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6,5/10
1,7 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe head of a yakuza gang is being trailed by a mysterious, vengeful blind woman.The head of a yakuza gang is being trailed by a mysterious, vengeful blind woman.The head of a yakuza gang is being trailed by a mysterious, vengeful blind woman.
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Avaliações em destaque
All I have to say is that them Japanese seem like they have way too much fun sometimes. Lots and lots if bloody sword fighting. Eccentric characters. The plot is straightforwards although it jumps around to odd places here and there. Not for everyone thats for sure.
'Blind Woman's Curse (1970)' is a bit of a mishmash of genres, a female yakuza semi-exploitation movie by way of early J-horror such as 'Kuroneko (1968)'. It's the first starring role for the piercingly beautiful Meiko Kaji and it showcases her steely gaze, strong constitution, gentle strength and capacity to kick ass right out of the gate; it's easy to see why she became such an icon. The film is mostly successful despite the disjointed nature of its relatively loose narrative, kept afloat by a bevy of colourful side characters and the never-quite-delivered-on promise of powerful otherworldly intervention. It establishes itself as an interesting endeavor right from its opening titles, which play over a battle that ensues after the lead reveals her gang's dragon tattoo which slithers its way across all of their backs. The narrative's most intriguing elements are relegated to the background for a lot of its runtime, but even the standard gang v gang stuff is compelling enough for what it is. Everything comes to a head in a brilliant final movement which begins with a striking sequence of a gang's march to war in front of an ominous blue sky, proceeds to feature several stabbings and slashings which spew geysers of ruby red blood, and ends with a one-on-one battle set in a surrealist arena marked by strange swirling clouds and the heavy presence of long-held hate. It's a really strong note on which to end and it makes up for the flick's slower portions towards its midsection. Still, this ultimately isn't as good as some of the films it obviously heavily inspired ('Lady Snowblood (1973)', for instance) and almost feels like a fairly standard entry in its specific subgenre. It has all the right elements but doesn't quite combine them in the most potent way. It's an enjoyable but relatively forgettable affair.
For me, nothing illustrates the yawning chasm between Eastern and Western culture as effectively as a film like Blind Woman's Curse. What might seem perfectly reasonable to a Japanese audience can be totally perplexing to an Englishman like myself. Of course, a film like Blind Woman's Curse, which features some truly 'unique' (for want of a better word) scenes, might seem just as baffling to the average Japanese person; it's hard to be sure. Suffice to say that the film, written and directed by Teruo Ishii (so you know there'll be some torture there somewhere), doesn't play out in predictable fashion. Or perhaps it does, if you're Japanese.
Gorgeous Meiko Kaji plays sword-swinging Akemi, leader of the Tachibana gang, who avenges her father's death by attacking the Goda gang. While dealing several deadly blows to the Goda boss, Akemi accidentally blinds his sister Aiko (Hoki Tokuda), who stupidly gets in the way. Akemi sees a black cat slurping up the girl's blood and believes herself to be cursed.
Three years later, Akemi is released from jail, and resumes leadership of her gang, but other organised criminals have their eyes on the Tachibana territory. Up and coming gang boss Dobashi (Tôru Abe) uses Tachibana traitor Tatsu to help him seize control, but is also assisted by a mysterious blind woman who is deadly with a blade.
Now this might sound like the makings of a rather routine tale of revenge, but trust me, the film is far from straightforward. For starters, one of the gangs is led by a man in a loincloth, who suffers from terrible body odour. Then there's the little matter of the weird hunchback (Tatsumi Hijikata) who lives in a theatre full of realistic looking wax heads and who cackles maniacally like Salacious Crumb; did I mention that he has the power to reanimate the dead by licking them? As for the black cat that haunts Akemi's dreams... it shows up from time to time, flying across the screen on clearly visible wires, occasionally making off with tattooed skin flayed from the backs of members of the Tachibana gang.
Throw in opium addict sex slaves, a zombie who loses his head, and lots of bright-red blood (including that Japanese favourite, excessive arterial spray), and what you have is a film that is definitely different, but not one that I can wholeheartedly recommend because it is so uneven, awkwardly lurching from yakuza gang drama, to supernatural thriller, to avant-garde arthouse flick.
5.5/10, rounded up to 6 for the spiral cloud backdrop during the final fight between Akemi and Aiko. Very cool!
Gorgeous Meiko Kaji plays sword-swinging Akemi, leader of the Tachibana gang, who avenges her father's death by attacking the Goda gang. While dealing several deadly blows to the Goda boss, Akemi accidentally blinds his sister Aiko (Hoki Tokuda), who stupidly gets in the way. Akemi sees a black cat slurping up the girl's blood and believes herself to be cursed.
Three years later, Akemi is released from jail, and resumes leadership of her gang, but other organised criminals have their eyes on the Tachibana territory. Up and coming gang boss Dobashi (Tôru Abe) uses Tachibana traitor Tatsu to help him seize control, but is also assisted by a mysterious blind woman who is deadly with a blade.
Now this might sound like the makings of a rather routine tale of revenge, but trust me, the film is far from straightforward. For starters, one of the gangs is led by a man in a loincloth, who suffers from terrible body odour. Then there's the little matter of the weird hunchback (Tatsumi Hijikata) who lives in a theatre full of realistic looking wax heads and who cackles maniacally like Salacious Crumb; did I mention that he has the power to reanimate the dead by licking them? As for the black cat that haunts Akemi's dreams... it shows up from time to time, flying across the screen on clearly visible wires, occasionally making off with tattooed skin flayed from the backs of members of the Tachibana gang.
Throw in opium addict sex slaves, a zombie who loses his head, and lots of bright-red blood (including that Japanese favourite, excessive arterial spray), and what you have is a film that is definitely different, but not one that I can wholeheartedly recommend because it is so uneven, awkwardly lurching from yakuza gang drama, to supernatural thriller, to avant-garde arthouse flick.
5.5/10, rounded up to 6 for the spiral cloud backdrop during the final fight between Akemi and Aiko. Very cool!
The way this film juggles being a samurai/yakuza, crime, and horror film all at once is quite impressive, and keeps things from feeling predictable. It's worth watching to see all those genres in play at once.
I think it may have become a little less satisfying in the second half, with maybe more characters than it needed, and Meiko Kaji (who's great here) unfortunately gets a little less focus in that back half.
It comes together well enough by the end at least, and the action's pretty good, the samurai/yakuza stuff is fun, and the horror elements work well, leading to a couple of creepy sequences. It's an odd and pretty good movie overall.
I think it may have become a little less satisfying in the second half, with maybe more characters than it needed, and Meiko Kaji (who's great here) unfortunately gets a little less focus in that back half.
It comes together well enough by the end at least, and the action's pretty good, the samurai/yakuza stuff is fun, and the horror elements work well, leading to a couple of creepy sequences. It's an odd and pretty good movie overall.
Meiko Kaji spends 3 years in jail for avenging her Yakuza father, and on her release she inherits the leadership of the Tachibana gang. They're quite a nice bunch, for Yakuza, but a nasty rival gang are bent on taking over their territory. As if that wasn't bad enough, she appears to be under the curse of a black cat that got a taste of her victim's blood...
The film takes a broadly familiar period-Yakuza story and mixes it up with elements of horror and... strangeness, making for an intriguing cocktail of styles, moods and ideas. Teruo Ishii was one of the premier visual stylists of the Japanese exploitation wave, and this film shares the style even though it's relatively light on the exploitation. The plot is straightforward but the details make it interesting, and having Meiko Kaji as the lead actress certainly helps there too.
Good stuff!
The film takes a broadly familiar period-Yakuza story and mixes it up with elements of horror and... strangeness, making for an intriguing cocktail of styles, moods and ideas. Teruo Ishii was one of the premier visual stylists of the Japanese exploitation wave, and this film shares the style even though it's relatively light on the exploitation. The plot is straightforward but the details make it interesting, and having Meiko Kaji as the lead actress certainly helps there too.
Good stuff!
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesNOBORI RYU series. #3 and final in series.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen the woman is pulled up the well, the man who holds the rope suddenly runs away and lets go of the rope. The woman should instantly fall back down to the bottom of the well but she does not. Another man grabs the rope a couple seconds later to prevent a fall that did not happen.
- Citações
Akemi Tachibana: Tatsu, You're too filthy even for the Yakuza.
Senba-tatsu: Thanks and you're too pretty. Go home and scrub the floor.
- ConexõesFeatured in Kain's Lists: Top 5 Badass Women BEFORE Princess Leia (2017)
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- How long is Blind Woman's Curse?Fornecido pela Alexa
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- Data de lançamento
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- Também conhecido como
- The Blind Woman's Curse
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- Tempo de duração1 hora 25 minutos
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- 2.35 : 1
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