Young Yakuza
- Year:
- 2007
- 90 min
- 60 Views
When I started this film,
there were 86 301 Yakuzas in Japan,
spread over a number
of crime syndicates.
Yakuza is a
professional gambling word.
Literally ya-ku-za means
eight-nine-three.
So, how is your son
Naoki?
At the moment, he's at home.
But I did want to
speak to you about him.
I thought so.
In trouble again?
He's always in trouble.
The police keep calling.
I don't know what to do.
He doesn't even have a job?
No, he does nothing all day.
Here's what I propose...
You may think it odd but,
you could send him to the boss.
He's a yakuza, no?
Yes, he is.
No, I don't want that.
If it were another
yakuza clan,
suggested it.
But everyone knows
Kumagai here.
We've all known him forever,
we know how he climbed
the ladder to get where he is.
You can't go wrong.
it to my parents,
or the people I know.
The yakuza world
can be a place
where he can learn
good manners and perseverance.
Then he can decide
if he wants to be a yakuza.
He's no longer a child.
He can decide himself
what he wants for his future.
In any case, this apprenticeship
will only last a year.
It goes by quickly.
without your permission.
But if you wish,
I will speak to your son.
- I'll go.
- Fine.
May we come in?
Please excuse me.
This is Naoki, Mrs. Watanabe's son.
Delighted.
My name is Watanabe.
Sit down.
He told me about you.
You know your mother, you and I,
are all from the same neighbourhood.
It's as if we were
all the same family.
But tell me,
what do you think of our milieu?
To be honest...
I don't really know any yakuzas.
I have friends who are familiar
with yakuzas from films or books.
But I'm not really.
Until now, I know
nothing about the milieu.
At the moment,
I don't have a steady job.
I do nothing all day.
I spoke with M. Imai
who said this was
a good chance...
He advised me to come here
as an apprentice.
I was just thinking
that it was time to change.
I couldn't just go on
doing nothing.
So, I thought that this was
a good opportunity for me.
During your apprenticeship,
you will see many things.
I am warning you,
they will not all be positive.
Human relations are
not always easy.
Of course,
it is an apprenticeship,
and your first experience.
And everything you see,
what you feel,
every experience you have...
whether it is good or bad,
can be a lesson.
What you deem to be good,
you will take on board,
and what you deem to be bad,
you will reject.
You will be your own judge.
Trust your instinct.
Good luck.
By the way, how old are you?
And that haircut is fashionable,
for young men of your age?
No, not really.
But I didn't have time
to get a haircut.
If you want to be
an apprentice here,
you need to be free to move.
You can't have messy hair.
You need to have short hair
to be able to react immediately.
Go to the barber tomorrow,
get your hair cut.
- Is that clear?
- Yes.
We will leave you now.
Goodbye.
- Good luck.
- Thank you very much.
- How old are you?
- 20 years old.
You're so lucky!
- You think?
- Yes.
At 20, I was
in a motorcycle gang.
Is that so?
What about you?
- Yes, when I was 16.
- Really?
- Just for a day.
- One day? What put you off?
In fact, what happened was...
my friends absolutely
wanted me to join.
They kept bugging me...
I was going to say yes.
But then they wanted me
to curl my hair.
A perm?
I didn't want to.
I said if that was the condition,
I would quit.
And you left after one day?
Get changed. You can't wear
your own clothes anymore.
You wear this uniform.
You can throw out the rest.
"Please excuse me."
You have to bow low down.
Your arms by your sides,
and really mean what you say.
"Please excuse me."
Again.
Yes, not too bad.
But really mean what you say.
When you're leaving you say:
"Excuse the interruption."
Yes, that's it.
In the morning, when the boss arrives:
"Good morning, boss."
"Good morning, boss."
In here, are the boss's
cups and glasses.
- All these?
- Yes, this is all for the boss.
Here, are the guest glasses,
and here,
the H.Q. chief's things.
Here, are the guest cups,
and here, are our ones.
And all the dishes above,
belong to the boss.
are the boss's.
Those are for the deputy chief,
those for the H.Q. chief.
Here, there are less than usual.
They're for the guests.
That's the boss's kettle.
This one is for us.
- Be very careful.
- OK.
That's the boss's fridge.
Everything in there,
is for the boss.
Can you get me a coaster?
of folding the shibori?
Yes.
We'll go in together.
"Please excuse me."
First,
put down the shibori.
The name should be on this side.
- The name on the cup?
- Yes, facing him.
You place the shibori on the right.
Then you say:
"Excuse the interruption."
- How old are you?
- 26 years old.
I'm only 20.
You look older.
I get that a lot.
You look much older.
Really?
That old?
- Have I met everyone yet?
- Not yet.
It's stressful.
At the start, that's normal.
It's stressful.
Scary ones?
No, I don't think so.
Really?
You'd think in a place like this,
there would be.
- Really...
- You're sure?
The concrete jungle
You wander, bad boy solitaire
Full of dreams
You land in Tokyo
In a state
You understand nothing
Freezing wind whips your cheeks
In this shitty town
You show your teeth
You fight your demons
At the crossroads, you must choose
Life or death
All or nothing
Your life on the line
No room for error
In this concrete valley
You're petrified
You lose your bet
Your dreams collapse
It's a dead end
Totally lost
Left, right?
No one to help
Dead or Alive
Always
Wandering
With no end
Dead or Alive
In this labyrinth
Follow your path to get there...
Companies and businesses
use these stickers.
"No entry
for criminal organisations."
The police give them out.
business owners and managers.
They're doing it everywhere.
They organise meetings
in rented halls,
or in their offices...
Anyway, it doesn't matter...
In these meetings,
the police...
give out information...
on the clans operating
in such and such a zone.
In addition...
the police give instructions
to businesses.
They tell them
not to give in
to the demands
of criminal organisations.
I think they give people
lots of information
they wouldn't normally have.
The first time I saw that,
I was raging.
I thought:
"Are they trying to abolish us?"
Now, I don't even
notice it anymore.
They made these stickers,
they stick them up
and won't let us in.
Let them!
We'll find other ways
of getting by.
The first time I came
to this neighbourhood,
I must have been 9 years old.
This shopping mall
is the cheapest
in all of Shinagawa.
At the time,
I lived in Oimachi with my family.
I remember
we would come here by train
to do our shopping.
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