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The Best Japanese Horror Films of All Time, Part 2
by Dejan
Ognjanovic
HAUNTED
PAST, PSYCHOTIC PRESENT, DYSTOPIAN FUTURE
1. Ghosts
2. Psychos (1): PSYCHO OBSESSION
3. Psychos (2): SERIAL KILLERS
4. Futuristic (cyberpunk) horrors
5. A league of their own
-----------------
2. PSYCHOS
The very first glance at the bulk of Japanese horror
films reveals at least two notable conclusions. The
first is the sheer bulk of horrors about psychos,
madmen, human killers. Even if you discard the direct-to-video
exploitation splatter sickies, you're left with an
incredible number of relevant, high quality horrors
dealing with this subject. After all, this is the
primary reason for dividing this chapter on the best
Japanese horrors of all time into two parts. There's
just way too many good Japanese horrors dealing with
psychos. The second thing that one notices immediately
is that Japanese psychos are quite different from
the Western ones. Apparently, there is a widespread
psychosis inherent in the contemporary Japanese society
that a lot of people can relate to and maybe even
recognize their hidden feelings and urges in the acts
of violence perpetrated so often on cinema and video
screens. And there are many elements within this madness
that make it typically Japanese.
Western psychos are often slaves of the past: the
roots of their insanity lie in some trauma from the
past, and usually closely connected with their parents.
'My sick mother/father made me do it!' Boys brought
up as girls, girls brought up as boys, boys confused
about sex due to a strict religious education, things
like that. The shadow of Norman Bates (PSYCHO) looms
large over all those. Of course, in slasher flicks
psychos are taken for granted, they are ready-made
monsters that require no elaborate explanation or
motivation. Madness is an alibi enough in itself,
now let's get to the real business, which is –
slashing oversexed teenagers. Those papier-mache 'psychos'
are mostly inspired by Michael Myers (HALLOWEEN),
and often wear masks which further distance them from
humanity and recognizable motivation.
Japanese psychos, on the contrary, are not so much
slaves of the past as they are of the present. Even
when their motivation can, at least in part, be linked
to some family ties, their madness seems to be primarily
nourished by the society en large. Rather than products
of disfunctional families, Japanese psychos are, by
and large, products of the contemporary Japanese society
where alienation, distance and detachment, lack of
affect, indifference towards others and selfishness
seem to be rules of the day. The necessity to succeed
in an over-competitive community produces a lot of
strain. Fear of failure is haunting people on every
step of the societal ladder, from the elementary school
via university all the way to the eventual job one
(hopefully) gets. When there is so much pressure,
of course there will be outbursts of outrageous, often
violent reactions. That is why violence in Japanese
films has such orgasmic qualities, rarely achieved
in their Western counterparts. While not always convincing
on the most literal, physiological level, the Japanese
geysers of blood are more than convincing as portrayals
of psychological truths: they are vents in a pressure-cooker
of a strongly dehumanized society.
For the sake of clarity this overview of Japanese
psychotronic cinema is divided into two parts. Part
one deals with horrors in which psychosis is seen
'from inside': madmen are their main characters, and
the viewer spends most of the time in the claustrophobic
confines of their insane microcosm, sharing their
sicko frame of mind. These madmen are governed by
obsessions, weird passions and perversions which are
predominantly sexual. In many respects they live like
'otakus', a particularly Japanese phenomenon to be
elaborated on below. Part two of this overview is
devoted to horrors in which, instead of a limited
microcosm, psychosis is seen in a wider context, 'from
outside'. These films often have a structure of a
police procedural (as exemplified by the blueprint
provided in SE7EN), or sometimes of a slasher-drama.
More about those in the next chapter: for now, let's
go back to our obsessive friends.
PSYCHO OBSESSION:
When Japanese are obsessive about something
or someone, the results are often more extreme than
anywhere else in the world. At least that's what we
learnt from their movies. Just look at that classic
conclusion of Oshima's IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES
(1976) where the strong passions lead a possessive
woman to cut off her lover's penis. The strict rules
of propriety, decency, hierarchy etc. through the
ages have created a rather rigid context which is
always a fertile ground for unbridled outbursts of
vehement passion. That's why even the classical Japanese
literature (should I remind you of Yukio Mishima?)
and cinema (A WOMAN IN THE DUNES, IN THE REALM OF
THE SENSES,...) abound in outrageous psychosexual
acts.
Modern Japan has provided a context for a new kind
of psychos embodied in the 'otaku' figure. While most
of these are quite harmless, the extremities of their
lifestyle sometimes lead to unspeakable violence.
Otakus are teens or twens, mostly boys. They despise
physical contact and live a mediated 'life' through
the media (TV, video, DVD, internet), technical communication
and simulation in general. "Identity diffusion
syndrom" and an "ego vacuum" have today
become the 'normal' state of affairs. Distance and
detachment govern their lives. Yamazaki Koichi, a
historian of Japanese everyday life and an authority
on otaku, sees the origin of this social phenomenon
in the changes in Japanese culture in the '70s. Otakus
are the children of media and technology. They grew
up as only child with daddy always out at work, and
mummy very eager that her son studies hard so he can
enter a good university so he can enter a good company.
The cliche Japanese success story. And the kid goes
into hiding behind piles of toys, comics, and play
machines. There is a communication breakdown between
parents and their children, which transcends the usual
generation gaps found elsewhere.
The severe communicational barriers between parents
and children led to a series of killings of parents
by their sons. It started in 1980 when a boy, who
would today probably be called an otaku, had slain
his parents with a metal baseball-bat. The 'kinzoku
bat murderer', as he was known, was followed up by
five or six other youngsters in a very short time.
The most famous case was revealed in July 1989 when
Miyazaki Tsutomo (27) was arrested for the suspected
abduction and murder of four girls age four to seven
and the attempted molestation of another girl. His
case is paradigmatic for numerous otaku-like psychos
that are later found in the movies like ALL NIGHT
LONG, EVIL DEAD TRAP 2 etc. In his room in Tokyo were
found piles of manga and a collection of 6000 videotapes,
including child pornography and horror-videos. He
was socially isolated, didn't dare approach women,
was working as a printing shop assistant, was crazy
about video and comics, and drew comics himself. He
took videos of two of his victims so he could view
them later on. He claimed that he commited the crimes
as if in a dream and without intent. The defense counsel
contended that he was emotionally immature and had
difficulty making a distinction between himself and
others. "He lacks understanding of life and death,
and has a strong desire to return to his mother's
womb," the defense counsel said. The defense
argued that the audiovisual culture of videotapes
and television, the lack of a sense of reality in
the information society and the isolation of youth
are behind the crime as sickness of modern society.
There is an even more extreme sort of otaku called
'hikikomori', a name which refers to those who retreat
from society into complete nothingness, holing themselves
up in their bedrooms at their parents' homes and doing
anything to fill the hours. One of them writes: ''I
sleep until my eyes are about to rot. I see dreams.''
The sickness of modern society, indeed. It's embodied,
among other things, in the 'rorikon', or 'Lolita complex',
named after Vladimir Nabokov's novel. It signifies
the strange sexual taste for teenage girls which is
so widespread in Japanese popular culture, including
movies, that Western viewers are often confounded
(or attracted!) by the omnipresent fetishism of schoolgirls'
uniforms, white panties etc. as seen in the films
like WIZARD OF DARKNESS, FUDOH, and their more extreme
direct-to-video brethren.
All of this creates a very peculiar cultural background
in which psychos are not isolated incidents or exceptions,
but embodiments of a pervasive social malaise. Here
are the best Japanese films dealing with the obsessions
which, no matter how personal and individual they
may seem, always represent a madness much wider...
and deeper. If you look long enough into these psychos'
worlds, who knows – maybe they’ll start
looking back!
-----------------
ONIBABA
aka THE HOLE, 1964
Dir: Kaneto Shindo
KFCC
Review: Click
Here!
A young woman and her mother-in-law live alone
in a huge marsh. It is a time of unrest: a civil war
is raging, and in their backwater seclusion they merely
try to escape destruction and survive. Their mode
of survival is ingenious: they seduce and kill the
wandering samurai and live off selling their armor.
The story proper begins when their son's/husband's
friend returns from the battle with the news of his
death. The man goes back to his old shack in the marsh
nearby. He introduces the element of unrest in the
women's life. The subdued passions start raging just
like the winds which constantly blow the reeds around
them. The older, but still attractive woman decides
to scare off her son's wife in her nocturnal vistis
to the neighbor using a demon-mask stollen from a
recently killed samurai...
While the lonely women from Japan's middle ages cannot
be called 'otaku', their seclusion from the rest of
the world and complete devotion to immoral passions,
disregarding the consequences, makes them direct ancestors
of modern-day urban psychos. As serial killers motivated
by survival, they are clearly products of unstable
times with shaky moral values. Their psychosis becomes
apparent only when the sexual drive is introduced:
it is the mirror which finally shows their distorted,
demonic faces. Shindo's stunning black-and-white photography
portrays them with a mixture of sympathy and detachment,
never losing sight of the wider context of their setting.
The reeds in constant waves, never still, provide
a suitable metaphor for the tumults of their society
but also of the waves of passion and wild nature which
emerge from beneath layers of 'civilization'. Crucified
between Eros and Thanatos, the two women are as powerless
as their victims, 'like flies to wanton gods'...
MOJU,
aka THE BLIND BEAST, 1969
Dir: Yasuzo Masumura
KFCC
Review: Click
Here!
A blind sculptor kidnaps a model in order to study
her beauty in captivity and create a masterpiece inspired
by her perfect proportions and texture. He imprisons
her in a black room decorated only with enlarged bas-reliefs
of female lips, eyes and other body parts. After several
unsuccessful attempts to run away, she accepts her
destiny, and begins a genuinely disturbing relationship
with an already demented artist which leads to an
outrageous culmination.
This is the grand-daddy of all later, idiosyncratically
Japanese products which manage the impossible –
merging of sado-erotic exploitation with the genuine
artistic exploration. No one is better than the Japanese
when it comes to providing the sensual titillation
at the same time with intellectual stimulation! The
above synopsis could be mistaken for the plot of some
Z-grade schlocker of Jesus Franco or Ted V. Mikels,
but in this Oriental instance it is treated with all
seriousness and artistry of a legitimate 'festival
flick'. Inspired by the story of Japanese Edgar Allan
Poe – Edogawa Ranpo – Masumura's film
is a masterful examination of voyeurism and fetishism
inherent to all cinema. It is a masterpiece in which
the very texture of the film, with its claustrophobic
and surreal design, becomes the objective correlative
of its ideas and obsessions, and strikes you subconsciously,
sidestepping reason and logic, and haunting you forever
with the imp of the perverse you'd never known you
had.
EVIL
DEAD TRAP 2: Hideki
Dir: Hashimoto Isou
KFCC Review: Click
Here!
A fat, asocial projectionist lives her life of
quiet desperation with occasional outbursts of hatred
towards normal women expressed through violent butchering
in which their wombs are extracted. When her sole
acquintance (it would be too much calling them 'friends')
gets a boyfriend, a very intimate rage starts brewing...
Oh, yes, there will be blood!
(P.S. There is no real connection with either first
or third part of EVIL DEAD TRAP: their sole connection
is in the haphazard title, and thus each can be viewed
independently. Part I is discussed in the next chapter,
while part III is disappointing, unoriginal and boring,
and does not merit inclusion among the all time best.)
Depression, sexual frustration and feelings of
low self worth govern the world of EDT2: it is a claustrophobic,
gloomy microcosm of meaningless existence, a death
in life which turns into a 'death to life' stratagem
of survival, as embodied in the killer's focus on
victims' wombs and ovaries. Very few films, either
Japanese or otherwise, have managed to capture with
such chilling beauty and terror the desolation of
a character driven beyond the normal existence. As
it usually happens in the best examples of this sub-genre,
the world of alienation and emotional distance is
not limited to the private world of a psycho: it merely
coalesces the forces at work in a much wider context.
Rarely has the world of 'normalcy' looked as repulsive
as here. Rarely has Tokyo looked as devoid of human
life as here. Excellent photography, with vivid, Argentoesque
colors and a haunting electronic score create an ambiance
that is at the same time stylized and frighteningly
real. The elliptical narration may alienate some viewers,
but reason and logic have died long ago for our protagonist,
and the greatest achievement of EDT2 is in capturing
her outlook and feelings without too many words. The
sights and sounds manage just fine. Through the bulk
of this film bloodletting is present, but not excessive;
in the final scenes, however, it becomes copious beyond
belief. The final two chapters on the DVD are called
'Blood Balet' i 'Prelude to Madness'. Check out why.
ALL NIGHT LONG 2: ATROCITY, 1994
Dir: Katsuya Matsumura
A shy otaku boy becomes a prey of an amoral bisexual
lad and his group of thugs. At first he's merely bullied,
but later becomes their disciple in the art of humiliation
and torture. Otaku resists, but when his cup is filled
he turns against his 'teachers' in an orgy of unspeakable
bloodshed.
This is the second, and by far the best part out of
five (so far) in a highly intriguing and quite intelligent
series dealing with the violence in contemporary Japan.
More specifically, it coldly depicts the process of
contamination with violence, in which victims easily
turn into tormentors. It portrays the nihilistic landscape
in which brutality seems to be the only accessible
'language' of communication between people reduced
to objects. This parable of alienated Japanese youth
is filled with brutal sexual violence (where rape
is only the beginning) and imaginative, copious torture
and splatter. It's bleak beyond belief: no one gets
out of here alive or sane. There are no 'normal' bonds:
no parents, no lovers, no friends. All characters
are reduced to either subjects or objects of desire.
Rape or be raped. Kill or be killed. Survival of the
fittest at the price of sanity (and humanity). Dehumanized,
soulless creatures roam the lifeless scenery of Tokyo
where electric and phone wires only stress the distance
between people. Loud airplanes provide the soundscape
for the apocalyptic devastation in which no exit is
in sight. There is no salvation, everyone is doomed
from the very beginning, and various acts of violence
are just pointless twitches of the death nerve.
While this description goes for more or less all five
parts of this series (all directed by Matsumura!),
part II is exceptionally good because a) it has more
likeable characters; b) it is most convincing in presenting
a genuine Sadean philosophy; c) the torture is incredibly
vicious even for Japanese standards. Highly recommended
only for the strongest stomachs!
MERMAID
IN A MANHOLE, 1995
Dir: Hideshi Hino
KFCC Review: Click
Here!
A painter discovers a real mermaid in the sewer.
She's half-dead already. He tries to save her, or
at least to preserve her through his art. Her skin
decays in scabs and boils filled with blood and pus,
while worms and centipedes emerge constantly... Seeing
that there's no way of saving her body, he becomes
obsessed with an attempt to create the ultimate portrait
- painted with her blood and multicolored pus.
Even the most hard-hearted splatter fans will
have a hard time stomaching this gruesome flick since
it contains some of the most outrageously disgusting
images ever committed to screen. However, beyond the
oozing body liquids, vomit, crawling vermin and body
parts, a careful viewer will notice a dark Cronenbergian
poem about human mortality and transcience of all
ideals and dreams. Its utlimate nihilism seems to
be the suggestion that not even art can transcend
the loathsome facts of life regulated by the biological
determinism. The flesh is weak... and bloody... and
slimy... and there's no escaping it! The only faults
in this film can be found in its low-budget origins
(spare sets and not always superb make up effects),
visulas sometimes cheapened by the video technique,
and poor acting by some side-characters. This is by
far the most original, inspired and intelligent part
of the otherwise boring and puerile GUINEA PIG series.
(P.S. The GUINEA PIG films are worth mentioning only
as a peculiar socio-cultural phenomenon, as the epitome
of the trend in which sadistic torture of women is
sold as 'entertainment', and also as a showcase for
quite convincing make up effects. However, they have
no other merits and are not worthy to be discussed
among 'the best' Japanese horrors.)
GEMINI,
1999
Dir: Shinya Tsukamoto
KFCC Review: Click
Here!
A long-lost twin returns to his brother, a respected
surgeon in early 20. century. He throws the doctor
into a well and assumes his role. The doctor is left
to ponder his attitude towards his underprivileged
patients as well as mysteries connected with his wife's
past...
This
is Tsukamoto's successful attempt to create a genuine
Japanese gothic with such ingredients as: family secrets,
doppelgangers, mysteries of identity and unrecognized
kinship, stormy nights and unexpected, violent twists...
GEMINI is a highly stylized film in which for the
first time in Tsukamoto's opus one can find colors
like golden-yellow, green, violet, red... Even in
this costumed, period piece Tsukamoto continues his
obsessive scrutiny of the Japanese identity through
the character of a man who discovers unknown possibilities
within himself (usually with the 'help' of a femme
fatale). Rather restrained, GEMINI uses only sporadic
bursts of frenetic camera movements or trade-mark
quick shock cuts. The music by Tsukamoto regular Chu
Ishikawa is (as always) pure genius.
AUDITION,
1999
Dir: Takashi Miike
KFCC Review: Click
Here!
A widower organizes an audition for non-existent
film in order to meet a perfect wife. He gets far
more than he bargained for: a beautiful, but mysterious
girl whose idea of possessiveness transcends all boundaries
of normality..
Great
success at international film festivals brought a
revelation to the Western public: an ingenious auteur,
a mad genius of unpredictabilty - the one and only
Takashi Miike. The film opens like a deliberately
paced drama with hints of wry humor and satire on
Japanese men's attitude towards women, dating, sex,
etc. Then it progresses into the darkly bizarre territory
reminiscent of later Cronenberg (a great influence
on Japanese filmmakers, both with his early SF-horrors
and with his later disturbing psycho-dramas). Towards
the end, however, it grabs you by the throat and punches
you in the face, guts and groin with unexpected, yet
quite meaningful scenes of unpalatable torture and
terror, both physical and emotional. The shocking
ending will devastate you not only with its perfectly
directed visceral imagery but also by its implications.
This is a haunting, multilayered, thought-provoking
masterpiece of first order and one of the most important
films made in any country, any genre, anywhere in
the past decade.
Dejan
Ognjanovic
07/17/2006
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