The Warped Ones

“An unrestrained banshee wail of libidinal frenzy and lunatic vengeance.”-Chuck Stephens, Criterion

(Kyonetsu no kisetsu, a.k.a. Season of Heat, a.k.a. The Weird Love Makers). A nihilist screech dedicated to deafening everything that came before it, The Warped Ones is New Wave gone violent punk, and as breathless and berserk a film as any ever sponsored by a commercial studio. Tamio Kawaji (a member of Nikkatsu's “Bad Boy Trio”) mugs like a homicidal, psychopathic Jerry Lewis as a juvenile delinquent with a taste for anarchy, destruction, and bebop; “I need some black music!” he wails, before setting off on a one-man war vaguely aimed at a journalist and his artist girlfriend, but encompassing the police, horny Westerners, and even Japanese beatniks. (“What extraordinary Fauvism! Your eyes reflect boredom with modern society!” cries a group of finger-snapping artistes this rude boy stumbles across, in a scene more Herschell Gordon Lewis than Jean-Luc Godard). The film's startling freeze-frames, crazed camera whirls, and other visual intoxications are as nervy as any in the French and Japanese New Wave, but The Warped Ones seethes with a Nietzschean fury all its own, too antisocial to be part of any contemporary movement, and about twenty years too early for punk.

This page may by only partially complete. For additional information about this film, view the original entry on our archived site.