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Ranpo jigoku

  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 14m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Ranpo jigoku (2005)
FantasyHorror

This four-part anthology takes its cue from the short fiction of legendary horror writer Edogawa Rampo.This four-part anthology takes its cue from the short fiction of legendary horror writer Edogawa Rampo.This four-part anthology takes its cue from the short fiction of legendary horror writer Edogawa Rampo.

  • Directors
    • Akio Jissôji
    • Atsushi Kaneko
    • Hisayasu Satô
  • Writers
    • Rampo Edogawa
    • Atsushi Kaneko
    • Akio Satsukawa
  • Stars
    • Tadanobu Asano
    • Yûko Daike
    • Chisako Hara
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Akio Jissôji
      • Atsushi Kaneko
      • Hisayasu Satô
    • Writers
      • Rampo Edogawa
      • Atsushi Kaneko
      • Akio Satsukawa
    • Stars
      • Tadanobu Asano
      • Yûko Daike
      • Chisako Hara
    • 19User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos70

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Tadanobu Asano
    Tadanobu Asano
    • Private Detective Kogorô…
    Yûko Daike
    Yûko Daike
    • (story 'Kagami jigoku')
    Chisako Hara
    • (story 'Kagami jigoku')
    Masami Horiuchi
    • (story 'Kagami jigoku')
    Mikako Ichikawa
    • (story 'Kagami jigoku')
    Hanae Kan
    • (story "Imomushi")
    Ryûhei Matsuda
    Ryûhei Matsuda
    • Tarô Hirai (story "Imomushi")
    • (as Ryuuhei Matsuda)
    Kaiji Moriyama
    • (story "Kasei no unga")
    Tomoya Nakamura
    Tomoya Nakamura
    • (story "Kagami jigoku")
    Hiroki Narimiya
    Hiroki Narimiya
    • Tooru (story "Kagami jigoku")
    Harumi Ogawa
    Tamaki Ogawa
    • Fuyu Kinoshita (segment "Mushi")
    Yukiko Okamoto
    • Tokiko Sunaga (story "Imomushi")
    Tarô Suwa
    Tarô Suwa
    • Temple Priest
    Hiromasa Taguchi
    • (story 'Mushi')
    Minori Terada
    • (story 'Kagami jigoku')
    Susumu Terajima
    Susumu Terajima
    • (story 'Kagami jigoku')
    Yumi Yoshiyuki
    • (story 'Kagami jigoku')
    • Directors
      • Akio Jissôji
      • Atsushi Kaneko
      • Hisayasu Satô
    • Writers
      • Rampo Edogawa
      • Atsushi Kaneko
      • Akio Satsukawa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.21.2K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    6dchief8000

    Effects or defects??? Some explain what.

    I thought the movie was... interesting. Some parts a little too artsy. I'm not really here to debate the movie but, to ask about the warning in the beginning. What are the EXACTLY talking about pertaining the "intended effects"? I'm not sure if they're talking about the blockey distorted appearance of a scratched DVD or if its just the one I'm watching. After a few minutes it gave me a little headache. I thought that that was what they were warning about until towards the end when the guy in crawling bugs says, "what was I thinking?" then the movie was "normal". I had rented the movie from Blockbuster and it was brand new and undamaged.
    8samxxxul

    Sato Rules. So messed up it's brilliant!

    Rampo Noir is one of my favorite horror anthologies, sharing a similar disturbing, visceral feeling to Subconscious Cruelty (2000). (Check out my review for it if you have time.) The film is a fascinating, yet uneven, collection of four stories, each directed by a different filmmaker adapting a tale by Rampo Edogawa. The only constant thread is actor Tadanobu Asano, who takes on a new role in each segment, from a naked wanderer to a private detective. The movie has almost giallo-esque vibes, aesthetically and argumentatively, a strange cocktail of David Cronenberg's body horror and the aesthetic of films like Heroic Purgatory (1970) (check out my review if you have time here) and House (1977).

    The directors involved are an interesting mix of seasoned artists. Legendary Akio Jissoji, whose "Buddhist Trilogy" is a work I adore and recommend, and whose name you might also have seen on the famous Ultraman TV series and his acclaimed Art Theatre Guild films, directs one segment. Another is from Hisayasu Satô, an icon of pinku cinema. Mangaka Atsushi Kaneko and director Suguru Takeuchi round out the quartet.

    Of the four, the two standout chapters are Takeuchi's opening segment, "Mars Canal," and Satô's "Caterpillar." "Mars Canal" is a short, silent parable about a naked, vulnerable man at a lake, almost like a piece of living art. The simplicity and atmosphere make it a hypnotic start to the film.

    The Metamorphosis of Caterpillar: The most absurd and grotesquely captivating storyline is "Caterpillar," the complete story of a war hero who returns home completely dismembered-a quadruple amputee, mute, and facially scarred. His wife, the artist, treats him not as a husband but as a living canvas. She dresses him, feeds him, and parades him around, obsessing over her creation. It's a horrific allegory about control, love, and the monstrous ways in which we can possess another. The wife's affection is a twisted kind of horror; her love is a form of artistic subjugation. She sees her husband as a prize, a bizarre specimen she has reshaped and kept in a jar. In her mind, she's transforming him from a "caterpillar" of war into something beautiful and powerless. The ending climax of this story is a shocking, visceral and fully embracing the erotic grotesque themes of the source material.

    The Mirror and the Bugs:

    The other two segments, Jissoji's "Mirror Hell" and Kaneko's "Crawling Bugs," are also ingenious but less compelling. "Mirror Hell" follows a detective as he investigates a series of mysterious deaths caused by a man who creates mirrors that seem to burn people's faces off. This segment explores obsession with self-image and the danger of perspective.

    "Crawling Bugs" is a strange, unsettling tale of a man with a mental illness that makes him feel like bugs are crawling on his skin whenever he's near other people. He becomes obsessed with a beautiful theater actress, fantasizing about a life with her. This story is an unsettling, dirty dive into the themes of idolization and loneliness, where the protagonist creates his own reality to escape the horrors of the one he's trapped in.

    Overall, Rampo Noir is a must-watch for diehards of the directors here and also for anyone who enjoys Japanese horror and isn't afraid of a little absurdity.
    9jaycbird

    Creepy and Kinky Art!

    "Rampo Noir" (Rampo Jigoku) is a gorgeous, creepy, kinky to the extreme as well as beautifully conceived and well crafted compendium of four stories by Japanese author Edogawa Rampo (a transliteration of Edgar Allan Poe and the nom de plume of Taro Hirai): "Mars Canal", "Mirror Hell", "The Caterpillar" and "Crawling Bugs". "Mars Canal" bookends the program and launches us into the three other nightmares. "Mirror Hell" was fun and simply GORGEOUS to look at! "The Caterpillar" (which is the pet name a woman has given her husband for horridly KINKY reasons!) totally CREEPED me out! "Crawling Bugs" was dizzyingly lovely to look at, though quite unnerving as the lead character's 'dilemma' was eerily reminiscent of one of my best friends! It has been released on DVD (region 3) in Japan and I. Must. Have. IT!!
    rooprect

    Not exactly Rampo, but very effective

    "Rampo Noir" is a collection of 4 short films loosely (and I mean 'LOOSELY' like your mouth after a heavy dose of novocaine at the dentist) based on the 1950s short stories of Edogawa Rampo.

    The pen name "Edogawa Rampo" is a Japanese katakana phonetic translation for "Edgar Allen Poe" (say them out loud), which shows the author made no attempt to hide the strong influence Mr. Poe had on him. And indeed, perhaps minus Poe's unique sarcastic wit, the two writers are similar in many ways. That is, Rampo was an excellent writer of Victorian surrealism.

    Here we have a modern visual adaptation of Rampo's work which falls short of conveying the master's subtle, Victorian style, but as standalone works of 21st century erotica-horror, they are very effective. These films take the psychologically off-kilter imaginings of Rampo and convert them into outright physical, psychosexual nightmares. Rampo never wrote about steamy sex scenes, bondage & blatant perversion, but these adaptations rely heavily on them. Perhaps more noticeable is the way these adaptations are stripped of any morality that Rampo had originally conveyed. These ain't your grandfather's sort of literature. Characters here are unapologetically twisted, evil & sadistic, hardly recognizable as human beings.

    If you can get past that, or if you've come here wanting to see some sick, twisted stuff, then read on. You'll probably enjoy these works.

    #1 "Mars Canal" - We begin with the shortest one, a silent film showing a man stumbling through a strange landscape while having disturbing, sexual flashbacks. Most people are utterly confused by this one, and indeed the meaning (here as well as in Rampo's original story) is very abstract. The cinematography is gorgeous, making extreme use of vivid greens and light/dark contrast.

    #2 "Hell of Mirrors" is so far from the original story that it's unrecognizable, but it has an interesting story nonetheless. The original story was about a man who was obsessed with mirrors to the point that he builds an experimental laboratory dedicated to the study of optical illusions, culminating in a fantastic & shocking experiment where he builds a spherical chamber of mirrors which he enters. The film is, instead, about a series of gruesome murders of women which all involve mirrors. Also stuck in there are some bizarre love triangles and a creepy scene of sadistic sex (none of which is in the original Rampo). I feel this piece's strength is its creepy mood and the mystery aspect of it, as we follow a detective trying to catch the killer.

    #3 "Caterpillar" is the sickest of the lot. Be prepared, this one outshines any twisted story I've seen except for maybe "The Human Centipede" (a laughably gross movie about a German doctor who sews a bunch of people together, mouth-to-butt. Who comes up with this stuff??). The original "Caterpillar" by Rampo is about a war hero who comes home disfigured, deaf, mute & quadruplegic. His devoted wife cares for him but wrestles between tender love & her cruel impulses to torment her husband. In this film, the cruel impulses take center stage, are exaggerated and shown in shocking imagery along with sexual perversion. Seriously, this gets even sicker than the 1982 "Basket Case" or any of its twisted sequels. Nothing like the original Rampo except in the opening premise, this film's strength lies in its sheer perversity. Not for the faint of heart!

    #4 "Crawling Bugs" is my favorite of the lot because, rather than bombard us nonstop with disturbing images, it breaks up the pace with some satirically bright, comedic scenes. It begins with a jolly, dreamlike scene of a grinning man and his less-than-grinning bride-to-be about to be married in a setting that can only be described as a set from Walt Disney's "Zip a dee doo dah". From there, we get fragmented flashbacks to a consideably darker tale unfolding about a man obsessed with a famous actress. It hops back & forth to the magical wonderland with some excellent dark comedy spicing things up all the way to the hilariously sick ending. Faithful to Rampo or not, "Crawling Bugs" is a real treat for the mildly depraved cinephiles amongst us.

    These films have 1 thing in common, and that is an expert approach to cinema as an art form. The films are challenging, fragmented and gorgeously filmed while digging deep into the rancorous well of human depravity. Give 'em a watch, and then if your curiosity is piqued I highly recommend reading the original Rampo stories that spawned them. They're very hard to find, especially in English, so I may try to post a few in the discussion board. I'd love to hear what people think of these adaptations.
    10polysicsarebest

    Mind-blowing!

    Uh.. wow. Here's one you will never forget. Four disgusting and insane shorts that seem loosely connected at times (themes of torture, mirrors, obsession, love, bugs, and.. uh.. Tadanobou Asano are in most of the shorts), all lovingly filmed by 4 different directors. Great acting and beautiful visuals throughout and never a dull moment in its 2 hour running time, this film is actually shockingly beautiful and very experimental at times (see the first story which is completely silent) and is just so full of ideas and life that it should be required viewing for everyone who's into cinema that's a little bit different than the norm.

    Much more so than the overrated 3... Extremes, this is a film that actually manages to disturb you with its images. Just try getting the images of a disgusting, drooling, dying human caterpillar or a very realistic decomposing corpse out of your head. However, what really sets this film apart are actually the BEAUTIFUL visuals. I can't really describe what makes them so beautiful; you just have to see them.

    Completely unnerving and endlessly fascinating throughout, this is definitely some kind of masterpiece that doesn't have any of the monotony that bogs down most pictures of this type. In fact, it's hard to choose a favorite short amongst the 4, because they're all so good! Highly recommended.

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    Related interests

    Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
    Fantasy
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Fantastic Asian Movies You Have Not Seen (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Air du miroir 'Dis-moi que je suis belle' from 'Thais'
      Written by Jules Massenet and Louis Gallet

      Performed by Usuki Ai and Motosugi Mio

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 5, 2005 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Rampo Noir
    • Filming locations
      • Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan
    • Production companies
      • Albatros Film
      • Culture Publishers (CP)
      • Geneon Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $217
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 14m(134 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS

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