The film's limitations are as obvious as any bop on the nose. It was shot for tuppence-ha'penny (or local equivalent) on a handful of easily redressed, easy-to-hose-down sets: in the prison washroom, the urinals and showers are too close for comfort, while the staircases are the wobbliest since TV's Crossroads. The overemphatic American dubbing of the international release print makes it hard to take wholly seriously, because a film where a punched head explodes like a watermelon really doesn't need further emphasis. Tune all that out, however, and your bounteous reward is a pacy run of ever more inventive and energetic scenes: a cemetery flashback where an uncle trains Ricky by hurling gravestones in his general direction (bit disrespectful to the dead, but a useful marker that anything goes here); a hook-handed deputy warden, occupying an office where the sole bookcase is apparently filled with VHS porno, chugging the water from the receptacle his glass eye is soaking in; Ricky performing midfight surgery on himself, shortly before his foe commits seppuku and uses his own intestines to try and strangle our boy. Evidently, little of it was meant for the Ladies in Lavender crowd, but your inner 15-year-old cannot help but thrill to the accumulation of cool, freaky and/or lurid shit. One reason for Riki-Oh's semi-occasional revivals - in repertory, on DVD, and now on streaming - is that it is in its own way as oppositional as Ricky himself, its every baroque turn showing up the listlessness and imaginative shortfalls of both the lumpen van Damme/Lundgren thumpers the studios were peddling at the time, and the superhero movies that followed in its wake. Even on a shoestring budget, it says, all this is possible in the cinema - and yet the movies have persistently settled for that instead. Which is the real dystopia? You be the judge.
Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky is currently streaming via Prime Video, and available to rent via YouTube.
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