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Genocide

Original title: Konchû daisensô
  • 1968
  • Approved
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
818
YOUR RATING
Genocide (1968)
JapaneseHorrorSci-Fi

All the insects on Earth become wild and attack humans, causing Armageddon.All the insects on Earth become wild and attack humans, causing Armageddon.All the insects on Earth become wild and attack humans, causing Armageddon.

  • Director
    • Kazui Nihonmatsu
  • Writers
    • Kingen Amada
    • Susumu Takaku
  • Stars
    • Keisuke Sonoi
    • Yûsuke Kawazu
    • Emi Shindô
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    818
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kazui Nihonmatsu
    • Writers
      • Kingen Amada
      • Susumu Takaku
    • Stars
      • Keisuke Sonoi
      • Yûsuke Kawazu
      • Emi Shindô
    • 18User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos35

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    Top Cast30

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    Keisuke Sonoi
    • Yoshito Nagumo
    Yûsuke Kawazu
    Yûsuke Kawazu
    • Joji Akiyama
    Emi Shindô
    • Yukari Akiyama
    Reiko Hitomi
    • Junko Komuro
    Eriko Sono
    • Nagumo's Assistant
    Kathy Horan
    • Annabelle
    Chico Lourant
    • Charlie
    Ralph Jesser
    • Lieutenant Gordon
    • (as Rolf Jesser)
    Toshiyuki Ichimura
    • Seborey Kudo
    Tadayoshi Ueda
    • Tsuneo Matsunaga
    Hiroshi Aoyama
    • Toru Fujii
    Tatsumi Ichiyama
    Hideaki Komori
    Saburo Aonuma
    • Detective
    Mike Danning
    • Aircraft Captain
    • (as Mike Daneen)
    Franz Gruber
    • Doctor
    Harold Conway
    • Commander
    Warflum Begiches
    • Adjutant
    • Director
      • Kazui Nihonmatsu
    • Writers
      • Kingen Amada
      • Susumu Takaku
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    4.7818
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    Featured reviews

    7ebeckstr-1

    Startling imagery, phantasmagoric plot mash pp

    I'm rating this movie higher than it probably deserves for a couple of reasons. Firs, one has to admire the audacious, lurching combination of genres and plot lines, hallucinatory in their variations. Secondly, the final two shots of this movie are stunning. I won't give them away, although I wish I could because they are just some of the coolest final images of any science fiction movie of that era, and make the entire movie worthwhile.

    All of these impressions reflects some advice I would give if you choose to watch this movie. I don't think one ought to watch it literally, as a plot-driven film, because doing so could be frustrating given some of the illogic and seeming randomness of the events. Instead, I ultimately watched it for the imagery, the drunken, staggering wackiness of it all, and the utterly fascinating cultural aspects of the movie (for example, wow, do Americans not come off particularly well in this flick!).

    I would also recommend Genocide for those who enjoy eco-horror or eco-scifi, such as Frogs, Phase IV, Bug (the Bradford Dillman flick), Food of the Gods, and even classic giant irradiated "bug" movies such as Them and Tarantula, which were among the first eco-scifi movies.
    5kevin_robbins

    This is a very average addition to the horror genre that's still a fun watch

    Genocide (1968) is a movie that I recently watched on a random streaming service. The storyline follows a young lady who recently became pregnant and is planning to have an abortion when an insect outbreak occurs. All life becomes at risk as no one knows how to stop the bugs. A diabolical plan to take over the world becomes apparent and will anyone be able to stop the mastermind behind the plot?

    This movie is directed by Kazui Nihonmatsu (The X from Outer Space) and stars Eiji Okada (Woman in the Dunes), Hiroshi Fujioka (Kamen Rider), Ryûji Kita (King Kong Escapes) and Reiko Mutô (Arcadia of My Youth).

    This is one of those "almost good" movies that had all the ingredients to be fun but somehow falls short. The film starts with a fun model burning airplane crash scene that made me smile. The sets, settings and characters were fun. The villain was a smoking hot blond with a few screws loose...but somehow all the pieces of the puzzle weren't put together well. The storyline was a bit stale, slow and didn't have enough kills for me to get excited. The ending was cool and worked for me.

    Overall this is a very average addition to the horror genre that's still a fun watch. I would score this a 4.5-5/10 and only recommend watching it if nothing better is available.
    4I_Ailurophile

    Good ideas are rendered poorly with forced, heavy-handed treatment

    Let's not beat around the bush: this is a mess. It's not all bad, but a bounty of good ideas are fumbled terribly in too many ways. We do get the variation on "nature run amok" genre cinema that is promised by the very name of 'War on the insects,' and the alternate name 'Genocide,' but this is delayed, sidelined, and scarcely more than alluded to for a majority of the runtime, only slowly becoming more central in the latter half. This might be fine if the storytelling at large were strong and compelling, but the thriller-orientated human drama that defines the preponderance is garbled and scattered, with all its very workable notions being treated questionably if not outright poorly. To wit: a U. S. Air Force bomber, a murder investigation, and the suspect's expecting wife; U. S. airmen, Soviet spies, the Cold War, and hatred of war and humans; and to top it all off, nihilist, misanthropic biological warfare, experimentation, and eco-terrorist supremacy. Amada Kingen penned a fine story with engaging thoughts, admirable themes, and bleak despair. Screenwriter Takaku Susumu took that story and devised a screenplay that's far more heavy-handed than his work for another contemporary Shochiku horror piece, 'Goke, body snatcher from hell,' and frankly downright sloppy and harried. The film isn't downright awful, but that's not saying much.

    For as gawky as the screenplay is, plot development is commonly brusque and forced, and the pacing is a mixed bag that mostly, increasingly, pushes along too swiftly. The narrative at large feels overfull in only eight-four minutes as ideas are smashed together inelegantly; swell as the root conceptions for characters, scenes, and dialogue may be, they are reduced and rendered with such blunt, tactless forthrightness that their potential is overcooked. Add some Movie Magic for good measure, moving the plot along as it requires without concern for judicious, sensible story progression. To much the same end, while he could only work with the material he had, Nihonmatsu Kazui's direction here comes across as harried, struggling to keep the proceedings cohesive - which makes it all the more unfortunate that Terada Akimitsu's editing is even more curt and forcible than the plot development, so dubious that at times a beat or scene is altogether cut short. For the record, that includes the last minutes. And it bears repeating that all throughout the length we're given spoken reference to insect activity, but it's certainly not handled in a manner that allows the thought to resonate; in the second half these thoughts are brought to bear more concretely, but still the potency is plainly lacking owing to how the picture was written, directed, and edited.

    Other facets are more appreciable. Under all these conditions the cast is regularly put in the regrettable position of overacting (I feel so bad for Chico Roland in particular), recalling contemporary 'Star Trek,' but they put forth an honest effort and mostly come off better than not. Hirase Shizuo's cinematography is fairly smart at times, capturing some nice detail. I love the stunts and practical effects, of course, and the special makeup; where more fanciful visuals are inserted the use is quite fetching. The production design and art direction are fantastic, and likewise the costume design, hair, and makeup. I like Kikuchi Shinsuke's original music as it complements the proceedings, even if it tends to get overwhelmed by all else on hand. Broadly speaking 'War of the insects' is well made. It's just that for all the skill and intelligence that did go into it, these are sadly not reflected in the writing, the direction, or the editing, and the end product stumbles significantly in imparting its tale. We do get what we came for, but the power of the material absolutely is not there. I tend to refer to Fukasaku Kinji's 'Virus' of 1980 a lot because it has stuck with me every day since I watched it, but it seems like a particularly relevant point of comparison here: while the plots differ, the features reach for the same region of tying together an apocalyptic nightmare, the shortsightedness of humans and military endeavors, and the faint spark of hope for a future. Where 'Virus' resonates thunderously over its two and one-half hours, however, the doing here is such a clunky mishmash that it is robbed of all impact.

    It's not all bad. There are much worse ways to spend your time. For what this title does well, I want to like it more than I do. For all those ways in which it falls short, emphatically including the almost laughable last stretch, I wonder if I'm not being too generous. I'm glad for those who get more out of 'War of the insects' than I do, but in my opinion this is just too flawed to earn a specific recommendation.
    5Jeremy_Urquhart

    Wish it had been better.

    Maybe if the bugs had been big and/or radioactive, we could have had some fun set pieces, but eventually it sets in that maybe this doesn't want to be a fun, silly bug movie.

    I mean, the premise of insects wanting to wipe out humanity before humanity wipes them out is absurd, but through this crazy premise, the film gets pretty serious, thematically, while looking at things like the atomic bomb attacks on Japan and the Holocaust, which must given this its title of Genocide.

    Not sure I've ever had a B-movie like this go so heavy (especially when at the start it looked like it was going to be very silly), and I don't think it truly works, but it's an admirable effort.

    It will surely stick out in my memory the more and more old Japanese horror movies I work through in the future.
    6DanTheMan2150AD

    Exhausting

    Exceptionally convoluted and deliriously nihilistic, Genocide is appropriately harrowing and periodically bonkers if a little middling around the second act. The second of only two movies from director Kazui Nihonmatsu, having previously helmed The X from Outer Space, Genocide is all over the place with enough hair-brained ideas to fill two movies let alone a single 84-minute one, primarily the hallucinogenic bees being bred by an insane holocaust survivor. Nihonmatsu handles the film with considerably more skill than his prior effort, there's a wider variety of shots and a better building of suspense thanks in part to the photography of Shizuo Hirase and the passable score from Shunsuke Kikuchi. It's very much an accident of a film, suitably ambitious and apocalyptic in its finality, ultimately hinging on the potential detonation of a hydrogen bomb and the single mother who may have to single-handedly repopulate a country. Genocide is an exhausting yet very rewarding experience, showcasing so pretty damn good filmmaking for its small budget but, as noted before, has too much plot for its own good.

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    Related interests

    Hidetoshi Nishijima and Tôko Miura in Drive My Car (2021)
    Japanese
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film received the comedic riff treatment by the Mystery Science Theater 3000 (1988) crew in "Cinematic Titanic" under its original U.S. title "War of the Insects".
    • Connections
      Featured in Cinematic Titanic: War of the Insects (2011)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1969 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • War of the Insects
    • Production company
      • Shochiku
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.45 : 1

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