Joe Shishido
13 titles
Filmography
13 results
Youth of the Beast
(1963)A Colt Is My Passport
(1967)Cruel Gun Story
(1964)Branded to Kill
(1967)When Japanese New Wave bad boy Seijun Suzuki delivered this brutal, hilarious, and visually inspired masterpiece to the executives at his studio, he was promptly fired. BRANDED TO KILL tells the ecstatically bent story of a yakuza assassin with a fetish for sniffing steamed rice (the chipmunk-cheeked superstar Joe Shishido) who botches a job and ends up a target himself. This is Suzuki at his most extreme鈥攖he flabbergasting pinnacle of his sixties pop-art aesthetic.

Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell, Bastards!
(1963)Starring original Diamond Guy, Jo Shishido, Seijun Suzuki's Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell Bastards! is a hard hitting, rapid-fire yakuza film that redefined the Japanese crime drama. Detective Tajima (Shishido) is tasked with tracking down a consignment of stolen firearms, as the investigation progresses things take an anarchic, blood-drenched grudge match.

Gate of Flesh
(1964)
Danger Pays
(1962)When 1 million yen go missing, a man (Jo Shishido) spies the opportunity to get rich, but he's not the only one looking to get his hands on the cash.

Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Final Episode
(1974)The Final Episode of the Battles Without Honour and Humanity series brought a new, more contemporary mood to the film and its characters. The yakuza may be starting to resemble a legitimate business, but director Kinji Fukasaku, working with new screenwriter K么ji Takada, never lets the audience forget their violent origins, and their tried-and-true methods of accomplishing their business. 1966. After a police crackdown, the gangs of Hiroshima and Kure have formed a massive, multi-family political and economic alliance called the Tensei Coalition, seeking a way forward into the 1970鈥檚 as part of Japan鈥檚 economic bubble. Sh么z么 Hirono (Bunta Sugawara) finds himself increasingly alienated from this semi-legitimate form of corruption, particularly as acting Tensei Coalition chairman Matsumura (Kinya Kita么ji) tries to put the gangs on a new, more business-like path. But old habits die hard, and when rivalries surface once again, they bring with them the promise of more bloodshed. The long-awaited conclusion to the epic series is an elegy for the bad guy, with the harsh realisation that Japan鈥檚 economic growth came about only through the sacrifice of the blood of its young men, victims of twenty long years of Battles Without Honour and Humanity.
Retaliation
(1968)In 1969 future sexploitation specialist Yasuharu Hasebe (Stray Cat Rock: Sex Hunter) teamed up with the inimitable J么 Shishido (Branded to Kill, Youth of the Beast) for a follow up to their yakuza hit Massacre Gun. A tale of gang warfare that features a raft of the period鈥檚 most iconic stars, Akira Kobayashi (Battles Without Honor and Humanity, The Flowers and the Angry Waves) is a yakuza lieutenant who emerges from jail to find his gang dispersed and his ageing boss in his sickbed. Shishido is the rival waiting to kill him and a young Meiko Kaji (Lady Snowblood) is the girl caught in the crossfire. Gritty and cynical, Retaliation is a hardboiled precursor to Kinji Fukasaku鈥檚 revisionist yakuza pictures of the 1970s.

Fugitive Alien
(1987)When his race attacks Earth, an alien who refuses to kill gets branded a traitor and joins up with a band of humans who think he's one of them.

Star Force: Fugitive Alien II
(1987)Ken and the crew of the Bacchus 3 return in Star Force: Fugitive Alien II (1987) while Joel and the Bots make a Captain Joe action figure and stage a "name that puppet" quiz show.
Rusty Knife
(1958)
The Notorious Bored Samurai 6
(1991)Intrigue unfolds as Shusui discovers a plot involving buried gold, sparking a crisis that leads to uncovering a deceptive identity.