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Matango il mostro

Titolo originale: Matango
  • 1963
  • VM14
  • 1h 29min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,4/10
3767
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Matango il mostro (1963)
KaijuMonster HorrorSupernatural HorrorHorrorMysterySci-FiThriller

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaShipwrecked survivors slowly transform into mushrooms.Shipwrecked survivors slowly transform into mushrooms.Shipwrecked survivors slowly transform into mushrooms.

  • Regia
    • Ishirô Honda
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Takeshi Kimura
    • Shin'ichi Hoshi
    • Masami Fukushima
  • Star
    • Akira Kubo
    • Kumi Mizuno
    • Hiroshi Koizumi
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,4/10
    3767
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • Shin'ichi Hoshi
      • Masami Fukushima
    • Star
      • Akira Kubo
      • Kumi Mizuno
      • Hiroshi Koizumi
    • 89Recensioni degli utenti
    • 48Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto48

    Visualizza poster
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    + 43
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    Interpreti principali29

    Modifica
    Akira Kubo
    Akira Kubo
    • Kenji Murai - Professor
    Kumi Mizuno
    Kumi Mizuno
    • Mami Sekiguchi - Singer
    Hiroshi Koizumi
    Hiroshi Koizumi
    • Naoyuki Sakuta - Skipper
    Kenji Sahara
    Kenji Sahara
    • Senzô Koyama - Sailor
    Hiroshi Tachikawa
    • Etsurô Yoshida - Writer
    Yoshio Tsuchiya
    Yoshio Tsuchiya
    • Masafumi Kasai - Owner
    Miki Yashiro
    • Akiko Sôma - Student
    Hideyo Amamoto
    Hideyo Amamoto
    • Skulking Transitional Matango
    Takuzô Kumagai
    • Doctor
    • (as Jirô Kumagai)
    Akio Kusama
    • Police Personnel
    Yutaka Oka
    • Doctor
    Keisuke Yamada
    • Doctor
    Kazuo Hinata
    • Police Personnel
    Katsumi Tezuka
    Katsumi Tezuka
    • Police Personnel
    Haruo Nakajima
    Haruo Nakajima
    • Matango
    Tokio Ôkawa
    • Matango
    Kôji Uruki
    • Matango
    Masaki Shinohara
    • Matango
    • Regia
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • Shin'ichi Hoshi
      • Masami Fukushima
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti89

    6,43.7K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8Coventry

    Mightier than Mothra, deadlier than Godzilla… Mushrooms!

    Purely because not all their contemporary monster movies could feature big mutated lizards (Godzilla), flying turtles (Gamera) or humongous moths (Mothra), the Japanese also made a monster movie with giant … mushrooms! Well, I say "the Japanese" but basically it's once again just the one and only legendary director Ishirô Honda who was responsible for yet another imaginative and extremely entertaining cult classic. Honda was an amazingly talented director and he single-handedly directed Japan's finest genre milestones. So… mushrooms! Yes I know this sounds incredibly idiotic and the international title "Attack of the Mushroom People" also strengthens the suspicion that we're dealing with a silly and light-headed B-movie, but this honestly is a very competent and admirably atmospheric tale of terror! Seven prominent citizens, including a university professor, a writer and a famous pop singer, turn their back on the stress of Tokyo for a holiday on a luxurious sailing yacht. There's a lot of flirting, laughing and "La La La La" singing on board, but then a massive thunderstorm turns their yacht into a heavily damaged piece of driftwood and the group washes ashore a mysterious fog-enshrouded island. With a food supply of barely one week, the group rapidly falls apart due to intrigues and selfishness, and what's the deal with those ominous mushrooms that grow all around the island? They also stumble upon a large and stranded research vessel that is overgrown with fungus and the same damn mushrooms! The survivors instinctively know they shouldn't eat them, but what else are they supposed to do when there's no more food? I consider myself very lucky and privileged because I was able to see the original Japanese-language version of "Matango" on a big cinema screen, during a little festival in my country with a focus on botanical- themed horror movies. Granted, the picture quality was quite creaky and the film was interrupted every 10 minutes due to technical reasons, but the charm and nostalgia value of an early '60s film on the big screen is irreplaceable! The concept of the film is one of the most original in horror cinema history, and director Honda maintains an unsettling atmosphere throughout. He achieves this thanks to subtle camera work, eerie sound effects & music, embittered character drawings and frightening monster designs and set pieces. Yes, the mushroom-monsters definitely DO look creepy and the large vessel is truly nightmarish!
    falmoury

    a new video master in Tohoscope widescreen available

    First a correction : the making year and distribution release year in Japan of MATANGO is 1962 and not 1963. It is of course a very good movie from Inoshiro Honda, the father of "Kaiju Eiga" and every cinephile knows what that means. Besides, it is a "Kaiju eiga" (= "monster movie" as trasnlated in English) quite closer to horror than to science-fiction, even it is also a sci-fi, including mentions of the atom research in the ghost boat in which the survivors are living. It is closer to BINJO TO EKITAI NINGEN [L'HOMME H] (Jap. 1958) than to GOJIRA (Jap. 1954), both directed by Honda, if you want to have a comparative idea. Anyway, it is a very original movie in Honda carrier. Even it can remind, as a cultivate reader mentionned it, a W.H.Hodgson's novel. But were the Japanese scriptwriters aware of that source ? Interesting question. I am glad to announce you that in France, a smart distributor has bought the rights from Toho and distributed that movie in a beautiful Cinemascope complying with 16/9 TV screening : it has been shown on Canal + private famous French TV but I do not think it is available on DVD or video.

    It was around one or two years ago and we have been able to discover it in original japanese langage with French subtitles : beautiful master and beautiful movie. Honda is my favorite horror and sci-fi movie director with regard to history of Japanese movie. I have recently written an "Elementary filmography of Kaiju Eiga" in which Inoshiro Honda has of course the main place, as far as Toho is concerned. MATANGO is a masterpiece.
    bruce-129

    A certain something...

    If you look around on the Internet you can see that almost all the entries for this movie, are above average and there are probably a million different reasons for that. I think they all have in common that somehow this movie really gets people on a sub-conscious level and represents something.

    I remember seeing this movie at various times growing up on the late night horror shows, in Houston, Texas, called "Weird" and "Late Wierd", and then in California on "Creature Features".

    There is something about watching this movie about a groups of somewhat related friends who are out on a cruise in their rich friends sailboat, well, actually the exact details escape me, and I am not sure that the English tranlation accurately tells what was supposed to be going on in the original story.

    The boat is caught in a storm, and they drift through heavy fog to a deserted island where everything is misty, moist, and fungus ridden. To survive they look for food, and find that people have been to the island before, in fact a large group of people on a freighter ship that has wasted away.

    There are some clues on the ship as to what happened, and some strange goings on that stress these "friends" to the breaking point, and their cohesion starts to unravel.

    There is just something special about this eerie and fun movie that if I ever see it in DVD format I will pick it up.
    7youroldpaljim

    If you are in the mood for a bizarre, imaginative, nightmarish fantasy, see this film.

    I have noticed that many of the commentators in this forum have stated that this film gave them nightmares. No wonder. This film based on William Hope Hodgson's novel "The Voice in the Night", has a plot that is so bizarre that it could only have been inspired by someone's nightmares. The premise of intelligent fungus luring people to eat them and then the people slowly turn to "mushroom people" is so nightmarishly creepy that I can't imagine that Hodgson (or anyone else) could of dreamed this idea up when he was wide awake.

    MATANGO (aka ATTACK OF THE MUSHROOM PEOPLE) is a surprisingly low key atmospheric Japanese horror fantasy. The film is a bit slowly paced at times and too much time is spent on the castaways bickering amongst themselves. There are some elements that I suspect were better developed in the novel. One scene has the two female castaways hearing the voices of dead relatives trying to lure them into the rainforest. This never occurs again and leads nowhere. I'm sure the stuff about nuclear experiments was not in Hodgson's novel. However, the art direction is excellent, the music creepy and the final sequence memorable. Overall, the boys at Toho did a good job.

    I don't care what the Medvids think of this film, or the pseudo hip MST3K crowd thinks either, your old pal jim says, see this one.
    8ceolen@humboldt1.com

    Even better in black and white

    When I first saw this film on a local late-night horror movie show, it was the late 1960s and our family hadn't yet purchased a color TV. Growing up with films and TV shows produced and viewed in B&W made me sensitive to the unique qualities of this medium, particularly the way in which it focuses the viewer's attention on the quality and play of light. It is this element of "Matango" which most impressed me—the cold ethereal light of the fog-shrouded forest covered in great lumps of pallid fungus sent a real shiver down my back. Although I had cut my teeth on such midnight horror movies, this one actually stole away my sleep for a couple nights!

    Over time I had lost track of this film. The Saturday Night horror show became a thing of the past and no one seemed interested in rebroadcasting these old films. Then very recently, on a lark, I asked our local (independent) video rental place if they had this film in their data base, and Lo! there it was, available on VHS. They ordered it, held it for me, I rented it and prepared to sit down and be scared by it again after a hiatus of over 25 years.

    Imagine my surprise to find that the film is in color! In color, it didn't have the same impact at all as it did when I watched it on our B&W TV back home. Quickly, before it got too deep into the story, I changed all the settings on my TV to a nicely balanced black and white, and WOW! There it was, the scariness, the moodiness, the mystery, and the visual subtleties which make it a very nice piece of art.

    Really, folks—you gotta see this film in black and white to really appreciate how well it was photographed, lighted, constructed and dressed. This is quite a gem of a film, but one which should have been in black and white to begin with.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      The film was nearly banned in Japan. The makeup some characters wore as they were turning into humanoid mushroom creatures was very similar to how many Japanese people looked after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
    • Blooper
      When Kasai shoots at Yoshida and Mami as he chases them off the boat, you can see the bullets ricochet off the ground before he even fires a shot.
    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The opening credits of the Japanese version are on animated sailboat sails.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into Gli ultimi giorni dell'umanità (2022)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • novembre 1973 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Giappone
    • Lingua
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Attack of the Mushroom People
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Hachijôjima, Giappone
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Toho
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 29 minuti
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.55 : 1

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