• Director(s)

    Eiichi Kudo

  • Production Year

    1969

  • Genre(s)

    Action, Drama

  • Approx. running minutes

    98m

  • Cast

    Bin Amatsu, Kanjûrô Arashi, Hideo Fujimoto

Film

Bounty Hunter: The Fort of Death

strong violence, bloody images, sexual threat

BOUNTY HUNTER: THE FORT OF DEATH is a Japanese action drama, from 1969, in which a physician famed for his fighting skills and sense of justice comes to the aid of oppressed villagers taking a stand against a ruthless clan lord.

BOUNTY HUNTER: THE FORT OF DEATH is a Japanese action drama, from 1969, in which a physician famed for his fighting skills and sense of justice comes to the aid of oppressed villagers taking a stand against a ruthless clan lord.

violence
Strong violence includes shootings, slashings and stabbings with bladed weapons, and strikes with arrows, which are occasionally accompanied by blood spurts. A man whose arm is severed during a sword fight realises he has no chance of survival and chooses to take his own life by cutting his throat in undetailed, but bloody, fashion.
sexual violence and sexual threat
A woman is set upon by a group of men who tear down her robe, although there is no strong nudity; the men draw straws to determine who will be the first to violate her, but an intervention stops the sexual threat from going further than its establishment. There are also scenes in which two different women, both with mental health issues, make uninvited sexual advances on men who rebuff them.
injury detail
There is dismemberment and decapitation, as well as other bloody injury, in the aftermath of violent events.
There is moderate threat from guns, swords and other weapons. Moderate sex references include a man raising a finger and wiggling it in a suggestive manner as he comments on another man's reluctance to take up a woman's offer of sex, and he describes her as "begging for it". There is also brief breast nudity, and comments about STDs. There are references to mental health, and the death of a child. There is mild bad language ('bastard'). There is mild rude humour as a man urinates on a large gun to cool it down after it becomes hot during prolonged use in a battle.
  • Director(s)

    Eiichi Kudo

  • Production Year

    1969

  • Genre(s)

    Action, Drama

  • Approx. running minutes

    98m

  • Cast

    Bin Amatsu, Kanjûrô Arashi, Hideo Fujimoto

strong violence, bloody images, sexual threat
Classified Date:
19/01/2024
Version:
2D
Use:
Physical media + VOD/Streaming
Distributor:
Radiance Films
violence
Strong violence includes shootings, slashings and stabbings with bladed weapons, and strikes with arrows, which are occasionally accompanied by blood spurts. A man whose arm is severed during a sword fight realises he has no chance of survival and chooses to take his own life by cutting his throat in undetailed, but bloody, fashion.
sexual violence and sexual threat
A woman is set upon by a group of men who tear down her robe, although there is no strong nudity; the men draw straws to determine who will be the first to violate her, but an intervention stops the sexual threat from going further than its establishment. There are also scenes in which two different women, both with mental health issues, make uninvited sexual advances on men who rebuff them.
injury detail
There is dismemberment and decapitation, as well as other bloody injury, in the aftermath of violent events.
There is moderate threat from guns, swords and other weapons. Moderate sex references include a man raising a finger and wiggling it in a suggestive manner as he comments on another man's reluctance to take up a woman's offer of sex, and he describes her as "begging for it". There is also brief breast nudity, and comments about STDs. There are references to mental health, and the death of a child. There is mild bad language ('bastard'). There is mild rude humour as a man urinates on a large gun to cool it down after it becomes hot during prolonged use in a battle.
  • Classified date

    19/01/2024

  • Language

    Japanese