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The PackageHORRORS
OF MALFORMED MEN (KYOFU KIKEI NINGEN; 1969) was by far the most controversial
film ever made by the late Teruo Ishii, one of Teruo
Ishii was reportedly a lifelong fan of the works of |
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The StoryHirosuke
is a young medical student suffering from bizarre visions involving malformed
women and the rocky coast of a far-off island.
He also discovers one day that a man has recently died who looks exactly
like him. In a misguided effort at
ferreting out the mystery man’s identity, Hirosuke pretends to be his dead
doppelganger and moves in with the latter’s wife.
She buys into Hirosuke’s ruse but is discomfited by his coldness
toward her. Hirosuke for his part
is preoccupied with his quest, investigating circus sideshows and eventually a
secluded island he recognizes as the landscape of his visions. On
the island he meets the freakish Jogoro, who lords over a kingdom of human
oddities. In a seaside cave Jogoro
reveals to Hirosuke the secret of this freak paradise: years earlier Jogoro
caught his wife canoodling with another man and so brought them both to the
island, where he let them starve to death in the very cave he and Hirosuke now
stand in. Jogoro further admits
that he kidnapped several unsuspecting women from the mainland and surgically
transformed them into malformed humans. And
Jogoro discloses yet another secret: years earlier he birthed twins, of whom
Hirosuke is one. There are even
more (many more) secrets, but in the interests of keeping this summary to
a manageable length I’ll leave them for you to discover on your own. |
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The DirectionTo
be frank, Teruo Ishii, despite his cult status, was never a terribly great
director. He had an annoying
penchant for overheated melodrama and lurid exploitation, both very much
evident in HORRORS OF MALFORMED MEN. There’s
also the fact that he wasn’t much of a storyteller, proven here in the way he
packs in an unconscionable amount of back story, leading to an overabundance of
flashbacks. The reason for this was
apparently Ishii’s desire to include as many Edogawa Rampo-inspired concepts
as possible, but the resulting film is a mess narrative-wise. Where
Ishii excels is in gruesome and surreal imagery.
Often shot through multi-colored filters, Ishii’s visions of malformed
humans drifting trance-like (the freaks were portrayed by a real-life dance
troop) through cobbled streets won’t ever misplace the work of Jodorowski or
Arrabal, but do make for deeply striking, never-before-seen images.
There’s also an agreeably outrageous bit toward the end in which a
lover’s dying wish to be reunited with his beloved is granted in a decidedly
unexpected manner. It’s just too
bad the film is otherwise such an overplotted jumble. |
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Vital StatisticsHORRORS
OF MALFORMED MEN (KYOFU KIKEI NINGEN) |
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