The first film in the 10 part Gambling Den series, all starring Koji Tsuruta and many of them featuring Tomisaburo Wakayma in a villain role. This opening instalment is unfortunately one of the weakest. Tsuruta is an honourable gambler who decides to help two other men (Kyôsuke Machida and comic relief Shingo Yamashiro) save two women from a yakuza run brothel. Unfortunately too much time is spent on silly humour and a straight forward story that lacks any nuance. The themes of honour and humanity are quite weak here, and the film is largely missing the "between a rock and a hard place" dynamic that is important for a good ninkyo film. There is a decent amount of gambling scenes, but they also tend to be low on tension. The final encounter with evil gang boss Seizaburô Kawazu is satisfying, however.
+ Sonny Chiba Special: Part 25
Bodyguard Kiba (Japan, 1973) [35mm] – 2.5/5
Sonny Chiba is a karate fighter taking on the mafia in this mediocre grindhouse action film, which foreshadowed the karate film boom that started with The Street Fighter (1974). It’s a decently entertaining film with some memorable bits of ultra-violence and spaghetti western imagery, but the action is sloppily filmed and not much good can be said about storytelling. The film was re-edited and released under the title The Bodyguard (1976) in the US. The American version added some amusing bits, e.g. the Ezekiel speech quoted in Pulp Fiction, but also removed most of the karate philosophy and references to Chiba's real life master Masutatsu Oyama. In the American version Chiba becomes a bodyguard to fight criminality; in the Japanese version he goes on a rampage just to advertise the power of karate: something that makes his character an even bigger asshole.
Bodyguard Kiba 2 (Japan, 1973) [VoD] -2.5/5
Mediocre sequel is mainly notable for being the film where Chiba finally got his karate gang together. Etsuko Shomi co-stars as Kiba's sister, who is blinded in the terrific opening fight by villain Masashi Ishibashi. In a somewhat nonsensical turn (considering the first film), crime fighter Kiba employs himself as a yakuza bodyguard to collect money for his sister's eye operation. It all sounds more interesting than it is in the hands of director Ryuchi Takamori. Thankfully the film improves towards the end when Tsunehiko Watase re-joins the cast and introduces some (underdeveloped) ninkyo elements. The violent final fight is entertaining as well, though not a classic by any means. Chiba, Ishibashi and Shihomi's next collaboration would be The Street Fighter!

