Black Butler (film)

Black Butler (Japanese: 黒執事, Hepburn: Kuroshitsuji) is a 2014 Japanese period-style action fantasy film directed by Kentarō Ōtani and Keiichi Satō.[2] The film is based on the manga of the same name by Yana Toboso.[2]

Black Butler
Directed by
Produced byShinzo Matsuhashi
Written byTsutomu Kuroiwa
Based onBlack Butler
by Yana Toboso
StarringHiro Mizushima
Ayame Goriki
Music byAkihisa Matsuura
CinematographyTerukuni Ajisaka
Edited byTsuyoshi Imai
Production
companies
  • C&I Entertainment
  • Rockworks
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • January 18, 2014 (2014-01-18) (Japan)
[1]
Running time
119 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Box office$5.8 million

Plot

The film is set in a parallel, quasi-Victorian history. The world contains two major powers: the West, ruled by the Queen, and the East. The Queen manipulates events worldwide using operatives called the Queen's Watchdogs. The film's protagonist, Earl Kiyoharu Genpou (replacing Ciel Phantomhive from the anime), is a Queen's Watchdog in an unnamed Eastern metropolis. A large automobile is careering through a docks area. The man driving is rapidly desiccating, his face wrinkling, its skin crumbling. As he dies, the car crashes to a halt. A warehouse echoes with screams as dark-clad men herd young women around. The chief thug questions one young woman for carrying photos of desiccated bodies. A young man in a formal black butler's uniform suddenly appears in the warehouse, identifying himself as a servant of the Genpou family. The thugs attack. Most are disabled or killed quickly. Only the chief thug remains conscious for questioning.

The next day, the young woman earlier questioned in the warehouse appears dressed as a young gentleman, in the role of Earl Kiyohara Genpou, the only son and heir of the Funtom Toy Company fortune. The earl's servants are present, including Sebastian Michaelis (the Black Butler from the previous night's battle), the clumsy maid Rin, and the house stewards Tanaka. The Earl speaks with the Queen's personal secretary Charles B. Sato about the death of the Queen's ambassador Anthony Campelle, found overnight on the docks, mummified in his car. The unusual cause of death, and the presence of a card depicting a devil, mark it as the eighth similar mysterious death of a powerful citizen in a case called the Devil's Curse. All victims have some connection with the human smuggler from the warehouse. No motivation for the deaths is apparent, however, nor is a root cause of the desiccating symptoms. The Queen demands a quick close to the case.

At the Eastern Ministry for State Security, Bureau of Foreign Affairs, a senior official greets the visiting policeman Tokizawa. A coat button found at the warehouse massacre implicates a Watchdog of the Queen in the fracas. Tokizawa is told that if a Watchdog exists, he represents a danger to the nation and should be disposed of. Tokizawa is then warned to pretend he heard nothing about the connection between the warehouse and the Watchdog, nor about the Watchdog's proposed elimination or else the Queen will know about it. Tokizawa and a few officers learn that the Genpou Family were once called the Phantomhive family from England before the family moved to Japan and change their family name to Genpou. The Earl and Sebastian examine Campelle's corpse. Clues found there lead them to an underground club of the wealthy. The Earl infiltrates the club using help from her aunt, with the maid Rin posing as her escort. Sneaking behind closed doors, the Earl and maid are captured and subdued by Shinpei Kujo, CEO of Epsilon Pharmaceuticals, host of the party.

Kujo talks with a hooded figure about Necrosis, a poisonous new drug. Party guests begin inhaling Necrosis. After a brief moment of euphoria they begin bleeding from nose, ears, and eyes as desiccation sets in. A henchman displays a familiar devil card, along with a bowl of red capsule, consuming two of which will cancel the effects of the Necrosis poison. The hooded figure suddenly kills Kujo and leaves. At the same time, Sebastian searches a series of darkened laboratories. A booby trap explodes near him, destroying the side of the lab building. The butler survives and rescues the Earl and the maid Rin from the scene of the Necrosis poisoning. Tokizawa takes Sebastian for interrogation; however, Sebastian beats up the police and escapes. The Earl travels with her aunt to a room near the exorcism ceremony. The aunt admits to being the hooded figure who killed Kujo, as well as the masked figure who years ago killed the Earl's parents and the bio-terrorist who will soon kill the gathered elite with a Necrosis bomb. Sebastian saves the Earl from her aunt's attack and tricks the aunt into succumbing to Necrosis.

On the roof of the building, the Earl guesses the combination of the briefcase bomb and disarms it. The Black Butler kisses the Earl, treating her for Necrosis exposure in the process, and takes her home with the remaining Necrosis capsules from the bomb. Later, at the office of policeman Tokizawa, a box arrives with a hand-written note. In it are the remaining Necrosis capsules, a sign that the terrorist danger has been dispelled and the Genpou family are not his enemies. Meanwhile, at Eastern Ministry for State Security, Bureau of Foreign Affairs, a senior official gets a note that the Earl is alive and well and revealing to be a member of the crime syndicate that attacked the Genpou family. Sebastian puts the Earl to bed and she orders him to stay with her until she falls asleep.

Cast

  • Hiro Mizushima as Sebastian Michaelis, the "Black Butler"
  • Ayame Goriki as Earl Kiyohara Genpou (Genpō Shiori), the Queen's Watchdog
  • Yūka as Wakatsuki Hanae, Shiori's aunt
  • Mizuki Yamamoto as Rin/Lyn, the housemaid
  • Tomomi Maruyama as Akashi, the house steward
  • Masato Ibu as Kuzo Shinpei
  • Takuro Ono as Matsumiya Takaki
  • Yu Shirota as Charles Bennett Sato[2]

Production

The film changes the setting of the original manga which was set in 19th-century London to an unnamed Eastern nation in the year 2020.[2] The film stars Mizushima Hiro as Sebastian the lead, his first starring role in three years.[3]

Release

Black Butler was released in Japan on January 18, 2014.[2] The film debuted at third place on its opening weekend in the Japanese Box office being beaten by Trick The Movie: Last Stage and The Eternal Zero.[4] The film grossed a total of ¥601 million ($5,672,766) in Japan,[5] and $98,848 in other Asian territories,[6] for a total of $5,771,614 in Asia.

Reception

Derek Elley of Film Business Asia gave the film a three out of ten rating calling it "a failure at every level", noting that the film was "stodgily directed, appallingly constructed (with an especially confusing exposition) and laden down with yards of flat dialogue. When any action does finally come, it's just so-so.".[2] The Guardian gave the film three stars out of five, noting that "Much of the dialogue and performances are stilted, but as a kitsch cult watch it has its charms."[7] The Times awarded the film three stars out of five, describing it as "compellingly weird".[8]

gollark: We need to combine both computer science *and* actual practical stuff, to avoid Electron and also avoid ridiculous weird type insanity.
gollark: Just use a different library for some incredibly obscure archive format nobody can use.
gollark: Ghosts?
gollark: It might be a not-actually-backward-compatible update.
gollark: Perhaps you are forgetting to close the stream or something.

See also

Notes

  1. "4 Live-Action Black Butler Character Videos Posted". Anime News Network. January 16, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  2. Elley, Derek (March 26, 2014). "Black Butler". Film Business Asia. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
  3. Ma, Kevin (January 22, 2014). "Eternal Zero tops 5th week at Japan B.O." Film Business Asia. Archived from the original on June 6, 2020. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
  4. "Japan Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
  5. "2015年3月下旬 映画業界決算特別号". Kinema Junpo: 96. March 2015.
  6. "Kuro Shitsuji (Black Butler)". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
  7. Smith, Anna (17 October 2014). "Black Butler review – stilted revenge thriller with kitschy charms". The Guardian. Retrieved October 27, 2014.
  8. Muir, Kate (October 17, 2014). "Black Butler". The Times. Retrieved October 27, 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.