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IMDbPro

L'effrayant Docteur Hijikata

Original title: Kyôfu kikei ningen: Edogawa Rampo zenshû
  • 1969
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
L'effrayant Docteur Hijikata (1969)
Body HorrorFolk HorrorHorror

After escaping from an insane asylum, a medical student assumes the identity of a mysterious dead man, who appeared to be his doppelganger, and gets lured to a sinister island ruled by a mad... Read allAfter escaping from an insane asylum, a medical student assumes the identity of a mysterious dead man, who appeared to be his doppelganger, and gets lured to a sinister island ruled by a mad scientist and his malformed men.After escaping from an insane asylum, a medical student assumes the identity of a mysterious dead man, who appeared to be his doppelganger, and gets lured to a sinister island ruled by a mad scientist and his malformed men.

  • Director
    • Teruo Ishii
  • Writers
    • Teruo Ishii
    • Masahiro Kakefuda
    • Rampo Edogawa
  • Stars
    • Teruo Yoshida
    • Yukie Kagawa
    • Teruko Yumi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Teruo Ishii
    • Writers
      • Teruo Ishii
      • Masahiro Kakefuda
      • Rampo Edogawa
    • Stars
      • Teruo Yoshida
      • Yukie Kagawa
      • Teruko Yumi
    • 35User reviews
    • 61Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos97

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Teruo Yoshida
    Teruo Yoshida
    • Hirosuke Hitomi…
    Yukie Kagawa
    • Shizuko
    Teruko Yumi
    • Hideko…
    Mitsuko Aoi
    • Toki Komoda
    Michiko Kobata
    • Chiyoko Komoda
    Yumiko Katayama
    • Female Patient A
    Kei Kiyama
    • Kei
    Reiko Mikasa
    • Mad Woman
    Miki Obana
    • Slashed Woman
    Kyômi Sakura
    • The Nurse
    Michi Tanaka
    • Kin
    Yoshiko Katô
    • Masseur
    Asano Kanamori
    • Female Patient B
    Yôko Koyama
    • Miki
    Chiyo Okada
    • Clerk
    Mie Hanabusa
    Mie Hanabusa
    • Mie
    Sumie Ozawa
    Masaomi Kondô
    • Takeshi
    • Director
      • Teruo Ishii
    • Writers
      • Teruo Ishii
      • Masahiro Kakefuda
      • Rampo Edogawa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.42.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7kluseba

    A murder mystery thriller that turns ino a supernatural horror film

    Horrors of Malformed Men is a quite experimental movie by veteran director Ishii Teruo that has been inspired by the tales of famous mystery and horror author Edogawa Rampo who had himself been inspired by Western authors such as Edgar Allan Poe. This experimental movie at the pulse of its time combines several of these tales. The main issue is that this fusion isn't always fluid and leads to two completely contrasting parts.

    The first half of the movie is a murder mystery tale. A medical student without any recollection of his past is trapped in a sinister asylum. He manages to escape when one of the guards attempts to murder him. The fugitive discovers the photograph of a recently deceased man from a prosperous family who looks exactly like him. The medical student decides to take the dead man's identity to find out the truth about his origins and escape from the police.

    The second half of the movie is a supernatural horror tale. The medical student travels to the island of a mad scientist who transforms perfectly normal humans into hideous freaks to create a better society. He gets captured, manipulated and threatened by the scientist and attempts to escape the island and prevent the scientist's megalomanic plans.

    It's probably a matter of prefence whether you prefer the first or the second half of the movie but they are so different from each other that few people will equally appreciate both parts. The first half is atmospheric, mysterious and surprising as it convinces with clever storytelling and intriguing characters. It recalls numerous European murder mystery films as especially the German Edgar Wallace films and the Italian giallo genre come to mind. The second half is much more brutal, experimental and frantic and ventures into experimental cinematography with hectic camera work, numerous flashbacks and colourful locations. It's a mixture of Japan's very own pink film genre of the sixties and American pre-war science-fiction and horror cinema somewhere between King Kong and Island of Lost Souls.

    In the end, Horrors of Malformed Men is certainly daring, entertaining and unconventional. However, the script is all over the place and the conclusion might even be too unconventional for most open-minded cineasts. Ishii Teruo should have created two different movies here instead of putting together two ideas that don't gel.
    Elvoid

    A Doctor Moreau... that's Japanese.

    It's funny that Ishii says he was not familiar with the Moreau storyline because this flick looks so much like a crazy adaptation for it. Not an intense feature but one that will serve you very memorable freaky and somewhat psychedelic moments that, out of the wild context, will remind you of all the Japanese contemporary horror everyone yells for (think Ring, Dark Water as much as video games like Siren and Project Zero...). Very poorly written plot, but who cares when they're served such crazy visions and a final I would place in my top 10 of mindblowing movie endings - but that's just me... That's a very hard to see movie, and well worth seeing if you get the chance.
    8Boba_Fett1138

    A rewarding movie.

    If you can stick this movie out till the end, you'll get a very rewarding movie. It's not the easiest movie to watch and it didn't seemed at first to me that this movie was going to be much good early one but it's definitely a movie that gets better in its second halve, when there is more story and the movie its visuals become just great to watch.

    It's a quite surrealistic Japanese movie, that relies heavily on its visuals. There are some amazing visuals throughout the movie, with also the thanks of the phenomenal camera-work. It's an artistic movie above all things, so beware of what to expect.

    Of course there is also a story but this one is quite hard to follow at times. It isn't until the movie reaches its halve way point that it becomes more or less more clear in which direction the story is going. The movie soon becomes a sort of a surrealistic Japanese version of the Island of Dr. Moreau. I think those that are familiar with this story, or any of the other movie versions of the story will be more able to understand and appreciate this movie.

    For a Japanese movie it also features quite some good acting. It's an obviously well cast movie, in which the actors don't act in a very theatrical way, like you might expect from a Japanese movie. Especially surprising also since this movie got made back in 1969.

    After finishing watching this movie I simply must say that I overall enjoyed it and found it to be an ultimately rewarding movie to watch, though it's obvious that this is not really a movie for just everyone.

    8/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    6ChungMo

    Bizarre attempt to mix horror with Butoh dance

    Postwar Japan gave birth to probably one of the most consistently weird dance forms, Butoh. It rather hard to describe except that the processions of anguished clay caked naked bodies and rag covered transvestites makes me think of a nuclear holocaust. Since Japan is the only country with any experience with the horrors of a nuclear holocaust, it isn't surprising.

    We open with a dazed man in the middle of a cage of naked crazy women in a mental institution. We soon learn that he's an inmate as well. He is haunted by an odd children's lullaby. That night a strange bald man tries to kill him but instead our hero kills the bald man and escapes. Our hero hears the unusual lullaby and finds a circus performer who seems to come from the same remote place on the coast. He makes his way to the coast and finds out that a rich man who looks exactly like him has just died. He digs up the body and switches clothing becoming the dead man mistakenly buried too soon. Our hero then attempts to discover the strange secrets of the dead man's family while trying to imitate the deceased.

    After watching this production I am very interested in why this film has been banned in Japan for so long. There are plenty of films that are WAY MORE DISTURBING, disgusting or horrifying from Japan, some made the same year! The most likely part is the second half of the film when the Butoh dancers are given plenty of screen time but much of it is mystifying to me rather then disturbing. The couple of torture scenes are rough but not worse then anything I've seen from any pinku film.

    Anyway the film is quite good for the first half and starts to fall apart during the second half. It seems the the director and his camera person really didn't know what to do with the Butoh dancers. We get a number of very striking Butoh scenarios, poorly filmed (compared to the excellent filming in the rest of the film), that go by with the main characters just gazing on in disbelief. No real connection to the plot.

    An interesting experiment.
    8Indyrod

    And you thought your Father had problems...

    Wow, this is a must have for Japanese horror fans, and can you believe it, banned for all those years. Outstanding story involving a man finding his way back to his origins, which include his Father making malformed men, and ladies. My favorite, the goat women. This is quite a gruesome horror film from 1969 or so, that got banned in Japan, and therefore restricted everywhere. Don't worry, it's available now, and you need to see it, before it disappears again. Great DVD too, as it contains a commentary from some historians that will bore you to death. It did me at least, but nothing could damage my affection for this excellent shocker for the times. You thought your Father had problems, wait until you meet this dude. I like this one, it is decadent, gruesome, and has some naked girls. And should I forget, a pretty shocking depiction of the result of malformed men. Yes, Malformed Men, you have been warned.

    Related interests

    Jeff Goldblum in La Mouche (1986)
    Body Horror
    Florence Pugh in Midsommar (2019)
    Folk Horror
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Although this film had built a reputation, it was not available for viewing in the United States for 40-50 years. It finally was released on DVD in the U.S. but some, if not all, did not contained English dubbing or subtitles. Lack of theatrical showings was possibly due to the extensive topless nudity throughout the film. It was reportedly banned outright in many areas.
    • Connections
      Featured in Malformed Memories (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Utsukushiki Tennen (aka: Beautiful Nature)
      Composed by Hozumi Tanaka

      Circus music

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Horrors of Malformed Men?Powered by Alexa
    • Why was this film banned?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 31, 1969 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Horrors of Malformed Men
    • Filming locations
      • Noto, Ishikawa, Japan
    • Production company
      • Toei Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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