Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989)
Directed by Shinya Tsukamoto
Genres - Science Fiction, Drama, Fantasy |
Sub-Genres - Sex Horror |
Release Date - Jul 12, 2005 (USA) |
Run Time - 67 min. |
Countries - Japan |
MPAA Rating - NR
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Synopsis by Judd Blaise
An hour-long feature from Japanese director Shinyu Tsukamoto, Tetsuo (also known as Tetsuo: The Iron Man) tells a horrific, cyberpunk-influenced science fiction tale about the intersection of man and post-industrial technology. The central character is a Japanese salary man, an average office worker who is transformed by a brief encounter with a metals fetishist, a man who has purposefully implanted pieces of scrap metal in his body. The salary man soon begins sprouting pieces of metal from various parts of his body, a change which is accompanied by increasingly nightmarish visions and bizarre, metal-filled sexual fantasies. As the man evolves into a strange hybrid of man and machine, he also develops a telepathic connection with another of his kind: the metal fetishist, who has been undergoing a similar conversion, and may indeed be the cause of the salary man's transformation. The two engage in a violent, destructive battle throughout the streets of Tokyo, accompanied by an appropriately industrial soundtrack. Shot on a small budget in 16 millimeter black-and-white, Tsukamoto reprised many of the images and plot elements of Tetsuo in a higher-budgeted sequel, Tetsuo II: Body Hammer.
Characteristics
Moods
Themes
Keywords
cyborg, transformation, iron [metal], sexuality, worker, accident, cybernetics, factory, fetish [sexual], hit-and-run, implant, robot, tissue [biology], violence, bionics, monster, surrealism
Attributes
Cult Film, High Artistic Quality