17 reviews
the ALL NIGHT LONG trilogy is a strange set of films. All 3 films tend to center around a character/characters who are kinda outcasts and socially awkward. All 3 films have the similar basic premise of a single or group of nerds/outcasts/weirdos who are subjected to some overwhelming stimulus that makes them freak the f**k out. I personally felt that Part 1 of the trilogy is the weakest, but still a decent film. It centers around 3 teenagers who witness a random and brutal murder, and then form a friendship based on their mutual experience. They then decide to throw a party where they each have to bring a girl - and this part of the plot is what holds Part 1 back and makes it a little slow. The whole party idea could have been left out, and I think it would have made the film sleaker and less dull. Anyway...only 1 of the 3 boys has any real luck finding a date, but on the way to the party, the boy is beaten and the girl is raped. The kid freaks out, goes to his other 2 friends, and decides to hunt the rapists down. Of course, the usual bloody revenge follows. The gore in this installment of ALL NIGHT LONG is relatively understated and takes a little too long to get there. The ending is decent but I was expecting a little more. Like some of the other reviewers, I felt there were definitely some slow moving areas and some plot lines that didn't really belong - but all-in-all a decent film. Parts 2 and 3 are better, and since you can now get all 3 dirt cheap as a box set from certain on-line retailers - might as well grab 'em all. Not as shocking as some have said, but still not for casual viewers... 7/10
- ElijahCSkuggs
- Dec 20, 2007
- Permalink
There might be hope for cult horror fans if Japan keeps making movies like "All Night Long." The tale of three high-school outcasts (the brainy geek, the aspiring pilot, and 'the guy with the car') who go after a savage gang of thugs after one of their girlfriends is raped and murdered is as lean and mean as classic revenge pics like "I Spit on Your Grave" and "House on the Edge of the Park." If the movie moves slow at times, it's with the good intention of developing the characters, which makes the violence of the last act more unsettling and personal.
6/10
6/10
- Jonny_Numb
- Jan 29, 2003
- Permalink
- BA_Harrison
- Dec 13, 2006
- Permalink
It seems that this film is mainly destined to teen audiences, because the leads are young adults. It is a social drama disguised in a horror film, that's my analysis; a vitriolic portrait of Japanese youth thru those grown up kids. It is not an European film, no matter the actors, it is sometimes totally f...up in the making of scenes, bloody, brutal, bitter and funny a few seconds later. Not for Western audiences anyway, except the die hard fans of Asian cinema and Japanese in particular. But it is not too long, only ninety minutes, and it makes things a lot easier for me. This is not a crime film, my real cup of tea concerning Rising Sun country films. It is bearable however, and it is also the first movie of a series. Without me though.
- searchanddestroy-1
- Sep 19, 2022
- Permalink
As a fan of the extreme japanese cinema i was really excited to finally get my hands on this film. But it was simply not worth the wait. The film is very slow and boring and as a matter of fact i had to fast-forward most of the film. Also most of the film's action is in the last 30 minutes and even when you finally reach that point of the film you are simply not interested anymore. It would have been way better if they had cut out about 45 minutes of the film ! and also , the scene at the end where a guy goes crazy is far too long. we dont need to see the guy jumping up and down for 10 minutes to understand there is something wrong with him
All Night Long (1992) is a dark and twisted film following three Japanese school mates. One day one of their girl friends is brutally tortured and raped by a gang of sick individuals. The three friends can't take it any more and begin to plot away to avenge their friend. But will the path to vengeance also lead to insanity? Can the friends help each other out in this darkest hour?
This has to be one of the most deranged films I have ever seen in awhile. But this film was nothing compared to the movies that soon followed. Dude, this film makers has a more skewed vision of the world than I do and that's saying something. If you like gutter level revenge flicks (Like I do) then look no further. Kind if hard to find but keep on looking. I don't think anyone can view all three films in one sitting.
Rated X and it shows!
Recommended for fans of this genre. Others definitely need not apply.
This has to be one of the most deranged films I have ever seen in awhile. But this film was nothing compared to the movies that soon followed. Dude, this film makers has a more skewed vision of the world than I do and that's saying something. If you like gutter level revenge flicks (Like I do) then look no further. Kind if hard to find but keep on looking. I don't think anyone can view all three films in one sitting.
Rated X and it shows!
Recommended for fans of this genre. Others definitely need not apply.
- Captain_Couth
- Feb 18, 2005
- Permalink
Though I appreciate the fact that the movie tries to be a serious-minded, "artistic" take on revenge and not just a bleak and mindless bloodbath, it doesn't really say anything new about its subject, anything that American and European horror films haven't said before. The first half proceeds in a disjointed, somewhat uninvolving manner; in the second half, the violence is excessive; and in both halves, the (over)acting is amateurish, with lots of "maniacal" laughing. There are also way too many (symbolic?) shots of planes taking off. (**)
After searching for some extreme Asian horror movie on IMDb this movie pop up and it been a long time since i watched a J-horror flick but after 90 minutes i finally realize how wrong i am.The movie have good start with characters i can relate too and there are strong performance thought out the movie but the rest is a complete trainwreck.The whole movie is just a bunch of random events smash together try to make sense but it executed so poorly.There three Japanese guy befriend with each other after witness a bizarre murder.I really care about these guys and want to know more about their live but the more the story go the more nonsense it become.I understand the movie goal is to show us audience the cold hard truth of reality but the way it approach is lazy as hell.The last 30 minutes of this movie is just simply mindless violence it seem like they don't know what to do next with the plot so they just show as much as gory disturbing stuff they can imagine and hope the audience sympathy with characters.If you interested with this movie feel free to check out the whole series by the same director
- phanthinga
- Jul 23, 2017
- Permalink
- HumanoidOfFlesh
- Aug 3, 2003
- Permalink
What starts off as a potentially disturbing movie gets caught up in itself and trips over its own feet. 3 kids are brought together after witnessing a senseless murder and form a pseudo friendship - Soon after, things slowly start to fall apart for each of them - throwing the entire movie into a disarray of confusion. Not as shocking as many claim it to be (in fact - I thought the horrible sequel to Henry Portrait of a Serial Killer left more of an impact than this Asian 'horror' movie) * out of ****
- cocolingus
- Oct 28, 2002
- Permalink
Not sure how I feel about this one. The first half of the movie was pretty boring actually. For an hour or so, the movie is kinda slow, and not that interesting. However, the second half does help this movie. It's an obvious message, how "normal" people turn into slashers and lose their compass.
I wish the first half was better, instead, we get a good idea, with a poor beginning. None of our characters have any depth, or a reason to really care, all are there for the sake of being there, and all struggle with the same problem: Women. I am curious how are the sequels to this. There are way better Asian extreme films out there like one of my favorite films The Untold Story or another film I dearly love Sweet Whip, or I Saw The Devil, all the films I just listed have a way more interesting plot, with loveable, characters, here you cant to that. None of our head characters are that likable, nor do they are interesting enough.
To summarize this movie, it's an Asian version of Hostel pretty much. The first half was pretty low, second half helps this movie a lot to stand on its feet. If you were a fan of Naked Blood or the Guinea Pig films, you most likely will enjoy this. To me, it was sort of okay.
I wish the first half was better, instead, we get a good idea, with a poor beginning. None of our characters have any depth, or a reason to really care, all are there for the sake of being there, and all struggle with the same problem: Women. I am curious how are the sequels to this. There are way better Asian extreme films out there like one of my favorite films The Untold Story or another film I dearly love Sweet Whip, or I Saw The Devil, all the films I just listed have a way more interesting plot, with loveable, characters, here you cant to that. None of our head characters are that likable, nor do they are interesting enough.
To summarize this movie, it's an Asian version of Hostel pretty much. The first half was pretty low, second half helps this movie a lot to stand on its feet. If you were a fan of Naked Blood or the Guinea Pig films, you most likely will enjoy this. To me, it was sort of okay.
- DarkSpotOn
- Sep 27, 2022
- Permalink
All of you who are into Japanese movies know how they could detect the hard stuff on the DVD sleeve. This one was released as offensive, vicious, nihilistic and extreme. And be sure to watch the strong uncut version, but, wait a minute, I didn't find it that vicious after all. As with most movies it all starts pretty decent. Just a ordinary guy asks a girl if he could help him find his way. She doesn't knows the way so he freaks out and stabs her in front of a few friends in daylight. The blood sputters out of the girl in a typical Japanese way. But after that part it all falls a bit down. We see what is happening to the friends, of course the experience creates a strange bond. It is all a bit of talking and nothing really happens until a girlfriend of them gets raped by a gang. That's the point were they freak out and are in for a brutal hunt. But in a vicious way, not a gory way. That's my only problem with this movie, the blood flows but not as it should be for an eastern movie. No nudity while the rape takes place. It's sad but not that bad after all.
Hopelessly bleak and nihilistic tale of 3 kids who after who witness a senseless, random murder & attempt to find three girls to go to a party to cheer them up. All of them end in heartache in one way or another. Ok, that synopsis doesn't sound like the movie is horror, but trust me it is. All the actors are believable. The violence is NOT over-the-top, but rather shown in a matter of fact way. The only part that wasn't that good was the ending, when they fade to black the first time, just press stop on your dvd player.
Where I saw it: own it on dvd
My Grade: B-
Extras: Trailers for Visitor Q, Blood, & Freeze Me
Where I saw it: own it on dvd
My Grade: B-
Extras: Trailers for Visitor Q, Blood, & Freeze Me
- movieman_kev
- Oct 5, 2003
- Permalink
Writer/Director Katsuya Matsumura's All Night Long trilogy is a very controversial film series in Japan. The first film, All Night Long was made in 1992 and has a simple but rather unusual premise as three young boys at their near twenties witness a repulsively mean spirited and violent stabbing murder of one innocent Japanese girl, after which the three become friends and experience another savage act of brutality, by man to another man, which starts the hellish ride of revenge and the victims turning into beasts themselves. This theme is a very usual and great in Japanese cinema, how humans are animals deep inside but rarely has the imagery been so explicit and overall view of life so pessimistic, but still realistic.
The film has one pure character which is a positive thing and also required in order to make the piece even more effective and larger. There must be hope for a better tomorrow, otherwise there's no reason to go on and even make films like this in the world. But the way how the only gleam of light ends up in Matsumura's world is so violent and evil that his look on life must be a very ugly one. Maybe it is better to die off as soon as possible as we are only surrounded by wickedness and selfish beasts hiding under their "civilized" surface? Fortunately it is not quite so and the fight must go on in order to keep the bad and rotten sides of humanity not active and off the background, and so that one character should have ended up some other way, or then the film would have needed another one of her kind.
There are also some scenes that may seem a little too long and boring so some cuts to the most unnecessary parts should have been made, especially near the ending. The ending includes also some stupid over-acting that doesn't work in this drama and the "wimpiest" of the three is not just too convincing anymore. Otherwise the characters are quite well written and thus interesting. They just turn from "good" and promising young boys into violent and avenging beasts that can only kill (each) others until the eventual death. This development of their characters is not jumpy or unrealistic (the mentioned over-acting and noisy nonsense at the end excluded), everything that happens inside them looks natural and the more we dare to admit these sides inside ourselves, the more natural and horrible it looks in this film, too.
There are some great lines that underline the themes of the film. According to Matsumura, people are not born equal into this world and people are just animals, a theme that was already mentioned above. Nobody can say these very pessimistic and nihilistic lines are not true or from this very own world of ours. In this film, there are "stronger" and "weaker", but they all end up pretty much the same way as they're all animals and brutes, too. The "strong" may think they can sadistically torment, make fun of and exploit the "weak" but the latter share the same instincts that can suddenly burst out when the situation's right. It requires a lot to fight against it and not let them become active. Almost nobody in this film manages to do so, and so films like these are there to show the real world how things are not supposed to be and how it can be prevented and achieved. The images and scenes just have to be interpreted and seen through, no matter how hard they can be and are.
The film is indeed rather hard to take especially if one has not experienced these, both mentally and physically ultra-strong cinematic rides of pessimism and merciless. The murder at the beginning is a very graphic and horrific one with blood stains on the camera lens and blood flying with infernal sadness, and the ending, perhaps even more (mentally) disturbing is not any delight to the eye, too, but is there to give thoughts for our minds, for example, about the mindlessness behind the morality of revenge. Still the film is not exploitation even though the point of the beginning could have been achieved with a less bloodshed, too. But the ending is at least an example how violence can disturb when everything is not shown on screen, and also the greatest thing in Japanese cinema in general, the silence and lack of (useless) dialogue is present in All Night Long very powerfully, throughout. Images can tell so much more powerfully than written words.
All Night Long is a rough ride of cinematic real life terror that can burst out and take place everywhere where humans live and inhabit. This kind of cinema will never be generally accepted or known and also the "horror audience" that mostly watches these is not very often capable to see through the gore and other reasons they are interested in these in the first place. But films like All Night Long are more and they offer the more the more the viewer is capable to see, understand and admit. Humans just are not as great as they wished they were. 8/10
The film has one pure character which is a positive thing and also required in order to make the piece even more effective and larger. There must be hope for a better tomorrow, otherwise there's no reason to go on and even make films like this in the world. But the way how the only gleam of light ends up in Matsumura's world is so violent and evil that his look on life must be a very ugly one. Maybe it is better to die off as soon as possible as we are only surrounded by wickedness and selfish beasts hiding under their "civilized" surface? Fortunately it is not quite so and the fight must go on in order to keep the bad and rotten sides of humanity not active and off the background, and so that one character should have ended up some other way, or then the film would have needed another one of her kind.
There are also some scenes that may seem a little too long and boring so some cuts to the most unnecessary parts should have been made, especially near the ending. The ending includes also some stupid over-acting that doesn't work in this drama and the "wimpiest" of the three is not just too convincing anymore. Otherwise the characters are quite well written and thus interesting. They just turn from "good" and promising young boys into violent and avenging beasts that can only kill (each) others until the eventual death. This development of their characters is not jumpy or unrealistic (the mentioned over-acting and noisy nonsense at the end excluded), everything that happens inside them looks natural and the more we dare to admit these sides inside ourselves, the more natural and horrible it looks in this film, too.
There are some great lines that underline the themes of the film. According to Matsumura, people are not born equal into this world and people are just animals, a theme that was already mentioned above. Nobody can say these very pessimistic and nihilistic lines are not true or from this very own world of ours. In this film, there are "stronger" and "weaker", but they all end up pretty much the same way as they're all animals and brutes, too. The "strong" may think they can sadistically torment, make fun of and exploit the "weak" but the latter share the same instincts that can suddenly burst out when the situation's right. It requires a lot to fight against it and not let them become active. Almost nobody in this film manages to do so, and so films like these are there to show the real world how things are not supposed to be and how it can be prevented and achieved. The images and scenes just have to be interpreted and seen through, no matter how hard they can be and are.
The film is indeed rather hard to take especially if one has not experienced these, both mentally and physically ultra-strong cinematic rides of pessimism and merciless. The murder at the beginning is a very graphic and horrific one with blood stains on the camera lens and blood flying with infernal sadness, and the ending, perhaps even more (mentally) disturbing is not any delight to the eye, too, but is there to give thoughts for our minds, for example, about the mindlessness behind the morality of revenge. Still the film is not exploitation even though the point of the beginning could have been achieved with a less bloodshed, too. But the ending is at least an example how violence can disturb when everything is not shown on screen, and also the greatest thing in Japanese cinema in general, the silence and lack of (useless) dialogue is present in All Night Long very powerfully, throughout. Images can tell so much more powerfully than written words.
All Night Long is a rough ride of cinematic real life terror that can burst out and take place everywhere where humans live and inhabit. This kind of cinema will never be generally accepted or known and also the "horror audience" that mostly watches these is not very often capable to see through the gore and other reasons they are interested in these in the first place. But films like All Night Long are more and they offer the more the more the viewer is capable to see, understand and admit. Humans just are not as great as they wished they were. 8/10
You should really give this movie a chance. At first when I started viewing this film it looked really crappy and low quality at first. The shots and colors were really bad; you could clearly notice that it was made by amateurs. But as I sat there I got more and more into the story. After a while I was completely hooked. The story builds up in such a great way. You don't really know what's going on at first. But after a when you find out, you almost get obsessed with it. I enjoyed the movie a lot The main message in All Night long is about how cruel and full of s*** human beings can be, especially men. It has a very depressing theme. There are no happy endings here. The atmosphere in the movie was really a depraved and dark. The movie is very silent in most of the scenes. There is almost no music, mostly noises. So when the violent parts of the movie starts to kick in the music stops. This is a great dramatic effect which makes it seem so much brutal.
The first All Night Long movie is defiantly the nastiest one. It has a lot of brutality and gruesome rape in it. It is very hard to watch. Not for those with weak stomachs. In some way it reminded me of a rape-revenge movie.
The first All Night Long movie is defiantly the nastiest one. It has a lot of brutality and gruesome rape in it. It is very hard to watch. Not for those with weak stomachs. In some way it reminded me of a rape-revenge movie.