Correlated with Susan Sontag's theorization of kitsch as well as employing the queer lingo of "camp," this film's relentless equal opportunity pop-art montage shattered the foundations of conventional cinema, making it a true document of the Shinjuku underground scene. Director Okabe himself appears recreating his favorite roles from Bonnie and Clyde to Spaghetti Westerns, as well as incorporating quotations by inserting stills of Godard, Kennedy’s assassination and the Vietnam War.
Michio Okabe
Writer, Director

Akaji Maro

Shigechika Satō

Michio Okabe
Yasunao Tone
Rikurô Miyai
Mami Aoyama
Gulliver
Mitsutaka Ishii
Kenji Kanesaka
Wet Hot American Summer62%
Marc Maron: Too Real68%
Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic63%
Chris Rock: Bring the Pain71%
Chris Rock: Kill the Messenger75%
Louis C.K.: Hilarious78%
Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl73%
Jerry Seinfeld: 23 Hours to Kill62%
How to Be a Man63%
Amazon Women on the Moon59%
Rock 'n' Roll High School63%
A Night at the Opera74%
Donald Glover: Weirdo68%
Tom Segura: Disgraceful71%
Ricky Gervais: Out of England 272%
Chris Rock: Tamborine64%
Tom Segura: Ball Hog69%
Hannah Gadsby: Douglas71%
Tom Segura: Mostly Stories70%