Visitor Q cover art

Visitor Q Details

2001 Certificate 18
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 2814 members

In Miike Takashi's outrageous, taboo-busting satire Vistor Q, shamed reporter Kiyoshi Yamazaki visits one of Japan's many comfort houses to make a documentary about sex and violence amongst the nation's youth and is surprised to encounter his nubile daughter there. Soon after he meets "Q", an enigmatic stranger, and invites him .. Read more

Starring Kenichi Endo, Shungiku Uchida, Kazushi Watanabe
Director Takashi Miike
Genres Drama, World Cinema

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Visitor Q

In Miike Takashi's outrageous, taboo-busting satire Vistor Q, shamed reporter Kiyoshi Yamazaki visits one of Japan's many comfort houses to make a documentary about sex and violence amongst the nation's youth and is surprised to encounter his nubile daughter there. Soon after he meets "Q", an enigmatic stranger, and invites him to visit his family home. Upon entering this dysfunctional world, "Q" sets about teaching each family member a unique and special lesson. But will he succeed in creating domestic harmony?

Starring Kenichi Endo, Shungiku Uchida, Kazushi Watanabe
Director Takashi Miike
Studio PALISADES TARTAN
Run time DVD: 1 hr 26 mins
Certificate Certificate 18
Genres Drama, World Cinema
Language DVD: Japanese
Subtitles DVD: English
Released DVD: 24 May 2004
Production year: 2001
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews (3) of Visitor Q

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  • An excess too far. Miike uses a satire on reality TV as an opportunity to break as many taboos as possible: it begins with a teenage prostitute seducing her father, then takes in sadistic bullying, mother-bashing, murder and an extended sequence of necrop

    • Halliwell's Film Guide
  • Made for peanuts and shot on DV, this phenomenally provocative film may well turn out to be Miike's masterpiece. A... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • Most helpful member's review of Visitor Q

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  • 30 out of 32 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Strangest Miike yet...

    Without a doubt, this is the strangest Miike film to date...Mid-way between the high-camp farce of 'Happiness of the Katakuris' and the twisted S&M madness of 'Ichii the Killer', it hits at every taboo imaginable. At times the humour verges on slapstick - the father, having just raped and strangled a co-worker, preparing to dismember her body in, of all places, a completely glass-walled greenhouse - at others, it is so dark it's painful to watch - the son beating his mother, and her tears as she attempts to cover up the resulting scars all over her body - this is a Japanese Mike Leigh on acid...Miike, in many of his films, seems to capture a twisted hysteria lurking at the heart of Japanese society, a society where cannibal killers become celebrities, and where a hegemony of abuse is simply an accepted part of life, amongst school children and adults, and from the cradle to the grave...Many of Miike's films seem to reflect on the immaturity of the Japanese, and the fear that the old (particularly older males, as Japan is still very much a patriarchal society) feel towards the changes - in perception, attitudes and desires - amongst young people in modern Japan...'Visitor Q' particularly highlights a growing dissafection with the traditional mainstay of Japanese culture - the family unit - and the subservient role of women and children within it, a role that has changed, and continues to change, irrevocably as more and more outside influences flood in - particularly the wholesale adoption and adoration of American cultural iconography - threatening to overwhelm what are seen as 'traditional' values...'Visitor Q' as with many of Miike's films, however, can be enjoyed simply as a sick, slick, twisted and darkly amusing comedy...This is the family that put the 'fun' in disfunctional...And their mysterious Visitor (the 'Q' of the title, one assumes...) although a million miles away from the visiting angel in 'The Bishop's Wife', has, in the end, the same effect, healing this terminally warped family...but in absolutely the least predictable way imaginable! If you're easily shocked, then don't bother. You won't enjoy this, and it'll only make you get all steamed up and onto your moral high-horse...'Visitor Q' has to be watched with a healthy and open mind...

      • Lucy Swan from Edinburgh
  • Most recent members' review of Visitor Q

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  • 3 out of 4 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    I tried

    Normally i try to watch a film to the end before i feel i have the right to pass a judgment on it, but sadly i could not do it on this occasion, i hate censorship in a film anyway, this film had a stupid muffled effect over most of the sex scenes, so why release it over here. Besides this the film was still a self indulgence at our expence, i have watched many japanese films over the years this has to be one of the worsed.

      • A customer from UK
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Rating breakdown

2,814 Member ratings
  • 100
230
  • 90
175
  • 80
354
  • 70
370
  • 60
468
  • 50
295
  • 40
309
  • 30
222
  • 20
244
  • 10
147

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    • In Miike Takashi's outrageous, taboo-busting satire Vistor Q, shamed reporter Kiyoshi Yamazaki visits one of Japan's many comfort houses to make a documentary about sex and violence amongst the ...