian-language films
Category:1973 multilingual films