Karate Bullfighter
Karate Bullfighter
| 09 August 1975 (USA)
Karate Bullfighter Trailers

Sonny Chiba plays Kyokushin Karate founder Masutatsu Oyama, who unexpectedly arrives at a karate tournament in rags, but wins the tournament. After turning down the chance to fight at future tournaments he returns to his simple village life. He reluctantly returns to karate for a final showdown against the students of a rival school.

Reviews
Contentar Best movie of this year hands down!
BoardChiri Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay
BelSports This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Ariella Broughton It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.
bob the moo This film is a biography of Korean karate master Oyama, whose students include the actor that drew me to watch this film, Sonny Chiba. I wasn't sure how I felt about a film about someone who, ignore the one heroic bull fight shown here, he did make a career out of "fighting" and killing tamed and tethered bulls with his bare hands; given my feeling on blood sports generally, this seemed to be a rung down the ladder from even those. That said I thought I'd watch the film to see what Chiba could do. The first thing that hits you is that the film has dated and unfortunately it is well enough made that it has not dated in a cheesy enjoyable way.The story told here is interesting enough in its very brisk flit through the early life of Oyama. We see his frustration with the world of karate, his killing in self-defence of a man and his subsequent attempts to make it right in regards the man's widow and young son. There isn't a lot of drama in the telling though and not a great deal of characterisation to gets one teeth into – interesting in the overview to a point but not a gripping story. This leaves the martial arts action to carry the burden and this it does, to a point. The fights are reasonably enjoyable but they are pretty "straight" in their delivery with very little in the way of impressive choreography or design to them. They aren't helped much by the very shaky camera which doesn't look like a deliberate choice since it tends to detract rather than add (those that think the Bourne movies etc just have "shaky cameras" should watch this to see the difference between it working as a device and not working as a device). The actions and tough standoffs are quite good though, but having Chiba in there makes them a bit better.As a physical presence I didn't see here why he has a big name, since to my amateur eye he is not as good as others I have seen make it into film, but he does have a decent presence as a leading man in this film. Yamaguchi maybe doesn't make this a thrilling martial arts film that I was hoping for, but there are some very good locations that are used well, a rain storm, the long grass of fields etc that I thought looked better than they played out.Maybe I'll try the rest of this short series of films from Chiba, but on the basis of this one I'm not so sure. It lacked a strong plot and characters to draw me in and the action was solid but not spectacular or thrilling. Still a solid martial arts film, but not a great deal more than that.
Witchfinder General 666 "Kenka Karate Kyokushinken" aka. "Karate Bullfighter" (1975) is the first film of the Oyama Trilogy, starring Sonny Chiba as the legendary real-life Karate master Mas Oyama (1923-1994). The collaboration of two prolific Japanese Exploitation filmmakers, "Karate Bullfighter" was scripted by Norifumi Suzuki ("Sex and Fury", "Girl Boss Guerilla"...) and directed by Kazuhiko Yamaguchi ("Delinquent Girl Boss - Worthless to Confess"), and, in regard of that it is actually pretty tame. Even though violent, the film is nowhere near as gory as some Chiba highlights (such as "The Street Fighter" or "The Executioner"), and while he often plays anti-heroes, he plays an overall very heroic and moral character here (though some of his deeds lack morality).After WW2, martial arts were banned in Japan by the Americans for a short time period. At one of the first Karate tournaments after the war, in 1949, a man dressed in dirty rags beats all the well-established masters. The rag-clad champion is Mas Oyama (Sonny Chiba). Since he detests how Karate 'is becoming a dance', conflict is inevitable... While this film is an account of Mas Oyama's life, it is obviously highly fictionalized. As the title already suggests, Chiba fights a Bull in this film - which, to my surprise, the real-life Mas Oyama actually did over 50 times in his life. Other events, such as the scenes in which he fights small armies of armed men, killing many of them, are probably fictitious. The real May Oyama himself appears in the credit sequence, practicing Karate. Sonny Chiba is great as always, both in his incredible martial art skills and his charismatic screen presence. Chiba's younger brother Jirô Chiba plays his disciple, Masashi Ishibashi ("The Steet Fighter") plays the bad guy, and the beautiful Yumi Takigawa ("Graveyard of Honor", "School of the Holy Beast") is lovable and innocent as Oyama's girlfriend.Overall, I personally still like Chiba best when he plays brutal anti-heroes as in "The Street Fighter", but this is doubtlessly another fantastic Karate flick with the man. I am now eager to watch the two sequels, "Karate Bear Fighter" and "Karate For Life", which are supposedly even better than this one. Highly recommended to my fellow Sonny Chiba fans.
whos_your_buddy This movie would receive a much higher vote from me in general and I will talk about why, but first and foremost it receives four stars and should stay at four stars because of the directors ridiculously tasteless portrayal of rape and sexual assault. Not far into the movie Oyama sexually assaults a woman he rescued earlier, and while she briefly becomes somewhat miffed by his actions this attitude only lasts about five minutes before loving adoration sets in and carries her character through the rest of the film. I know many will argue that it's not that important in a kung fu beat-em-up, and as a fan of the genera I can't say that it's all that unusual, but that doesn't stop it from being completely tasteless every time I see it.What I will say in this movie's defence however is that it's somewhat refreshing to see a martial arts, or even action movie of any sort, that offers no actual hero for the viewer to get behind. Oyama is portrayed as a rapist and murderer; a societal outcast whose only student becomes completely mentally unbalanced before being gunned down by the police. The final shots of the movie leave one with the feeling that Oyama himself is poised for a major breakdown and no longer seems to care for the woman he earlier assaulted into loving him and has since followed him with puppy-dog like devotion.Whether this was truly the intended message of the movie or not, one can't help but feel a little hopeful that Oyama might be on the brink of suicide by the time the movie is over. This is a rare emotional treatment from the martial arts genre and its interesting to see a film that leaves you with a sense that its violence is not to be celebrated. If only Karate Bullfighter had treated the subject of sexual violence better, either by creating more emotional depth and recognition between the two characters involved, or by leaving it out all together, this would have been a much more interesting film.
Golgo-13 Sonny Chiba, as everyone knows, is the man. In this film, he portrays Mas Oyama (1923-1994), a real martial artist who fought over 50 bulls with his bare hands…and won (interesting guy…look him up). Anyway, Chiba only kills one bull in the film but it's a memorable scene and as the liner notes say, right up there with the zombie vs. shark scene in Zombi! The film also offers up loads of hand-to-hand combat and a decent plot to boot, though I don't believe all of it is true. This film is the first of the Oyama trilogy Chiba made and is recommended for fans of martial arts action. Finally, three neat little tidbits; part of the opening theme was used in Kill Bill Volume 1, Oyama himself appears in the opening sequences, and that is because he trained Chiba in real life for five years!