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9 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
More of a psychological drama than a horror story., 3 May 2005
Author:
kkrogstad from Trondheim
The first notable postwar film version of the Kabuki play Tokaido
Yotsuya Kaidan by Nanboku Tsuruya. It was first performed as a Kabuki
play in 1821 and after 1900 made into many films. The play is actually
based on contemporary incident of a lower-class samurai wife who went
insane and disappeared after discovering that her husband had got
another woman pregnant. In Nanboku's play the husband has someone
poison his wife so that he could marry into a rich family, and the dead
wife becomes a ghost who haunts him.
Lemon her husband does not feel any guilt for his actions, but still is
presented as a despicable character responsible for the heroine's
plight. Kinoshita presents the appearances of the dead Oiwa as simply
the hallucinations of Lemon's guilt-wracked mind. When he commits
suicide - a divergence from Nanboku's inconclusive ending where he
remained alive - it is obvious he died from pangs of conscience rather
than supernatural causes. The film was more a psychological drama than
a horror story.
Made again in 1959 by Nobuo Nakagawa, and in 1965 by Shiro Toyoda.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The Ghost of Yotsuya Part I, 3 May 2009
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Author:
Scarecrow-88 from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Tragic melodrama almost plays like like a sordid soap opera. It
features a poor master-less Ronin, Iemon Tamiya desiring to live a more
lavish lifestyle, stuck in a marriage with Oiwa, who practically
worships him, completely indebted to the samurai for pulling her out of
a destitute state of being. A recently released criminal, Kohei, who
went to prison out of love for Oiwa(..when she worked in a
teahouse)survived countless beatings among other harsh treatments just
so he could see her again. Kohei's love is obsessive, to the point of
borderline madness..he frightens Oiwa who adores Iemon, her husband,
and, at one point, calls on elder neighbor Takuetsu for help to get him
off her property. Meanwhile, snake-in-the-grass Naosuke(..who was in
prison with Kohei; a rat who snitched on his fellow inmates regarding
their plan on a prison break)has his own plans for gaining wealth,
working as a gardener, manipulating Iemon into perhaps poisoning Oiwa
so that he could marry a rich merchant's daughter, Oume. If Naosuke can
convince Iemon to poison Oiwa, he can use the crime against him for
blackmailing purposes. Thanks to Oume's maid, Omaki, Naosuke is able to
arrange get-togethers between her and Iemon with an affair on the
horizon. While Iemon slowly grows more tired and frustrated with Oiwa's
clinging devotion, and, more importantly, his low status as a Ronin
living in near poverty, Naosuke goads Kohei into advancing his cause
for his obsession's cooperation. It seems, after all is said and done,
Naosuke's concocted scheme might eventually pay off after a
confrontation between Iemon and Oiwa results in her face falling into
hot water, a burnt face made worse by tampered ointment. With Oiwa's
face scarred, Iemon convinces her to take her medicine, laced with
poison provided by Naosuke, others interrupt the perfect crime such as
Kohei and Takuetsu unannounced, resulting in further violent activity.
I entered the film thinking this was a ghost story regarding a tragic
victim haunting the lover who killed her. But, THE GHOST OF YOTSUYA
PART I, in actuality, sets the stage for the haunting in the second
film. We are introduced to Yomoshichi briefly at the beginning, a
childhood friend of Kohei who greets him after noticing him in the
streets in a sullen, depressed mood. Yomoshichi's wife, Osode, looks
almost exactly like Oiwa. They will obviously play a greater role in
the second film after Oiwa's horrifying death at the hands of Lemon and
Naosuke. THE GHOST OF YOTSUYA PART I is a somber tale of misery and
betrayal, with a vile criminal mastermind, Naosuke, planting the seeds
alcoholic Ronin Iemon would eventually carry out, the premeditated
murder of innocent Oiwa, a victim of circumstances connected with greed
and class status. Practically every character within the film is
miserable..perhaps a projected view of life during that time in a
Japanese village. If you aren't part of a specific powerful clan or
family, life can be difficult. I think films within the genre which
focuses on the life of a samurai, you often see how important class
status is. The character of Iemon properly exposes such a case, his
misery is apparent and he wants out of the marriage, despite his
feelings for Oiwa(..who had a miscarriage after falling from a
stool;you also see, throughout the film, how clumsy she can be)seeing
that a life with Oume means reclaiming honor and status, vital
ingredients to a samurai.
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