Zeiram (1991)
Aka: Zeram
Starring: Yuko Moriyama, Kunihiro Ida,
Yukijiro Hotaru, Masakazu Handa, Mizuho Yoshido
Director: Keita Amemiya
Action Director: Mitsuo Abe
Special FX Director: Hajime Matsumoto,
Hiroshi Onodera
This one of those films that
I caught on TV at the tail-end and wondered just what it was I was
watching. It was cable TV back in the mid-1990s when I was channel
surfing and happened upon a Japanese movie I was unfamiliar with
(despite being a huge Godzilla fan at the time) and watched the last
ten or fifteen minutes, which was full of action and monsters. A year
or so later, I came across it again, probably on the Sci-Fi Channel
(back when it was still cool) and watched all of it. It was neat.
Then, when the Sci-Fi Channel did their Saturday Anime cycle, I
noticed that the anime adaptation of this movie was on and taped it
(over the course of two Saturdays). It is one of my favorite animes
of all time. I eventually got this movie (and its sequel) on VHS from
Video Daikaiju near the end of the 1990s (or early 2000s).
The movie opens with some
high contrast black-and-white photography of a strange,
mushroom-headed being walking through a corridor, viciously
slaughtering all the soldiers standing in its way. Enter: Zeiram.
Switch to our Earth, where
we meet our two main male protagonists: Kamiya (Yukijiro Hotaru,
Gamera, Guardian of the Universe
and Deep Sea Monster Reigo)
and Teppei (Kunihiro Ida, of Weather
Girl and Moon
Over Tao). Both men work for an
electronics company and seem to specialize mainly in equipment
repairs. They’re working on a Sunday, which both men resent for
differing reasons: Kamiya has scored high on his latest race bet and
wants to celebrate with his friends; Teppei has a date with one of
his female co-workers (whom we’ll never meet). Their last job of
the day is to investigate a claim of someone stealing power from the
grid. I would think that would be the job for the power company and
not an electronics company, but maybe it’s a Japanese thing.
They show up at the
apartment in question, which is inhabited by a mysterious woman named
Iria (Yuko Moriyama, of Kunoichi Lady
Ninja and Tokyo
Raiders) and her talking computer, Bob
(voiced by Masakazu Handa). Before our heroes’ arrival, we had met
Iria and Bob, who were talking about setting up “the Zone” and
earning money from their latest job. Yes, they are intergalactic
bounty hunters and their next target is Zeiram, whom we saw in the
opening scene. “The Zone” refers to a temporary pocket dimension
which can mimic the surrounding area up to a certain radius and thus
can be used to carry out jobs without endangering the locals. Zeiram
is on its way to Earth and Iria wants to capture him. So, she creates
a version of the Zone to resemble to the industrial zone of Tokyo and
sets up a portal for Zeiram’s travel pod to land directly in it.
Unfortunately, when Kamiya and Teppei show up to find out why she’s
stealing power—we learn that the Earth has been evaluated as being
naturally unfriendly and uncooperative to outsiders from space (even
friendly ones), so she’s working on the sly—they are accidentally
transported into the Zone. That means that Iria will have to work
twice as hard to fight Zeiram and
protect the two humans (the dialog
suggests that she and Bob will lose their bounty hunter license if
any of the locals dies on the job, probably something about the
“prime directive”).
From there on out, we have
martial arts battles with monsters, gunplay and explosions, lots of
slimy special effects (Zeiram can create little monsters from the DNA
of other organisms it has assimilated), more gunplay and fighting,
and even a scene of Teppei eating a space cockroach. At one point,
Iria is transported out of the Zone and has to direct Teppei and
Kamiya while she fixes the transporter. And Zeiram is not just
powerful, he has several different forms he takes on whenever it
looks like the humans are going to defeat him.
Zeiram is
a highly entertaining Tokusatsu film
from Keita Amemiya, an artist an effects man who became a director of
some renown in Japan. This is one of his earlier films and he shows a
good eye for monster designs and action sequences. These days,
Amemiya is probably most well known for his work on the “Garo” TV
series/franchise, which is sort of a more adult-oriented Tokusatsu
series. He also directed Mechanical
Violator Hakaider and Cyber
Ninja, the latter of which was
available to rent at places like Blockbuster Video back in the 1990s.
He also directed an episode of “Dinosaur Squadron Zyuranger,”
which corresponds with the first season of the “Mighty Morphin’
Power Rangers” (specifically the episode with the Terror Toad
villain).
The movie takes a little
while to get going, but once the characters enter the Zone, the pace
picks up considerably. My main complaint is the interval in which
Iria is temporarily trapped outside the
Zone, leaving our clumsy heroes to fend for themselves. It’s a good
way of upping the ante and the stakes, since the two men have no
skills and have to improvise to not die, but Yuko Moriyama is so
compelling as Iria that watching her just hang around doing nothing
is a bit of a letdown. Thankfully, she eventually finds her way back
into the film, which sets up a triple-climax for the movie. And
director Amemiya is really good at drawing out the suspense and
upping the stakes so that deliverance really comes at the last
possible second.
Most people will never
forget the design of Zeiram, with its hulking green body,
mushroom-shaped head, and a tiny, white, humanoid face in its head
that can extend, much like the secondary mouth of the Xenomorph.
Zeiram can engage in hand-to-hand combat, wield a gun, and produce
clones of its victims to use as his minions. The effects are
attributed to Hajime Matsumoto and Hiroshi Onodera. The former is
best known for his work on Gamera:
Guardian of the Universe and later
Godzilla-Mothra-King Ghidorah: Giant
Monsters All-Out Attack and Godzilla
Against Mechagodzilla. Onodera, on the
other hand, worked on the FX teams for all of the Heisei
Godzilla and Mothra movies, plus some
of the early 2000s Ultraman movies.
Their job is to give life to Keito Amemiya’s monster designs, which
they do handily, mixing rod puppets, man-in-suit techniques, and even
some stop motion animation.
The martial arts is a little
limited, and its clear that Yuko Moriyama is doubled for the flashier
moves. Japanese cinema was not the
place to turn to for quality martial arts in the 1990s, but watching
a beautiful woman like Moriyama (and her stunt double) karate-kicking
a giant, four-legged stop-motion skeleton is just the epitome of
entertainment.
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