The film tells three stories of lynching and punishment by the Yakuza during the Edo, Meiji, and Shōwa periods.
Panos Kotzathanasis from the website "Asian Movie Pulse" wrote: "The film unfolds in a frantic pace, with the succession of scenes being non-stop, in a tactic that definitely benefits the narrative, as it allows the story to unfold as a music video, at least in terms of speed.
Osamu Furuya’s cinematography presents images that definitely do now shy away from the violence, while the sudden zoom-ins on the faces of the characters inject the movie with a definite cult essence.
[1] Joey Shapiro writing for "Frame Rated" gave the film three out of five stars and called it a "fascinating monument to the glorious, messy, stomach-churning dawn of the modern exploitation flick.
"[2] Daniel Arboria from the "Horror News" stated: "Ishii also manages to make the film relatively compelling and fast-paced, hanging his torture games and murder set pieces on a well-worn framework, made up of the kind of questions of social responsibility and national identity that the Japanese will still be trying to process when the land of the rising sun eventually slips into the Pacific Ocean.