The Yakuza Landscape Today

Outlaw Appeal: The Yakuza in Film and Print

Culture

Whether romanticized or realistic, yakuza films have a long history in Japan. Books and manga also help the public explore their enduring fascination with the nation’s gangs.

Yakuza in Print

In the publishing world, yakuza-turned-author Abe Jōji’s book Hei no naka no korinai menmen became a bestseller in 1986. The novel was based on his prison experiences and adapted to both film—with the English title Guys Who Never Learn—and television. In the same year, Ieda Shōko’s book Gokudō no onna tachi (Yakuza Wives) was a big hit. The journalistic work about women in the yakuza world was also adapted, in greatly embellished form, to film and television. More recently, the manga series Ichi the Killer, featuring warring yakuza gangs, ran from 1998 to 2001 and was adapted into a notoriously violent film in 2001 by director Miike Takashi.

Perhaps surprisingly, there are even manga that mix the yakuza genre with “boys’ love”—comics portraying male-male relationships that are primarily marketed to women. One of the most successful of these is Saezuru tori wa habatakanai (trans. Twittering Birds Never Fly). It presents the story of a masochistic yakuza underboss and his bodyguard, a former cop. At the same time, it gives a highly detailed depiction of yakuza society.

Books in the Saezuru tori wa habatakanai (Singing Birds Don’t Flap Their Wings) series.

Yakuza Documentary

Matsukata Hiroki and Umemiya Tatsuo, who both acted in Battles Without Honor and Humanity, discussed the state of the genre in the weekly Shūkan Gendai in 2015. Matsukata said, “For good or bad, society was more open-minded then. Unfortunately, it’s become difficult to make a yakuza film these days.” Umemiya responded, “I think a new yakuza movie would be a hit though. Japanese gangs still operate in the same way as back then and the yakuza world is perfect for an ensemble piece.”

Outrage successfully uses its ensemble cast in a realistic fiction that falls between ninkyō romanticism and the true-story-based films that followed.

A recent documentary offers another viewpoint on Japan’s criminal gangs. Yakuza to kenpō (Yakuza and the Constitution) questions whether gang members have human rights. It was produced by Tōkai Television Broadcasting and first broadcast in 2015. After garnering a huge reaction, it was shown as a film in small theaters across the country in 2016.

The yakuza in the film describe the hardships of their lives after a wave of legislation targeting gangs. They have had to shut down their bank accounts and cannot get insurance or enter their children into nurseries.

A scene from Yakuza and the Constitution. (© Tōkai Television Broadcasting)

Documentaries like Yakuza and the Constitution provide a different perspective than fiction, however realistic, opening up further possibilities for understanding Japanese gangs.

(Originally published in Japanese on September 25, 2017. Text by Kuwahara Rika of Power News. Banner photo: A scene from Outrage Coda. © 2017 Outrage Coda Production Committee.)

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