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Product Detail |
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Audio Format: Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround, Dolby Digital Stereo Video Format: Anamorphic Widescreen 16:9 Languages: Mandarin, Japanese Subtitles: English, Chinese Region Code: 3 Year Made: 2001 Running Time: 106
Another great taboo film by Japanese cinema's current taboo breaker? Or just another overblown smorgasbord by a style-obsessed filmmaker ? Inugami is not just a film, it is an experiment in styles and whims by a director whose complex personality and background make him both honest and exigent in his art and overtly ambitious in his intentions.
Derided for his overweight as an adolescent, Masato Harada found refuge and release in cinema. He moved to Tokyo after his studies in the hope of becoming a director, but found no solace in the antiquated system of studio-bound apprenticeships. He chose to head abroad, first to England and then to the USA, where he found a more receptive attitude for his cinematic preferences (science fiction, adventure, epics) culminating in a father/son relationship with Howard Hawks.
However, Harada made his directorial debut not in the land of his dreams but in his native Japan. But back on his home ground, his American-born children had to face ostracism for simply being different. Ever since, Masato Harada has been both an angry and a sad man. Angry at the ailments of his native society - like the racism his children were suscepted to or the phenomenon of teenage prostitution, which he indicted in Kamikaze Taxi (1995) and Bounce Ko Gals (1997) respectively - and sad to see his most entertaining films (Gunhed, Painted Desert and Rowing Through) fail to get him closer to American movie shores. In fact, Harada calls Painted Desert a wasted "calling card to Hollywood", while Gunhed ended up on the American market as an Alan Smithee film.
Inugami is yet another display of the director's artistic exigence and international ambitions. Surfing on the last waning waves of the Asian psycho-horror boom, Inugami is probably the most visually impressive of them all. It is a ghostly family drama that plunges into some of the darkest recesses of Japanese traditions with the polished elegance of a Mizoguchi or Shindo and the thrilling panache of a new master.
The story itself is a take on the Oedipus myth, with Atsuro Watabe as the man who sleeps with his mother (Yuki Amami) and eventually kills his father. But the film doesn't follow the moral of the myth, in which Oedipus ends up as a lonely man on the road to redemption. In Inugami, the incestuous relationship is not a curse but a liberation, a departure of sorts from the seclusion of a clannish family, where blood relations are the rule. This is probably the greatest irony of the film, and Masato Harada must have been pleased to emphasise the taboo of incest. "What Japan needs now is taboo breakers" he says dauntlessly.
Where Inugami really stands out is in its female cast. Harada seems a very deft hand when it comes to casting the female roles of his films - who could forget his trio of bouncy kogals, for instance? In Inugami, Masato Harada couples veteran jidai geki actress Shiho Fujimura (of the Zatoichi and Nemuri Kyoshiro series) with ex-Takarazuka revue artist Yuki Amami, a tall, slender woman also seen in Takashi Ishii's Black Angel (Kuro No Tenshi Vol. 1, 1997) and Rendan (2000), Naoto Takanaka's Nippon version of The War of the Roses. In Inugami, Yuki Amami first appears as a 50-year old spinster before going through an impressive 25-year rejuvenation set to tickle your senses. It must have been a real pleasure for the actress to portray a truly sensual heroine after having played so many men in the Takarazuka revues. For Harada, "Inugami also deals with a kind of Hitchcockian heroine, in which an interesting-looking woman -- who has given up her sensuality -- transforms herself into a sensual, attractive woman." Yuki Amami certainly is that.
Released in January 2001, Inugami had a fair box office run, lapping up a $2 million gross. (In comparison, Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Kairo, which was targeted even more clearly at the Ring audience, barely topped the $500,000 mark). It achieved this result despite being rated R-15 for its taboo central theme and was therefore shorn of a potential bigger, family audience.
The unconclusive theatrical run of the film did not prevent it from touring world festivals, beginning with a prestigious Berlin selection which seemed to leave both the audience and the critics puzzled. Probably feeling more bitter than ever, Harada explained how, for him, this film was for the overseas audience, to reach the Berlin Film Festival competition and maybe, again, launch a more international career. Perhaps somebody should advise him to pair up with with producer Takenori Sento, whose efforts to reach foreign audiences have proven more successful.

Akira, a young schoolteacher, is transferred to a remote school high in the mountains. There, he meets forty-something Miki, and promptly falls for her. He soon learns that the town has a distrust and disgust for the woman and her family, who have long been rumored to be associated with a fearsome deity named Inugami. After discovering her family "secret", he tries to escape with Miki, but realizes all too late that her bond with the town is far beyond normal.
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