NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
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MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueKeiko and her friend are trying to find her missing brother after he disappeared visiting his girlfriend Yuko.Keiko and her friend are trying to find her missing brother after he disappeared visiting his girlfriend Yuko.Keiko and her friend are trying to find her missing brother after he disappeared visiting his girlfriend Yuko.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
Shigeo Katô
- Man from Ogawara Town Hall
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
NO SPOILERS
If you like Hammer style Vampire films.Give it a shot.TOHO has three Dracula films.This one, Lake Of Dracula and Evil of Dracula.All three are excellent in their original language versions.Now, don't expect "Victorian Era" vampire horror here, like in the Hammer films.This is Japanese after all.All three films have great atmosphere and some very creepy scenes.I write this review for this particular one because it has no other reviews.And it deserves one. TOHO is better known for its giant monster flicks(Godzilla etc.) I would assume most would shy away from a TOHO "Vampire" flick.Don't!! Its well worth your time.Very much out of character for TOHO and a darn good effort on their part.Its a shame many horror fans don't know of this or the other two titles.Its just one guys opinion that these films belong in any "Vampire" film lover's collection.
If you like Hammer style Vampire films.Give it a shot.TOHO has three Dracula films.This one, Lake Of Dracula and Evil of Dracula.All three are excellent in their original language versions.Now, don't expect "Victorian Era" vampire horror here, like in the Hammer films.This is Japanese after all.All three films have great atmosphere and some very creepy scenes.I write this review for this particular one because it has no other reviews.And it deserves one. TOHO is better known for its giant monster flicks(Godzilla etc.) I would assume most would shy away from a TOHO "Vampire" flick.Don't!! Its well worth your time.Very much out of character for TOHO and a darn good effort on their part.Its a shame many horror fans don't know of this or the other two titles.Its just one guys opinion that these films belong in any "Vampire" film lover's collection.
Despite its vampire titling, I would place this film more in the ghost-story genre (featuring that famous figure of Japanese horror cinema: the creepy, and ever-silent, female, child-like waif).
My short summary is that, in the end, the film does not quite capitalize on the wonderfully eerie mood it builds, but that it is well worth a watch and has some great (and occasionally scary) cinematic moments. (My main complaint is that the film ends up using what I will call the "Scooby Doo" reveal at several points, in that it employs both peripheral and central characters to tell us, in narrative format, the backstory: the who, what, where, when and why. It's a strange choice for a movie that relies so heavily on images and subtle expressions for the first 75% of the running time.)
While some have compared the film to the Hammer offerings, the moral universe here is not quite as "modern" in its themes, as its chief concerns are with familial loss, personal revenge and the ripples of social violence. (Even Hammer's historically oriented offerings-- say, the Witchfinder General or the Karnstein Trilogy-- tend to be preoccupied with much more contemporary themes.)
In terms of aesthetics, my own comparison would be to something like "Carnival of Souls" and, as a result of the really fine cinematography of Kazutami Hara, to something a Hitchcock understudy might have made. (My understanding is that the producers did want something like a Hammer-style vampire movie, but that the director was definitely looking for something in the Hitchcock vein. That might explain the somewhat disjointed style at points.)
Anyway, worth a watch, particularly as there are some really memorably unsettling episodes involving Yuko dispersed throughout the firlm. (The likes of Wei-Hao Cheng and Takashi Shimizu must have studied this film for inspiration.)
A side note: It's never developed enough to warrant extended consideration, but I could not help but notice the role that "the foreign" plays in this film (it's even more pronounced in "Lake of Dracula," the second installment in the trilogy). There are many instances where we learn that various male characters in movie have traveled beyond their homes / overseas as diplomats, to the US on business, in service for the war, etc., and that this contact or travel has unsettled the world in which they live. In at least two instances, this impact of foreign culture / foreign contact becomes very important to the narrative. It's easy to miss, but does some plot-work nonetheless.
My short summary is that, in the end, the film does not quite capitalize on the wonderfully eerie mood it builds, but that it is well worth a watch and has some great (and occasionally scary) cinematic moments. (My main complaint is that the film ends up using what I will call the "Scooby Doo" reveal at several points, in that it employs both peripheral and central characters to tell us, in narrative format, the backstory: the who, what, where, when and why. It's a strange choice for a movie that relies so heavily on images and subtle expressions for the first 75% of the running time.)
While some have compared the film to the Hammer offerings, the moral universe here is not quite as "modern" in its themes, as its chief concerns are with familial loss, personal revenge and the ripples of social violence. (Even Hammer's historically oriented offerings-- say, the Witchfinder General or the Karnstein Trilogy-- tend to be preoccupied with much more contemporary themes.)
In terms of aesthetics, my own comparison would be to something like "Carnival of Souls" and, as a result of the really fine cinematography of Kazutami Hara, to something a Hitchcock understudy might have made. (My understanding is that the producers did want something like a Hammer-style vampire movie, but that the director was definitely looking for something in the Hitchcock vein. That might explain the somewhat disjointed style at points.)
Anyway, worth a watch, particularly as there are some really memorably unsettling episodes involving Yuko dispersed throughout the firlm. (The likes of Wei-Hao Cheng and Takashi Shimizu must have studied this film for inspiration.)
A side note: It's never developed enough to warrant extended consideration, but I could not help but notice the role that "the foreign" plays in this film (it's even more pronounced in "Lake of Dracula," the second installment in the trilogy). There are many instances where we learn that various male characters in movie have traveled beyond their homes / overseas as diplomats, to the US on business, in service for the war, etc., and that this contact or travel has unsettled the world in which they live. In at least two instances, this impact of foreign culture / foreign contact becomes very important to the narrative. It's easy to miss, but does some plot-work nonetheless.
The first film in Yamamoto Michio's "The Bloodthirsty Trilogy" is usually viewed by fans of macabre cinema as the weakest of the three. Personally I find it stunning. Fully titled "The Fear of the Ghost House : The Vampire Doll" ("Yûrei yashiki no kyôfu: Chi wo sû ningyô") , Michio wasn't expected to turn in anything special for Toho (makers of the Godzilla films). just a simple pot-boiler rip-off of a typical European Horror.
Writers Hiroshi Nagano and Ei Ogawa however delivered a script which relied heavily on traditional Japanese ghost stories, which Michio then shot on Gothic style sets (the house, for example, is straight out of a Hammer, with oil portraits and suits of armour) with nods to western vampire tropes. The mix they created is intoxicating: full of atmosphere, genuinely creepy, and, in places, with unexpected scares of the quality of the earlier "Les Diabolics" or the later original "Ringu" ("Ring"). Highly recommended for anyone who likes classic horror, 1960s Hammer, or Asian Horror.
Writers Hiroshi Nagano and Ei Ogawa however delivered a script which relied heavily on traditional Japanese ghost stories, which Michio then shot on Gothic style sets (the house, for example, is straight out of a Hammer, with oil portraits and suits of armour) with nods to western vampire tropes. The mix they created is intoxicating: full of atmosphere, genuinely creepy, and, in places, with unexpected scares of the quality of the earlier "Les Diabolics" or the later original "Ringu" ("Ring"). Highly recommended for anyone who likes classic horror, 1960s Hammer, or Asian Horror.
After a strong success on European market from Hammer horror pictures, Toho decides to make their own Vampires movies, conceived as trilogy this very first enterprise "Yûrei yashiki no kyôfu: Chi wo sû ningyô" wasn't properly a Hammer production alike, it was adapted on Japanese folklore, the Vampire doesn't bite their victims, actually they living from black birds's blood, a girl from a cursed family, falling in love for a man, however she dies afterwards for an unknown reason, she becomes a vampire, his boyfriend looking for her and disappears without a trace, the his sister worried for his sudden disappearance asking helping for his boyfriend, at this point they find the place where an old and cold woman as a mother of the dead girl, they suspicious that woman didn't say the whole truth and starting making a investigation, too much valuable tale, surprisingly good!!
Resume:
First watch: 2019 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.
Resume:
First watch: 2019 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.
The Vampire Doll is the first film of what would later on become The Bloodthirsty Trilogy with Lake of Dracula and Evil of Dracula. Produced by Toho Studios, The Vampire Doll was directed by rather unknown director Yamamoto Michio who had been working as assistant director on Kurosawa Akira's Throne of Blood. The lead actresses and actors had also mostly played in low-budget gangster movies or television films. Nobody really expected this take on classic Western vampire stories to be a success but The Vampire Doll turned out being an incredibly atmospheric film that has stood the test of time.
The settings are perfectly chosen for this film that starts on a lonely road in rural Japan on a rainy night. The most important location is the secluded mansion inspired by Western culture with its elegant but old-fashioned decorations. The old cemetery that isn't taken care of blends in perfectly. Even the nearby sleepy village recalls elements of European horror literature and cinema.
The ominous, melodic and gloomy soundtrack fits perfectly as well. The sound effects of a wailing woman and angry birds intensify the atmosphere. The camera work is generally calm and precise and therefore surprises when sudden cuts take place to introduce quite efficient jump scares.
The acting performances are superb. Matsuo Kayo convinces as sympathetic lead actress who is very emotive and willing to risk her life to save her brother. Her more grounded and rational partner played by Nakao Akira complements her excellently. Minakaze Yoko excels as creepy lady who seems to have some skeletons in her closet. Takashina Kaku convinces as deaf employee with a hauntingly creepy look and rude manners. Every single actor and actress involved performs with passion and talent that is unusual for such a low-budget horror movie. It's something that is very rarely seen nowadays.
The story isn't the most creative one and obviously inspired by classic European horror films but it's told in a steady pace that will keep you entertained from start to finish. The movie revolves Sagawa Kazuhiko who had spent six months abroad and wants to see his fiancee Nonomura Yuko again. When he arrives at her family mansion, he is told by her mother that she died two weeks earlier in a tragic traffic accident. About a week later, Sagawa Kazuhiko still hasn't returned home and his sister Keiko starts to be worried. She convinces her fiance Takagi Hiroshi to visit the family mansion where her brother was headed for. When they arrive, they are told that her brother left the day after he was told that his fiancee had died but Keiko senses that strange things are going on in the mansion. Her fiance and she decide to stay to investigate the family's sinister past in a nearby town. The further they investigate, the more their lives are getting in danger.
If you like classic atmospheric horror movies, you will adore The Vampire Doll. The settings, effects and acting are still superb by contemporary standards. It's the best horror film I have seen in a long time and I would both revisit it again soon and recommend it to my friends.
The settings are perfectly chosen for this film that starts on a lonely road in rural Japan on a rainy night. The most important location is the secluded mansion inspired by Western culture with its elegant but old-fashioned decorations. The old cemetery that isn't taken care of blends in perfectly. Even the nearby sleepy village recalls elements of European horror literature and cinema.
The ominous, melodic and gloomy soundtrack fits perfectly as well. The sound effects of a wailing woman and angry birds intensify the atmosphere. The camera work is generally calm and precise and therefore surprises when sudden cuts take place to introduce quite efficient jump scares.
The acting performances are superb. Matsuo Kayo convinces as sympathetic lead actress who is very emotive and willing to risk her life to save her brother. Her more grounded and rational partner played by Nakao Akira complements her excellently. Minakaze Yoko excels as creepy lady who seems to have some skeletons in her closet. Takashina Kaku convinces as deaf employee with a hauntingly creepy look and rude manners. Every single actor and actress involved performs with passion and talent that is unusual for such a low-budget horror movie. It's something that is very rarely seen nowadays.
The story isn't the most creative one and obviously inspired by classic European horror films but it's told in a steady pace that will keep you entertained from start to finish. The movie revolves Sagawa Kazuhiko who had spent six months abroad and wants to see his fiancee Nonomura Yuko again. When he arrives at her family mansion, he is told by her mother that she died two weeks earlier in a tragic traffic accident. About a week later, Sagawa Kazuhiko still hasn't returned home and his sister Keiko starts to be worried. She convinces her fiance Takagi Hiroshi to visit the family mansion where her brother was headed for. When they arrive, they are told that her brother left the day after he was told that his fiancee had died but Keiko senses that strange things are going on in the mansion. Her fiance and she decide to stay to investigate the family's sinister past in a nearby town. The further they investigate, the more their lives are getting in danger.
If you like classic atmospheric horror movies, you will adore The Vampire Doll. The settings, effects and acting are still superb by contemporary standards. It's the best horror film I have seen in a long time and I would both revisit it again soon and recommend it to my friends.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe Vampire of the film is known as a kaijin, a Japanese word that means mysterious person and is used for supernatural humans of humanoid monsters.
- ConnexionsFeatured in House: The State of Japanese Cinema in the 1970s (2018)
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By what name was Yûrei yashiki no kyôfu: Chi wo sû ningyô (1970) officially released in Canada in English?
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