Black Tight Killers (俺にさわると危ないぜ, Ore ni Sawaru to Abunaize), literally - "Touching me is dangerous" is a 1966 Japanese film directed by Yasuharu Hasebe and based on the novel 三重露出 by Michio Tsuzuki.
[8] Jonathan Crow of Allmovie notes that the influence of Hasebe's mentor Seijun Suzuki can be seen in Black Tight Killers.
Like Suzuki, he uses the tropes of the gangster genre to create "a pop-art dreamscape" with "tail fins, flawless fashion, sudden and unexpected go-go dancing, cool jazz, and freakish violence".
Hasebe's quirky use of gaudy color is singled out for comment in the review, which judges the film to be "wild, decadent fun".
[10] In his survey of the pink film genre, Steve Fentone sums up Black Tight Killers with, "Chix with guns.