More old school manga madness from Japan. This film is too short and
rather cheesy, but it’s also interesting and imaginative, with an
otherworldly judge doting out gruesome punishments to evildoers.
The Package
JUDGE (YAMI NO SHIHOKAN: JUDGE), released on VHS and
DVD in the U.S. by Central Park Media, emanated from 1991. At just 50
minutes it’s extremely short, and may have been intended as the start of
a series that never got underway. I’m unaware of JUDGE’S standing among
anime buffs, but with me it ranks pretty high.
The Story
Murakami is a hunky corporate lackey embezzling
millions of dollars from his company. Ohma is a nerdy employee of said
company who’s banging Miss Yamamoto, who is herself involved in the
embezzlement scheme. In order to keep her quiet Murakami kills Miss
Yamamoto and makes the murder look like a suicide.
But then Murakami dies in a car accident and winds up
on an otherworldly plain, standing before a man who identifies himself
as the Judge of Darkness--or simply Judge--but who is actually Ohma in
another guise. Judge, who has a demonic bird companion and a law book
made of human skin, decrees that Murakmi’s body be wrapped up and
suffocated.
Shortly after this the company CEO Yamanobe dies during
a tropical vacation, shot by guerillas funded by the slimy Kawamata, his
longtime “best friend.” Kawamata is visited by an otherworldly attorney
who offers to defend his soul…for a fee, of course! Judge is nonplussed
by this attorney’s existence, but the latter takes Judge on in a
supernatural showdown and bests him.
In order to appear before the Judge of Darkness and his
ten kings of the underworld, Kawamata will have to be killed. This he
is, and appears before a court in which Yamanobe’s soul is called up to
defend himself and Kawamata is forced to stare into a mirror that
reflects back his true self. This mirror image not only admits to
planning Yamanobe’s death but also strangles Kawamata to death! Back in
the here-and-now Kawamata’s corpse is found with his hands clamped to
his neck.
The Direction
In true old school anime fashion, the animation is
choppy and perfunctory, particularly in comparison to today’s far
slicker models. The lame-assed synthesizer score is another unfortunate
mainstay of old school anime, as are the constant explosions, martial
arts duels, copious gore and soft-core sex (this is, keep in mind, very
much an example of adult anime). The storytelling isn’t
particularly erudite or coherent, with an extremely complicated,
dialogue-heavy narrative and quite a few distracting viewpoint shifts.
Yet it can’t be said that director Hiroshi Negishi
doesn’t make the most of his limited running time, or the wildly
imaginative script. The concept of an otherworldly Judge of Darkness is
a compelling one, and the 10 kings of the underworld who turn up near
the end are arresting creations (although they get precious little
screen time). An entire series could be made from this material, and
indeed should have, as this 50-minute film plays like a promising
warm-up to bigger and better things.
Vital Statistics
JUDGE (YAMI NO SHIHOKAN: JUDGE)
Fujihiko Hosono/Futaba-sha/Central Park Media
Director: Hiroshi Negishi
Screenplay: Fujihiko Hosono
Cinematography: Akihiko Takahashi
Cast: Kaneto Shiozawa, Miki Ito, Tomomichi Nishimura, Issei Futamata