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— Tagline

King Kong is Dead.

Godzilla has Retired.

and Theres a new monster in town
„ 
Deskappa
[[Image:Deskappa (2010) Japanese Poster.jpg|200px|]]
The Original Japanese DVD poster
Directed by Tomoo Haraguchi
Produced by John Silapera
Music by Masako Ishi
Running time 85 minutes (Japan)
Budget ???

Death Kappa (also known as Deskappa) is a 2010 nikkatsu and Interfilm kaiju film,Directed by Tomoo Haraguchi.

Plot[]

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SPOILER WARNING: This section may contain major plot and/or ending details. Proceed at your own discretion.

Kanako Kawado (played by Misato Hirata) returns to her home town in the wake of a failed career as an idol singer. As soon as she meets up with her grandmother Fujiko, a VW Beetle speeds down the road, hitting her grandmother and knocking a shrine containing a mummified kappa off a cliff and into the sea. With her dying breath, Kanako's grandmother begs her to "protect the kappa". Kanako takes over as the miko to her family's shrine. On a nearby beach, the joyriders who ran over Kanako's grandmother are attacked by strange creatures and men in black suits, the boys killed and the girls abducted.

One day Kanako catches her brothers listening to her song only to hear a noise coming from outside their house. The three of them find a kappa dancing to Kanako's song. The siblings befriend Kappa and he soon becomes part of the family. One night while Kappa is dancing to Kanako’s song, he is attacked and netted by a group of men in black suits. Kanako tries to save Kappa using a bow and arrow, causing the men to turn their attention towards her and capture her. Her distraction allows Kappa to escape. With their main quarry gone, the leader of the assailants turns her attention to Kanako as one of her subordinates tazes her.

Kanako wakes up to find herself chained to a giant wooden "X", surrounded by strange fish men, in a room full of Imperial Japanese imagery, traditional samurai weapons, a banner that reads "Revive the Spirit of Japan", jars full of specimens, and a mummified corpse in a wheelchair. A woman named Yuriko identifies the fish men as Umihiko and the mummy in the wheelchair as her grandfather. The Umihiko are his creations, made from Kappa's skin cells and intended for use as super soldiers to turn the tide near the end of World War II. He was rejected by the Japanese army, who saw the Umihiko as a crime against nature, but spent the rest of his life continuing his experiments. Yuriko has finished what he started, working with a group of radicals called the State Guard who believe that the Japanese were defanged in the wake of World War II and plan to use the Umihiko to resurrect bushido and Japanese imperialism. Another soldier comes in, escorting the two girls they had abducted, who now have gills and sharp teeth. They are becoming the first female Umihiko, and Yuriko tells Kanako she is going to become the third.

As Yuriko begins the process, Kappa storms into the lab to rescue Kanako. The State Guards try to capture Kappa alive, but he proves too tough and frees Kanako. Yuriko activates the Umihiko and sics them on kappa, which prove to be more evenly matched. Kanako pulls a naginata off the wall and slices the control panel in half, paralyzing the Umihiko. Infuriated by the defeat of her grandfather's opus, Yuriko pulls out a machine gun and tries to kill Kanako, who jumps behind Kappa's shell for protection. The bullets bounce off Kappa's shell, killing the State Guard captain, crippling another member, and destroying her grandfather's mummy. After she runs out of bullets, Yuriko discovers the damage she caused to her grandfather’s remains and freaks out, unveiling an atomic bomb. Despite the State Guard member's protests, she sets it off. The radiation from the bomb fuses the Umihiko into a single gigantic, amphibious fish monster that proceeds to rampage through Yokohama.

The JSDF is called in to deal with the monster, which has been designated Hangyolas. Their infantry is too terrified to open fire and quickly crushed. A joint attack by tanks and fighter jets stalls Hangyolas for a time, but he incinerates them with sheets of flame. As a last resort the JSDF send in the Gorgon Monster Death Ray, the most powerful laser in the world, but he endures it and returns fire. With all their countermeasures having failed, the JSDF resign themselves to the possibility that Hangyolas is invincible and a dark shadow falls over the minds of all of Japan. Suddenly, Kappa appears, having grown to gigantic size by the same radiation that created Hangyolas, his eyes glowing red. The two monsters do battle in the ruins of the city, with Kappa quickly pulling Hangyolas's tail off. Their fight comes to a head in an oil refinery, when Kappa picks up several Horton spheres and throws them at Hangyolas. The kaiju retaliates with his fire breath, only for Kappa to block the attack with his hands and push it back into Hangyolas, killing his enemy. The JSDF breathe a sigh of relief at the death of Hangyolas, but their victory is short-lived as Kappa goes on an even more destructive rampage. A kappa expert strolls into the JSDF meeting room and calls the giant kappa the consequence of humanity not believing in unconfirmed life forms. Declaring that Kappa will be humanity's doom, he rechristens him Death Kappa. The National Diet Building falls before his might, and he even targets Mount Fuji. The JSDF are at a loss: their entire military might was no match for Hangyolas and Death Kappa defeated him. Kanako comes to the top of a building with a bucket of water and a ladle, and starts singing. Death Kappa approaches her, suddenly calmed. Kanako uses the bucket and ladle to wet the dish on Death Kappa's head, returning his eyes to normal. The head of the JSDF committee states that Death Kappa should serve as a reminder of forgotten values. Death Kappa returns to the sea to the cheers of a grateful Japan, as Kanako quietly says goodbye to her friend.

Cast[]

  • Kanako Kado- Yuri Hirata
  • Yurico- Fuka
  • Professor Tanaka- Daniel Aguilar
  • National Guard Captain- Hideaki Anno (Friendship appearance)
  • National Guard member- Tatsutaka Kitaoka
  • Fujiko Kawado- Hiroko Sakurai
  • Staff- Mitsuko Hoshi
  • Chief Cabinet Secretary- Shigeru Araki
  • Reporter- Shinji Higuchi (Friendship appearance)
  • Deskappa- Kazunori Yokoo
  • Hankyolas- Toshio Miyake

Staff[]

  • Draft/Director/Special Director- Tomoo Haraguchi
  • Special Skill Assistant-Inuzo Nakamura
  • Executive Producer- John Silapera
  • Screenplay- Masada Umeda
  • Distribution- Interfilm
  • Production- Nikkatsu
  • Production- John Sirabella
  • Production cooperation-PARALLEL
  • Production-A FEVER DREAMS PRODUCTION

Titles[]

  • Deskappa (Original Japanese and Production title)

Release[]

the Japanese release of Death Kappa is six minutes longer than the version Media Blasters released in the United States, and includes an alternate ending in which a kaiju-sized Kanako, dressed like one of the Shobijin, soothes Death Kappa with her song.

Remarks[]

  • The battle between Deskappa and Hangyolas is directed by a wrestling broadcast by a pot and an announcer.
  • The version released earlier in the US has a different ending from the Japanese version.
  • A hint of " King Kong died. Godzilla retired. Who is Gamera ...?" is inserted in the trailers of both Japan and the United States.

DVD[]

Tokyo Shock DVD / Blu-ray + DVD (2010)

  • Region: 1 (DVD) or A/1 (Blu-ray)
  • Discs: 1 (DVD) or 2 (Blu-ray + DVD)
  • Audio: English (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 and 5.1), Japanese (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 and 5.1)
  • Subtitles: English
  • Special Features: "The Making of Death Kappa" featurette (11 minutes), extended version of the film's music video (5 minutes), pre-production promo films (5 minutes), still gallery (8 minutes), trailers for Death Kappa and other Fever Dreams films
  • Notes: Both the DVD and Blu-ray include all of the listed special features. Contains only the 79-minute version of the film.

Happynet DVD (2011)

  • Region: 2
  • Discs: 2
  • Audio: Japanese
  • Subtitles: English
  • Special Features: Three audio commentaries (staff, Misato Hirata and Mitsuko Hoshi, and audience reactions from a screening in Spain), American ending, trailers, featurette on a Death Kappa screening in Spain, other special features unknown

Tokyo Shock DVD / Blu-ray (2020)

  • Region: 1 (DVD) or A/1 (Blu-ray)
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: English (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 and 5.1), Japanese (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 and 5.1)
  • Subtitles: English
  • Special Features: To be announced
  • Notes: To be released on April 14.

Gallery[]

The Original japanese DVD release poster

a poster for the film.


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