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Jigoku

  • 1960
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
Jigoku (1960)
CrimeDramaHorrorThriller

A group of sinners involved in interconnected tales of murder, revenge, deceit and adultery all meet at the Gates of Hell.A group of sinners involved in interconnected tales of murder, revenge, deceit and adultery all meet at the Gates of Hell.A group of sinners involved in interconnected tales of murder, revenge, deceit and adultery all meet at the Gates of Hell.

  • Director
    • Nobuo Nakagawa
  • Writers
    • Nobuo Nakagawa
    • Ichirô Miyagawa
  • Stars
    • Shigeru Amachi
    • Utako Mitsuya
    • Yôichi Numata
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    4.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
    • Writers
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
      • Ichirô Miyagawa
    • Stars
      • Shigeru Amachi
      • Utako Mitsuya
      • Yôichi Numata
    • 49User reviews
    • 58Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos71

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    Top cast29

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    Shigeru Amachi
    Shigeru Amachi
    • Shirô Shimizu
    Utako Mitsuya
    • Yukiko…
    Yôichi Numata
    • Tamura
    Hiroshi Hayashi
    • Gôzô Shimizu
    Jun Ôtomo
    • Ensai Taniguchi
    Akiko Yamashita
    • Kinuko
    Kiyoko Tsuji
    Kiyoko Tsuji
    • Kyôichi's Mother
    Fumiko Miyata
    • Mrs. Yajima
    Akira Nakamura
    • Professor Yajima
    • (as Torahiko Nakamura)
    Kimie Tokudaiji
    • Ito Shimizu
    Akiko Ono
    • Yoko
    Tomohiko Ôtani
    • Dr. Kusama
    Kôichi Miya
    • Journalist Akagawa
    Sakutarô Yamakawa
    • Fisherman
    Rei Ishikawa
    • Old Man with Tatoo
    Hiroshi Shingûji
    • Detective Hariya
    Hiroshi Izumida
    • Kyôichi 'Tiger' Shiga
    Yôzô Takamura
    • Devil Torturers
    • Director
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
    • Writers
      • Nobuo Nakagawa
      • Ichirô Miyagawa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    6.84.8K
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    Featured reviews

    irearly

    LOUD and CLEAR

    I read about this movie when I was a kid. Never thought that much about it since I would probably never see it. Recently rented it off Netflix and WOW! Nakagawa's message comes through loud and clear across 46 years and the even wider cultural gap between US and Japan. Unusual stylization (truly hope to see this on a theater screen someday) is incredibly effective as a purely aesthetic experience (meaning you could turn off the subtitles and still be enthralled by the visuals and the music) AND as an elegy for the Japanese traditions of beauty and honor. You can read the various summaries in other posts. Suffice it to say this movie qualifies as a masterpiece if you don't go into it with "horror movie" expectations. See it!
    7paha_kuukkeli

    If good movie is sin Jigoku will surely take you to hell

    I usually find it positive if I can't categorize a movie and Jigoku surely gets the point from that. It's somewhat bizarre combination of drama, horror, film noir and art house where happy moments are more rare than good movies in Hollywood.

    While the hell sequences of Jigoku seem to gather most of the attention I think that the story as a whole is what makes this movie good. It proceeds fluently from disaster to another and while some events lead to unexpected results the script never leaves a viewer with a feeling that the twist was added just for the twist's sake (as is the case with many new movies).

    Technically the movie is awesome; good acting, great score (especially the haunting vocals) and beautiful cinematography. From modern perspective some of the hell sequences are way outdated (mainly the demons) while some look brilliant even today (settings like the river bank and some of the gore effects like the guy who gets flayed).

    I doubt that Jigoku pleases everyone but if you're into bleak and uncompromising movies this is almost a must see. 8/10
    5rlcsljo

    Hell is equally life and afterlife

    This movie spends half of its time in the real world and half in the afterlife. During the first half you ask "where the hell is hell anyway?". After it goes to the "real" hell, you realize that hell is all the things that went undone in the mortal coil.

    You realize that if you don't want to live in hell later, don't live in "hell" now.

    A great psychedelic trip without psychedelic trappings.
    8christopher-underwood

    series of hellish landscapes

    I guess this doesn't really belong with my more extreme reviews but for all it's stunningly beautiful scenes, it's heavily symbolic imagery and symbolism this still, even over 40 years, has a punch or two to unleash. It is for the most part a tragic tale that involves an almost laughable number of deaths and other misfortunes but hell always beckons. The last half hour or so is a considerably finely worked series of hellish landscapes with not a little graphic violence that could certainly not have been shown in the UK in 1960. Along the way there are many delights and a cool jazzy score. Fascinating, groundbreaking and most enjoyable.
    6themadstork

    Kind of a mess

    I picked this one up on a lark and I was pretty underwhelmed. The opening is both stylish and genuinely creepy with its laments, wrapped corpses, and surreal hellscapes, and it segués cleverly into a college lecture hall where our protagonist, a young theology student it seems, is listening to a lecture on concepts of hell. It's by no means fair to say that it's all down hill from there, but the movie only intermittently reaches the same heights. There are deeply unsettling and scary moments, but they're balanced by lot of ho hum bits and few others that almost set one to giggling. The plot is a complete mess it pulls credulity to bits and keeps on ripping and its all so rushed that there's neither time to build any real suspense or develop the characters. This is another problem: The female lead is a stereotypical picture of what I take to be a traditional Japanese idea of womanly virtue and the protagonist is just kind of wishy washy and uninteresting. His demonic friend and tormentor Tamura steals every scene he's in; the actor was clearly having a blast chewing up the scenery. And he succeeds wonderfully in what (I presume) he's supposed to do, which is making evil look a lot more fun than our hero's imperfect handwringing sort of virtue. But of course all the plot and real world stuff is just to set up hell right? Well the hell doesn't redeem it. It's often beautiful in a sick sort of way (Brueghel has a run for his money here) and viscerally repulsive, but while it might shock and perhaps even awe the viewer at points it's more gory and repulsive than unsettling. I suppose my reaction might be culturally conditioned, perhaps it would get under the skin of a Buddhist much more than it did a (somewhat lapsed) Christian like myself, but this brings me to another point: The theology is harsh as well you know. Almost everyone's evil and even the people who've committed fairly understandable and, I'd think, forgivable sins end up in hell. I grew up in an avowedly evangelical church and their theology was much more forgiving and understanding of human weakness. Sometimes we seem to have landed in the world of those terror tracts some churches in my home town used to pass out; there's a definite air of grim disapproval (whether affected or genuine I can't tell) for the sinful modern world hanging over the thing that's so stodgy it's more than a little funny. I'll give it high marks for the visual style and for the cool jazz that floats through and most of the actors acquit themselves quite well (though some don't have too much to work with). But to say that makes a complete mess of plot, pacing, and characterization is, if anything, kind.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film's production company was going out of business while the film was being completed, leading to budget-saving tactics such as the actors helping dig their own holes in the movie's set for Hell. Critics kidded that this film killed the Shintoho Studio.
    • Goofs
      While Shiro is on the rope bridge, we see him at various times hanging on to the side handrails. Between shots, without him having changed position, these handrails quite noticeably change in diameter from thin cables to a much thicker cable, indicating that some shots were filmed on a real bridge, others were filmed on a studio mock-up.
    • Quotes

      Tamura: So you want to turn me in for manslaughter?

      Shiro Shimizu: We're the ones who killed him. We caused it. Let's go together. Please.

      Tamura: That might ease your conscience, but I'm not interested. It'd be stupid. He was drunk. He ran into the road. It was basically suicide. Besides, he was just some yakuza scum. He's not worth the best years of our lives.

    • Connections
      Featured in Building the Inferno: Nobuo Nakagawa and the Making of 'Jigoku' (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Comin' through the Rye
      (uncredited)

      Music: traditional

      Japanese lyrics: unknown

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    FAQ13

    • How long is The Sinners of Hell?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 30, 1960 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • The Sinners of Hell
    • Filming locations
      • Tokyo, Japan
    • Production company
      • Shintoho Film Distribution Committee
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 41 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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