Release date: July 11, 1964
Director: Toshio Sugie
Studio: Toho
Cast: Hitoshi Ueki, Hajime Hana, Kei Tani, Hiroshi Inuzuka, Eitaro Ishibashi, Senri Sakurai, Shin Yasuda, Mie Hama, Keiko Awaji, Ichirō Arashima, Akihiko Hirata, George Ruiker, Bokuzen Hidari, Ikio Sawamura, Hideyo Amamoto et al.
Availability: Available on Amazon Prime Japan and on DVD; no release outside of Japan.
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This movie was shot on location in Macau, along with the previous film Crazy Cats Go To Hong Kong, released in December of 1963. According to audio commentary from Keiko Awaji, both films were shot simultaneously. The film was Toshio Sugie's last time directing a Crazy Cats production, and he also has a little cameo - I didn't spot him, but he was one of the spectators during a horse betting scene.
Alright, let's roll. No subtitles for this one so I will be trying my level best.
Ueda works at a hotel where a wedding is taking place and when he overhears two guests - one of whom is Hanaki, a managing director of a company called Awa Shoji, played by Hajime Hana - idly taking bets for fun, he can't help but join in. They bet on the bride's shoe size, so Ueda makes some excuse to steal one of her heels. They bet on her waist and hip size, and Ueda tries to measure her, but this doesn't go as smoothly as stealing her shoe and he is thrown out. An argument ensues with Hanaki, and Kei Tani's character Xiuming Chen enters the scene, watching them from behind a nearby parked car.
Hanaki and Ueda start betting on more random stuff: which car will move first when the light turns green, whether the passenger of a cab is a man or a woman, whether the number of sweet potatoes a street vendor has in his cart is odd or even, et cetera. After a while of this, Chen confronts Ueda and tries to get him to come to Macau, "the Monaco of the East", for reasons I'm not entirely clear on. Ueda has at this point made the acquaintance of Mie Hama's character Kaneko Izumi, who likes him and takes him in, although she wants him to get a real job. If not for her, Ueda seems like he'd be on the next flight to Macau as soon as he heard the word "gambling" in whichever language Chen chose to say it. (He uses three.)
Oh no, they got Ichirō Arashima in the old-age makeup again. He is the president of Awa Shoji. Kaneko is trying to get Ueda to work for the company as well (she is a secretary of some kind) but that life just isn't for him. But Kaneko is determined to get him to straighten out. Along with Hanaki and the president, she schemes to somehow use Ueda's #1 weakness against him: he is horribly allergic to dogs. (This seems like a lot of information for Kaneko to know about Ueda considering they've only been together for about two minutes of screen time, but that's movies for you.)
I don't know why that worked, but it worked, and now Ueda is working for Awa Shoji and bothering the office ladies.
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Bin Furuya sighting. |
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Here Ueda is handing out bra fillers to all the women in the office. |
Here we also see Toru Yuri who is a "triple crown" winner: he has been in movies with Akihiko Hirata, and was in the Comedy Trio TV series with Yoshiko Otowa as well as the theatrical Comedy Trio movie directed by Yoshiki Onoda. So he worked with all three Onoda siblings at some point or another. (This is rarer than you might think due to the five-studio agreement.)
Ueda doesn't take easily to the office life. He starts betting with himself on whether the next number on the sheets he's looking over will be even or odd. Ueda, my guy, I think you might need to see somebody about that. Hanaki takes him back to his own place and shows him that he has many fancy things, all in twos because he wants to marry the president's daughter Keiko (Keiko Awaji). Ueda convinces Hanaki to shave off his mustache but it turns out Keiko hates that.
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He might be allergic to dogs, but he can share the screen with Wan-san just fine. |
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Masaya Nihei sighting. We almost have a whole episode of Ultraman in here. |
It's around this time that the plot device which will ultimately lead Ueda to Macau comes in. Awa Shoji is trying to close a deal with a wealthy client named Mr. Heckel (George Ruiker, who we previously saw in Harikiri Shachō). A lot of rival companies are also competing for Heckel's business, so Awa Shoji enlists Ueda to help. He and Shin Yasuda's character Suzuki go to the airport to wait for Heckel, and Chen shows up as well to pick up his younger sister Xiuyu (Bai Bing). While the line of guys from rival companies is turned away at the door, Ueda and Suzuki use one of those window-washing hoist things to crank their way up to Heckel's window. In his hotel room, Heckel is doing business with Hirata's character, Tenyu Zhang, who is speaking the hell out of some English. He asks Heckel if he's found "any suckers" - this is our first inkling that Heckel is a fraud.
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I kind of want to post a clip of him saying "have you found any suckers?" because it's just a really weird thing to hear him say in English. |
Ueda was brought in precisely because Heckel dai suki gambling. They get to betting matchsticks for card games. Things get too heated for the hotel room and they go to a restaurant to continue the game. Heckel tries to get Ueda to go to Texas, but this isn't Texas Free-For-All, so that won't happen. Drunk and hopped up on gambling, Heckel agrees to conduct business in Japan through Awa Shoji.
It's taken 40+ minutes, but we now get our first musical number. It's good fun.
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His shirt says "musekinin" ("irresponsible"). |
The fun doesn't last, though. Awa Shoji finds out Heckel is a fake and that he turned tail back to Macau as soon as he received the money that his contract with the company promised. Ueda kinda gets fired, but hey, he didn't like the job in the first place. He meets back up with Chen and Xiuyu and it turns out there's some people in the Hong Kong mafia who are enemies of Chen's. Zhang had apparently tried to take over the gambling house where Xiuyu worked. Ueda gambled his way into this situation, now he's going to gamble his way out: almost an hour into the movie, we're going to Macau.
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The way Ueki just doesn't react whatsoever to getting whacked in the head got a laugh out of me. |
The gang is now all here: Senri Sakurai and Eitaro Ishibashi play Sakura and Ando, two dorks who meet the Awa Shoji contingent on the ground in Macau. Hanaki tries to keep everyone focused while Chen shows them all into a gambling house where every Toho White Guy is hanging out in the background.
Ueda eventually runs into Heckel looking not so great at a bar where he's trying to order either a really stiff drink or a Coca-Cola from Ikio Sawamura who isn't wearing a shirt. They tie him up back at their hotel room and Zhang enters the scene with a small retinue of goons. I'm really loving this role and it seems like Hirata was having fun with it too. Love to see him be the smarmy cool-guy villain.
Zhang has been the mastermind behind whatever Heckel was doing; Heckel was just a pawn to get money into Zhang's syndicate. I don't know if I should be making a note of this or not but, uh, we also get to see Zhang in the shower. The shot comes out of nowhere, is not contextually necessary, lasts for a decent amount of time and feels like nothing if not fanservice.
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I run a classy establishment here at guzareshirei dot blogspot dot com. |
...Anyway, Keiko and Kaneko fly to Macau to make sure the boys aren't getting into trouble (they are). I'm having a little trouble comprehending Japanese or even English at this point, but fortunately the plot is almost through. Zhang and his guys challenge Ueda and his guys to a final dice game. It's good old cho-han, nothing complicated, but a good movie can make cho-han one of the most nerve-wracking games you'll ever see.
Zhang plays dirty, of course, and brings in a dog to make Ueda freak out. Some business goes on here that I was having trouble following but as best I can figure it out, one of the guys discovers that Zhang is actually Japanese, his real name is Yamada, and he seems to have had dealings with Hiroshi Inuzuka's character (unnamed but referred to as "kaicho") at some point. Despite the attempted sabotage with the dog, Ueda of course wins the game, and the money taken from Heckel's bogus contract and the deed to the gambling house are returned to their rightful owners.
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In fairness I'm not even sure that's a dog; it looks like a feather duster, maybe |
Great movie! This was pretty early on in the Crazy Cats series, and this particular film lacks a lot of the character that would come to define their later movies, but it's really fun as just a regular comedy. I was expecting a lot more out of the on-location filming, but every Macau scene is confined to roughly the last half-hour of the film, so it feels very scaled-down. The whole thing feels much more like an Ueki solo vehicle than an ensemble Crazy Cats film. But in any case I had a good time with this one and may or may not be rewatching it at some point.
As one last point of interest, I read a review on Kinenote that claims the trailer for this movie put "(The man who killed Godzilla)" in subtitles when it introduced Hirata's character, but the trailer that I can find on YouTube doesn't seem to say that, so either I'm misinterpreting something or there's another trailer I haven't seen.