Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

RoboGeisha

2009 Japanese film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

RoboGeisha
Remove ads

RoboGeisha (ロボゲイシャ) is a 2009 Japanese sci-fi action B movie written and directed by Noboru Iguchi, visual effects directed by Tsuyoshi Kazuno, and special effects directed by Yoshihiro Nishimura. All three had previously worked together on The Machine Girl, and Nishimura worked on Tokyo Gore Police. The film premiered in theaters on October 3, 2009 and received generally negative reviews. The film's theme song is "Lost Control" by Art-School.

Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...

The film is about two sisters named Yoshie and Kikue Kasuga, Geishas who get abducted by a steel manufacturer in an attempt to transform them into murderous cyborg assassins.

Remove ads

Plot

Summarize
Perspective

The film opens with an assassination attempt on a political candidate by a geisha who is revealed to be a cyborg assassin. She is accompanied by two women in tengu masks who dispatch the candidate's bodyguards using unconventional weapons, including shuriken fired from their buttocks. The candidate is attacked by the geisha's mouth-mounted circular saw, but is saved by the sudden arrival of another cyborg geisha, Yoshie Kasuga (Aya Kiguchi), who destroys the attacker.

In flashback, Yoshie and her older sister Kikue (Hitomi Hasebe) are orphaned geisha living in a traditional house. Kikue, the favored and talented sibling, constantly bullies the clumsy Yoshie. During a performance for Hikaru Kageno (Takumi Saito), heir to the powerful Kageno Steel corporation, Yoshie accidentally disrupts the event but impresses Hikaru with her beauty and an accidental display of superhuman strength when defending herself from Kikue's abuse.

Hikaru abducts the sisters and forces them into combat against each other. When Kikue attempts to kill Yoshie, the latter unconsciously unleashes her full strength and defeats her. Impressed, the Kageno corporation begins transforming Yoshie and other abducted young women into cyborg assassins (robogeisha), equipping them with weapons such as breast-mounted machine guns and katana blades protruding from various body parts. The women are indoctrinated to believe they are fighting terrorists for the greater good. Kikue, deemed inferior, is reduced to a servant.

Both sisters eventually receive extensive cybernetic enhancements. During their first mission, Kikue saves Yoshie's life but is gravely wounded and deemed unfit for further assassin duties. Meanwhile, Yoshie becomes the group's top operative.

Yoshie is later ordered to eliminate a group of survivors, family members of the abducted girls, who have been protesting outside the Kageno building. Learning the truth about the abductions, Yoshie turns against the corporation. The Kagenos threaten to kill the crippled Kikue unless Yoshie undertakes a suicide mission. Yoshie survives the explosion and is rescued and rebuilt by the survivors, led by a former Kageno engineer.

The survivors attempt to confront the Kagenos and expose their plan to detonate a super-bomb in Mount Fuji. The meeting is a trap, the Kageno patriarch and Hikaru, now themselves heavily cybernetised, massacre most of the survivors. Hikaru then activates his castle, transforming it into a giant robot controlled by his own movements, and prepares to launch the bomb.

Yoshie assaults the castle-robot, battling her former fellow assassins and the tengu-masked women. She is confronted by a fully restored and mind-controlled Kikue, now upgraded into a superior robogeisha model. Yoshie is defeated but manages to break through Kikue's programming by revealing long-suppressed family truths and expressing her love for her sister. The sisters reconcile and physically merge into a single, far more powerful robogeisha.

Together, they defeat Hikaru inside the giant robot. By tricking him into specific movements, they cause the castle-robot to redirect the bomb into space instead of Mount Fuji. The bomb detonates harmlessly in orbit, destroying the castle-robot. The film ends with Yoshie, in narration, imagining a peaceful life where she and Kikue are ordinary geisha together.

Remove ads

Cast

Release and reception

The film was part of the "U.S. Premieres" at Fantastic Fest 2009 (24 September 1 October 2009). RoboGeisha was released in Japan on October 3, 2009 by Kadokawa Pictures. In January 2010, Funimation bought the rights to distribute the film.[1][2] The film was released in North America on April 17, 2010 by way of ActionFest, then in New York City on May 18, 2010. The film circulated to different film festivals before going to DVD and Blu-ray on November 16, 2010.[3]

Soundtrack

Summarize
Perspective
Quick facts Soundtrack album by Yasuhiko Fukuda, Released ...

All tracks are written by Yasuhiko Fukuda, except where noted.

More information No., Title ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads