Poe meets Oedipus Rex, in glorious Nippon
By GERALD PEARY | October 26, 2010
In Kaneto Shindô's 1968 baroque Japanese period piece, samurai run wild as ignoble marauders. And at the outset here, they gang-rape and murder a woman and her daughter-in-law in a virtuoso scene of Tarantino-style mayhem.
These women come back as avenging ghouls, luring leering samurai home and biting into their throats. Meanwhile, the mother's only son, the husband of the daughter-in-law, returns from faraway wars, himself a samurai.
How will he deal with his mess of ghostly relatives, torn as he is between family loyalties and the warrior code? With an invidious black cat meowing about, Shindô's movie, elegantly shot in widescreen black-and-white, melds Edgar Allan Poe and Oedipus Rex, all in sight of the legendary Rashômon Gate.
Related:
Review: Armored, Oscar predictions 2010, Review: Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo, More
- Review: Armored
In view of its credentials, Armored should be a lay-up.
- Oscar predictions 2010
After years of shrinking audiences and low-grossing Best Picture nominees, the Academy this year is hedging its bets.
- Review: Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo
The cheeky title conjures up belovedly tacky 1950s Japanese sci-fi films, but Jessica Oreck’s actual effort is a pallid, thinly poetic documentary essay about Japan’s obsession with insects.
- Review: Birdemic: Shock and Terror
Birdemic: Shock and Terror begs to be judged on the compellingness of its awfulness — if not by its creator, James Nguyen, then by its distributor. So here goes.
- Review: Holy Rollers
Loosely based on a true story, Kevin Asch’s film is an unlikely fusion of Almost Famous and Scarface featuring Hasidic Jews.
- Review: Living In Emergency: Stories of Doctors Without Borders
One thing you notice about the brave doctors working for the organization Médicins Sans Frontières in hellholes and war zones like Liberia and Congo: they sure smoke a lot.
- Review: The new, ‘complete’ Metropolis
Metropolis just keeps growing.
- Sweaty Palmes
Apichatpong Weerasethakul must have done something right in one or more of his previous incarnations.
- Four to watch for
These Cannes-debuting films will soon be appearing in your local neighborhood googleplex.
- Review: Sex and the City 2
Where does your 1998–2004 HBO hit series about sex and the single girl go when three of your four girls are no longer single? How about the United Arab Emirates?
- Review: Splice
Like its synthetic creature, Dren (Delphine Chanéac), Vincenzo Natali’s unwieldy but provocative thriller recombines DNA from many different movie and literary sources.
- Less

Topics:
Reviews
, Entertainment, Japan, Movies, More
, Entertainment, Japan, Movies, Quentin Tarantino, Edgar Allan Poe, Samurai, murder, Oedipus Rex, Less