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In 1995, Shinjuku Boys won Outstanding Documentary at the San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, [1] a Silver Hugo Prize at the Chicago International Film Festival [2] and Gold Prize at Houston Film Festival. [3] The film received positive reviews following its 2010 release by Second Run DVD.
Shinjuku Boys; Shutter (2008 film) The Sky Has Fallen; The Smashing Machine (2025 film) Snake Eyes (2021 film) Snow Flower (film) Snowden (film) Soarin' Solaris (1972 film) Space Amoeba; Stray Dog (film) The Street Fighter; Suicide Club (film)
The Babysitter (1995 film) Bach's Fight for Freedom; Back of Beyond (film) Bad Boys (1995 film) Bad Company (1995 film) La bailanta; The Bait (1995 film) Bakit May Kahapon Pa? Ballet (film) Ballot Measure 9; Balto (film) Bang (film) Bangarada Kalasha; Bangarwadi; Bangers (1995 film) Banglar Nayok; Barsaat (1995 film) Baseball Girls; The ...
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Grady Hendrix of The New York Sun, commented on the Trilogy, noting that "the three movies that make up his loosely related Black Society Trilogy are the work of a socially committed, ferociously intelligent director - albeit one who still takes time out from raging against the machine for raunchy sex jokes and blunt-force trauma." [3]
Shinjuku Triad Society (新宿黒社会 チャイナ マフィア戦争, Shinjuku kuroshakai: Chaina mafia sensô) is a 1995 Japanese film directed by Takashi Miike. [not verified in body] The film is one of the earliest examples of Miike's use of extreme violence and unusual characterization, two aspects he would become notorious for.
Bad Boys (1995 film) The Balkan Line; Banal (2008 film) Behind Enemy Lines (2001 film) Bharat (film) The Big Bang (1987 film) Black Widow (2021 film) Blackbird (2007 film) Blast from the Past (film) The Burial (film) The Butterfly Effect
Sion Sono (園 子温, Sono Shion, born December 18, 1961) is a Japanese filmmaker, author, and poet. Best known on the festival circuit for the film Love Exposure (2008), he has been called "the most subversive filmmaker working in Japanese cinema today", [1] a "stakhanovist filmmaker" [2] [3] with an "idiosyncratic" career.