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Guinea Pig 5: Mermaid in the Manhole

Original title: Ginî piggu: Manhôru no naka no ningyo
  • Video
  • 1988
  • 1h 3m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Guinea Pig 5: Mermaid in the Manhole (1988)
Body HorrorSplatter HorrorHorror

An artist rescues a mermaid in a sewer, who develops bleeding sores all over her body. He paints a portrait with what oozes from her body, and eventually dismembers her.An artist rescues a mermaid in a sewer, who develops bleeding sores all over her body. He paints a portrait with what oozes from her body, and eventually dismembers her.An artist rescues a mermaid in a sewer, who develops bleeding sores all over her body. He paints a portrait with what oozes from her body, and eventually dismembers her.

  • Director
    • Hideshi Hino
  • Stars
    • Shigeru Saiki
    • Mari Somei
    • Masami Hisamoto
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hideshi Hino
    • Stars
      • Shigeru Saiki
      • Mari Somei
      • Masami Hisamoto
    • 40User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Top cast5

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    Shigeru Saiki
    • The Artist…
    Mari Somei
    • The Mermaid
    Masami Hisamoto
    • Neighbor (female)
    Gô Rijû
    • Neighbor (male)
    Tsuyoshi Toshishige
    • Director
      • Hideshi Hino
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    5.52.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7xterminal

    Hino gets a plot

    Guinea Pig III: Mermaid in a Sewer (Hideshi Hino, 1988)

    Mermaid in a Sewer, one of the four Guinea Pig films directed by Hino, is the only one that rivals The Flower of Flesh and Blood in notoriety and popularity. Unlike its more graphic and brutal cousin, Mermaid in a Sewer (often translated as Mermaid in a Manhole, Mermaid in the Bathtub, or any other number of similar titles) actually has a plot to it. An artist (Shigeru Saiki), obviously modeled on Hino himself (Hino's style is unmistakable), draws his inspiration from things he sees and finds in his local sewer system. One day, what he finds among the muck and stench is... a mermaid (Mari Somei). Yes, a mermaid. A very attractive one at that (and one is forced to wonder what, exactly, would motivate an actress to play a part like this...). We find out, after the two have conversed a bit and he's done a preliminary sketch, that she is wounded. He takes her home (how he gets her there without anyone noticing is beyond me) and installs her in his bathtub in order to take care of her.

    You can see where this is going, I'm sure. Wound + sewer = bad, bad things.

    I'd comment on the acting, dialogue, etc. if I actually understood Japanese. Sometimes watching films in foreign languages with no subtitles is good for the soul, I guess (though anyone who happens to have a script from either 2 or 3 in English who'd be willing to send a copy my way would be remembered in my will, and not with a debt). The couple who lives downstairs from the artist (Masami Hisamoto, Tsuyoshi Toshishige) pop up every now and then to give what would seem a comic turn to the film, which only adds to the disgust and horror. If you get nightmares easily, this is not a film you ever want to see. As Joaquin Phoenix said in what was one of only a handful of lines in _8mm_ that's actually worth remembering, "there are some things you can't un-see." I could never pop this tape into the cassette player again, and certain images would remain as fresh in my mind as they are right now. It's that bad. *** 1/2
    9HumanoidOfFlesh

    Truly sickening gorefest.

    A painter named Hayashi(Shigeru Saiki)finds a wounded mermaid(Mari Somei)and saves her.He takes her home and puts her into his bathtub where she keeps decomposing,the spreading disease spurting blood and pus.Hideshi Hino's "Guinea Pig 4:Mermaid in the Manhole" is easily one of the most disgusting horror movies I have ever seen.The make-up effects made by Nobuaki Koga are incredibly revolting.The character of Hayashi is pretty sympathetic and the film has a mood of a very sad romance.The mermaid represents painter's wife and "all the beautiful things" he has lost,so she is bound to rot and vanish too."Mermaid in the Manhole" works as a piece of extreme art,so anyone who loves Japanese horror should give it a look.However if you're easily offended avoid this one like the plague.
    8w00f

    Simultaneously Disgusting and Beautiful

    Wow.

    I have rarely seen a film that manages to be intensely disgusting and poetically beautiful at the same time. Despite the reputation of the Ginipiggu films, this wasn't the most intense gore I've ever seen... Fulci's "Paura nella città dei morti viventi" is more disturbing, if not more graphic, and certainly far more violent. Fulci's film doesn't come close to the visual poetry that "Mermaid" exhibits in places, nor does it delve into the places in the soul that this film did.

    Confused yet?

    The basic story of "Mermaid": a Japanese artist has a penchant for lurking in a sewer near his home. We find out that this is because a beautiful mermaid lived in the river that once flowed where the sewer now sits. While skulking in the sewer one day, he finds the mermaid. She's been living in the darkness for decades, having become stranded when the city was built. The painter visits her repeatedly, and one day notices a horrible infection beginning on her abdomen. He realizes that she's gotten this infection from being trapped in the sewer for so long, and so he takes her home to care for her and paint her.

    The mermaid is the embodiment of the painter's childhood dreams, his innocence, and his joy. The infection is the decay of his own being, his psyche itself. As the film progresses, so does the infection, slowly disfiguring the mermaid until she comes to resemble ground beef covered with tumors that ooze multi-colored pus and occasionally give rise to masses of worms. She won't die, though, until he finishes his painting of her. She does die (which is an obvious outcome from the early part of the film -- but not the *ending*), and she does so slowly, painfully, horribly, and very graphically. If the thought of a boil-covered, bleeding woman lying in a bathtub filled with her own blood (and other fluids) while vomiting up blood and worms seems unpalatable to you, do NOT watch this film. I could easily see some of the scenes inducing a reversal of peristalsis in many viewers. I've seen some intense horror flicks and some very "realistic" gore, but there were definitely some nauseating and difficult moments for me in "Mermaid".

    There's also a scene wherein the mermaid has died and we see flowing paint obscure the paintings that the artist has rendered from his childhood memories as he dismembers her body, ostensibly for disposal. If I told any more, though, I'd be giving away the ending... and that wouldn't be fair.

    If you've got the stomach for it, I would highly recommend this film. The acting is solid (the dialogue is in Japanese with English subtitles), and the production values are quite good for a straight-to-video effort. This was a top ten seller in Japan for two months when it first came out, and with good reason. In many ways, this is a really excellent film, and it balances loathing and almost Poe-like horror with a certain inner beauty. I'm not generally a big fan of Japanese horror, but I haven't seen anything else that manages such a fine balancing act.

    "Mermaid in a Manhole" is available in the US only through Unearthed Films. It's worth the effort and expense to get hold of a copy.
    6Geeky Randy

    Probably one of the only films that could make the viewer want to run to the bathroom

    Director Hideshi Hino brings his manga to screen as an installment in the notorious GUINEA PIG series, about a recently widowered painter who finds artistic inspiration in an unlikely location from an unlikely creature. For gorehounds and ONLY gorehounds. The special effects—albeit twisted—are undeniably impressive. Probably one of the only films that could make the viewer want to run to the bathroom and vomit—not counting hand-held-styled movies that causes motion sickness. Aside from the shameless nastiness, the story's originality should also be recognized because of how difficult it can be to pull off this type of horror without involving serial killers or monsters in the mix.

    *** (out of four)
    LLAAA4837

    Experimental art film

    I saw this in the middle of the night, and it wasn't subtitled. Still, I figured out what it was about, despite the fact that I don't speak it's language. It's about what appears to be a painter who rescues an injured woman who begins to rot and spew pus. As she dies, he uses her goop as paint. The film's ending is depressing as it appears that he wasn't playing with a full deck.

    The overall tone of the film is bad enough without the bizarre situation, but the fact that the film literally doesn't race makes the outcome more of an effective idea that could be better implemented with a little less patience. Still, when the screen isn't drenched with guts and pus, it's pretty to look at. This is, i guess, a part of some strange series of films in Japan that deal with special effects gore and realism. This works in both areas, but also happens to have a little more to offer.

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    Related interests

    Jeff Goldblum in The Fly (1986)
    Body Horror
    Shawnee Smith in Saw (2004)
    Splatter Horror
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This is the last film starring Mari Somei, as the 25-years-old actress mysteriously disappeared in 1988. Her fate remains unknown.
    • Crazy credits
      At the end of the credits there is a small scene in the sewer where we hear something move in the water.
    • Connections
      Edited into Guinea Pig's Greatest Cuts (2005)

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    FAQ2

    • Why does the Artist paint things from the sewer?
    • Why does the Painter start stabbing and dismembering the Mermaid?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 25, 1988 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Guinea Pig 5: Mermaid in a Manhole
    • Production companies
      • Japan Home Video (JHV)
      • Ogura Jimusyo Co.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 3m(63 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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