Wednesday, August 14, 2024

60's Asian Horror Part Thirteen

MADAM WHITE SNAKE
(1960)
Dir - Shin Sang-ok
Overall: MEH

More of a supernatural fairy tale than anything adhering to strict horror tropes, Madam White Snake, (Baeksa buin), is one of a handful of films in the genre from director Shin Sang-ok.  In fact he remade it nine years later as The Snake Woman, (a movie that seems to be lost to time), with this one having an unhurried tone that unfortunately feels its length even if it is sufficiently crafted.  The story is inspired by the Chinese "Legend of the White Snake" crossed with the old kaidan motif of a beautiful ghost woman and her companion fooling a handsome man that crosses their paths into thinking that they are very much alive.  Despite her reptilian origins and manipulative nature, Choi Eun-hee portrays such an undead angel snake lady as benevolent and kind, doing everything in her power to stay on Earth and live out her domestic bliss, defying the supernatural rules of sky-dwelling divine beings in the process.  The plot line follows a tragic trajectory where humans and whatever Choi is are simply not allowed to be together and mankind's inherent follies are held accountable for such a fate, but it ends on a pleasant note where Buddha's mercy reigns supreme.
 
A DEVILISH HOMICIDE
(1965)
Dir - Lee Yong-min
Overall: MEH
 
South Korean filmmaker Lee Yong-min made a steady handful of horror movies in the last half of his career, yet sadly almost all of them are too obscure to find or simply lost altogether.  Thankfully, A Devilish Homicide, (Salinma, A Devilish Murder, A Bloodthirsty Killer), has remained intact and if it is any indication of the writer/director's work in the genre, it showcases a bizarre vision that treads incoherent ground yet busts out random supernatural high jinks at a reckless rate.  The first half here is unwavering in this respect, featuring a floating ghost lady that is hellbent on murdering a string of people that apparently wronged her ten years earlier.  Lee utilizes sparse spooky music, otherworldly howls from beyond the grave, and freaky visuals like a melting painting and an elderly lady who gets possessed by a cat or something that starts licking her own grandchildren as they sleep.  Yuck.  It is a shame that things eventually settle down with a lengthy flashback sequence arriving an hour in, which shines a melodramatic light on the undead woman's grudge, involving blackmail and extramarital affairs and the like.  The messy plot and inconsistent structure aside, it packs in plenty of macabre weirdness.

BAKENEKO: A VENGEFUL SPIRIT
(1968)
Dir - Yoshihiro Ishikawa
Overall: GOOD
 
Japan had a penchant for ghost feline vengeance movies, particularly during the late 1950s through the late 1960s, Bakeneko: A Vengeful Spirit, (Kaibyô noroi no Numa, The Ghost Cat of Cursed Pond), bearing a strong resemblance to many of them.  The usual motifs are present; a small body of water that curses those who come near it, overlords subjugating their servants, people being tricked into murdering other people due to supernatural manipulation, people being possessed by other dead people, samurais wielding swords wildly in a panic, doomed lovers, and of course cats being the unholy harbingers of retribution.  It takes some time to get to the bloody and ghostly shenanigans as we witness history repeating itself as two different couples meet their end due to their corrupt masters, but director Yoshihiro Ishikawa makes it a point to pepper the film with eerie atmospherics even before the last act gets things properly underway.  We are treated to more than one sequence where severed heads understandably scare the bejesus out of their victims, and these plus the usual bouts of women in demonic feline makeup and bestial meows contribute to the surreal and ghoulish tone.  It lacks memorable characters and is too formulaic plot-wise to be a renowned work in the genre, but it delivers plenty of spooky spectacle for golden era J-horror fans to appreciate.

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