Summaries

The ghost of a samurai's wife takes revenge on her husband.

This classic Japanese horror movie directed by Nobuo Nakagawa is based on an 18th-century masterpiece written by Nanboku Tsuruya. It is about a woman who haunts her husband after she dies a miserable death. The story has terrified the Japanese people for ages.—Leo Urbina

The ronin Iemon Tamiya asks the father of Iwa to marry his daughter, but the old man refuses, saying that he is worthless. Iemon kills him and his friend and together with the witness of the murder Naosuke, they lure Iwa and her sister Sode saying that the criminal Usaburô Ozawa was the killer of their father. They head to Edo with Sode's fiancé Yomoshichi Satô seeking revenge. Along their journey, Iemon and Naosuke throw Yomoshichi off the waterfall cliffs in a river in order that Naosuke can marry Sode. Sometime later. Iemon and Iwa are married with a baby and Sode and Naosuke are living together without sex, but the sisters do not know that they are living in the same town. When Iemon knows the wealthy Ume Itô, he plots with Naosuke to poison Iwa so that he can marry Ume. He also convinces the masseur Takuetsu to seduce Iwa. Iemon kills them both and dump their bodies in the river. Iemon marries Ume but soon the ghost of Iwa haunts him.—Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

When an arrogant old samurai refuses to let Iemon marry his daughter Iwa, the young samurai kills kills him and and his two companions. With the connivance of his servant Naosuke, Iemon claims the assassin was a local bandit. He promises to help Iwa avenge her father's death. They set off in search of the culprit, accompanied by Iwa's sister, Sode, and Yomoshichi, the son of one of Iemon's other victims. Naosuke, attracted to Sode but apprehensive of the closeness between her and Yomoshichi, stabs the young man and, with Iemon's help, throws the body into a waterfall. The two conspirators claim that Yomoshichi was killed by the same bandit responsible for the old samurai's death. They persuade the sisters to split up to continue the search. Two years later, unknown to the two sisters, both couples are in Edo. Iemon has married Iwa and has an infant son, but they live in poverty. Naosuke, eking out a living selling patent medicine in the streets, lives with Sode, but has promised he won't sleep with her until her father's death is avenged. He and Iemon meet secretly in the local brothel, where they plot to become wealthy. They stage the rescue of the wealthy Ito and his daughter Ume from a gang of ruffians. In exchange for money, Naosuke promises Ito he'll arrange Iemon's marriage to Ume. To be rid of Iwa, Iemon bribes a local masseur, Takuetsu, to seduce his wife. He also gives her a poison obtained by Naosuke. The poison disfigures Iwa horribly. Before she dies, Iwa learns of her husband's treachery. Rather than leave her infant son in the care of such a father, she kills the child before herself dying. To silence Takuetsu, Iemon kills him, too. The two corpses are nailed to either side of a shutter and dumped into a deep pool by Iemon and Naosuke. Iemon marries Ume, but on their wedding night sees visions of the disfigured Iwa and Takuetsu. Deluded by the visions, he kills Ume and her father, then flees to a temple for protection. Naosuke taunts his master, and is killed by Iemon. Sode is led by her sister's ghost to Yomoshichi, who has survived the attack two years earlier. Together they hunt down Iemon and avenge his victims.—Roger Keightley <[email protected]>

Impecunious samurai Iemon and his conniving servant Naosuke commit multiple murders to secure the affections of two sisters, Iwa and Sode. Iemon soon tires of Iwa, and given the opportunity to marry a wealthy man's daughter, he removes the inconvenience of an existing wife by poisoning her and slashing to death the masseur he'd bribed to seduce her. The two bodies are nailed to opposite sides of a shutter and sunk in a pool. Both victims' disfigured ghosts return to haunt the two murderers, leading them to further crimes and, ultimately, retribution.—Roger Keightley <[email protected]>

Details

Keywords
  • husband wife relationship
  • samurai
  • death
  • supernatural horror
  • husband murders his wife
Genres
  • Horror
Release date Jul 10, 1959
Countries of origin Japan
Language Japanese
Production companies Shintoho Film Distribution Committee

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 1h 16m
Aspect ratio 2.35 : 1

Synopsis

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