IMDb RATING
7.0/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
The ghost of a samurai's wife takes revenge on her husband.The ghost of a samurai's wife takes revenge on her husband.The ghost of a samurai's wife takes revenge on her husband.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
7.02.1K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Interesting and enjoyable but flawed version
Tired of living in poverty with his wife, a samurai hatches a scheme to kill her off so he can marry a wealthier woman which he carries out successfully, but her ghost returns to torment him for the wrongful death and must find a way to stop it before he is condemned for eternity.
This is one of the most enjoyable and faithful variations of the story. Even though most of them are going to be pretty much similar to what happens, this one goes for a straight retelling of the story which comes off decently. With the first half retelling their life in poverty together, these reinforcements of the society gap between the two becomes heavily integrated with the original story which isn't that action-packed yet wholly sets up the ghostly vengeance later on. When the murder happens and the ghostly stuff starts to happen, it gets infinitely better through the use of actually having stuff happening as those allow this one to surprisingly become far more watchable. With the last part of the film taken up by this use of classic Gothic horror tropes as the visions of the two ghosts appearing around the huts or appearing out of the swamp, moaning and madness all start to come into play here in a series of long, extended scare scenes that take on a fine form of revenge against him and even does correct some flaws found here. It doesn't have too many flaws about it to hold it back. The first half of this film has absolutely nothing of any real value as a horror film at all, looking absolutely like a lame drama about the social standing rather than anything to do with a ghost story, and it makes for some utterly boring and not at all interesting times. The endless talks of him trying to get a better life, the prodding from his friend who knows too much and the interactions with the wife all compound together to make this a pretty bland part of the story. As well, the film also really looks it's age with the set-based look of the villages and the cramped, confined feel completely destroys the intent of being out in the countryside the way it should be. The positives counteract some of these issues but not all of them, leaving this as a rather interesting take on the story but overall not much else.
Rated Unrated/PG-13: Violence.
This is one of the most enjoyable and faithful variations of the story. Even though most of them are going to be pretty much similar to what happens, this one goes for a straight retelling of the story which comes off decently. With the first half retelling their life in poverty together, these reinforcements of the society gap between the two becomes heavily integrated with the original story which isn't that action-packed yet wholly sets up the ghostly vengeance later on. When the murder happens and the ghostly stuff starts to happen, it gets infinitely better through the use of actually having stuff happening as those allow this one to surprisingly become far more watchable. With the last part of the film taken up by this use of classic Gothic horror tropes as the visions of the two ghosts appearing around the huts or appearing out of the swamp, moaning and madness all start to come into play here in a series of long, extended scare scenes that take on a fine form of revenge against him and even does correct some flaws found here. It doesn't have too many flaws about it to hold it back. The first half of this film has absolutely nothing of any real value as a horror film at all, looking absolutely like a lame drama about the social standing rather than anything to do with a ghost story, and it makes for some utterly boring and not at all interesting times. The endless talks of him trying to get a better life, the prodding from his friend who knows too much and the interactions with the wife all compound together to make this a pretty bland part of the story. As well, the film also really looks it's age with the set-based look of the villages and the cramped, confined feel completely destroys the intent of being out in the countryside the way it should be. The positives counteract some of these issues but not all of them, leaving this as a rather interesting take on the story but overall not much else.
Rated Unrated/PG-13: Violence.
The ending samurai standoff sequence is epic and worthwhile.
The Ghost of Yotsuya (1959) is a Japanese samurai/horror movie that I recently watched on a random streaming service. The storyline follows an ancient Japanese fairytale about a murdered woman who haunts her home and husband. As the husband tries to move on he finds it difficult to determine what's reality and what isn't. As he starts to go mad he gets closer to closer to being reunited with his deceased wife.
This movie is directed Nobuo Nakagawa (Jigoku) and stars Shigeru Amachi (Girl Boss Blues: Queen Bee's Counterattack), Noriko Kitazawa (The Depths) and Katsuko Wakasugi (Black Breasts).
The samurai genre is my absolute favorite genre so I may be a little bias when it comes to these films. The background music in this is outstanding, as are the sets, makeup and there's a tremendous transformation scene that's absolutely a must see. I adore the way they make the ghosts face look and how it tortures the husband. The ending samurai standoff sequence is epic and worthwhile.
Overall this is a unique addition to the horror genre that's a must see. I would score this a strong 7.5/10 and recommend seeing it once. And yes, it's with subtitles.
This movie is directed Nobuo Nakagawa (Jigoku) and stars Shigeru Amachi (Girl Boss Blues: Queen Bee's Counterattack), Noriko Kitazawa (The Depths) and Katsuko Wakasugi (Black Breasts).
The samurai genre is my absolute favorite genre so I may be a little bias when it comes to these films. The background music in this is outstanding, as are the sets, makeup and there's a tremendous transformation scene that's absolutely a must see. I adore the way they make the ghosts face look and how it tortures the husband. The ending samurai standoff sequence is epic and worthwhile.
Overall this is a unique addition to the horror genre that's a must see. I would score this a strong 7.5/10 and recommend seeing it once. And yes, it's with subtitles.
`O, the fury of a maddened woman is truly the greatest horror there is.'
And who can fault Iwa's fury? Her husband Iemon murders her father to marry her, deceives her into parting from her sister, fathers her child, pays another man to seduce her, then administers a disfiguring poison so he can marry another woman. Yet Iemon is not wholly wicked - he suffers pangs of conscience, and most of his crimes are the result of his servant's goading. Whilst our sympathy goes to Iwa, our empathy extends to Iemon. The film is endowed with the dimensions of a classical tragedy, as the director undoubtedly intended. In fact, the picture's opening scenes are unabashedly stage-bound, before it shifts subtly into an engrossing cinematic experience. Although the story has been adapted to film many times in Japan, this is generally considered the definitive version.
Besides its dramatic power, this version of Ghost Story of Yotsuya is visually sumptuous and thrillingly scored, the scope compositions are masterly, and the female phantom's appearance is truly nightmarish.
This is easily the most accomplished, frightening and satisfying of Nakagawa's period ghost stories.
Besides its dramatic power, this version of Ghost Story of Yotsuya is visually sumptuous and thrillingly scored, the scope compositions are masterly, and the female phantom's appearance is truly nightmarish.
This is easily the most accomplished, frightening and satisfying of Nakagawa's period ghost stories.
An okay flick with amazing, hallucinatory visuals
Shigeru Amachi wants to marry Katsuko Wakasugi, the daughter of prominent samurai Shinjirô Asano. Asano refuses the request, belittling Amachi who promptly murders him. Shuntarô Emi witnesses the murder and promises to help him cover it up, if he in turn helps him marry Wakasugi's sister. The two tell Wakasugi that her father was murdered by a notorious criminal and they will help her get revenge. Instead, they murder her sister's fiancé and Emi runs off with her.
Months later, Amachi and Wakasugi are married and living in Edo. Amachi has fallen for Junko Ikeuchi, the daughter of a nobleman, and hatches a plan to rid himself of Wakasugi. He hires Jun Ôtomo to seduce her so that he can legally kill her, but the plan goes awry. Ôtomo ends up dead and Wakasugi is poisoned causing hideous facial deformities before she also dies. Amachi marries Ikeuchi, but the spirits of Wakasugi and Ôtomo haunt him leading him to ruin.
This is probaby the best known adaptation of the kabuki play "Yotsuya Kaidan" (there are many). It's a fairly routine film from a story and characters perspective, but the film's vibrant colours and gory, hallucinatory visuals are really something.
Months later, Amachi and Wakasugi are married and living in Edo. Amachi has fallen for Junko Ikeuchi, the daughter of a nobleman, and hatches a plan to rid himself of Wakasugi. He hires Jun Ôtomo to seduce her so that he can legally kill her, but the plan goes awry. Ôtomo ends up dead and Wakasugi is poisoned causing hideous facial deformities before she also dies. Amachi marries Ikeuchi, but the spirits of Wakasugi and Ôtomo haunt him leading him to ruin.
This is probaby the best known adaptation of the kabuki play "Yotsuya Kaidan" (there are many). It's a fairly routine film from a story and characters perspective, but the film's vibrant colours and gory, hallucinatory visuals are really something.
Entertaining, but no knockout blows
The classic tale of 'The Ghost of Yotsuya' is entertaining enough, and zips along in its 76 minute run time, but it didn't deliver any knockout blows. The story is fairly black and white, with a ronin and his sidekick committing murder to get the women they want, but the depth of the blackness in their hearts is surprising, and makes it effective. Personally, I didn't find their supernatural comeuppance all that frightening, and felt that director Nobuo Nakagawa relied too much on the shock value of visuals, instead of creating real tension. The visuals are decent, but they're also dated, and we rarely fail to see what's coming. The performances were also generally over-done, though I understand my perspective is from another culture. Anyway, fans of the genre will probably enjoy this one.
Did you know
- TriviaThe mon was the currency of Japan from 1336 until 1870 when it began to be replaced by the yen (¥). It remained in circulation until 1891.
- Quotes
Iemon Tamiya: A samurai has his pride.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Building the Inferno: Nobuo Nakagawa and the Making of 'Jigoku' (2006)
- How long is The Ghost of Yotsuya?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Ghost Story of Yotsuya in Tokaido
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 16m(76 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content




