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Need scary movies? Asian horror is just for you

10 frightening flicks that will have you shivering while you read subtitles

Megumi Okina meets up with a vengeful — and dead — mother and son in "Ju-on."
Lions Gate's
COMMENTARY
By Christopher Bahn
MSNBC contributor
updated 5:39 p.m. ET Oct. 29, 2007

Just as the vitality and bold style of manga has swept through the formerly American-dominated field of comic books, Asian cinema has left a lasting stamp on the horror-film genre — especially the violent and distinctively spooky movies currently coming out of Japan, known by their fans as J-horror.

Hollywood has made English-language remakes of some of the bigger J-horror hits, including “The Ring” and “The Grudge,” but why not check out the originals? After all, you only need to fear a few subtitles.

“The Host” (2006)
A lot of monster movies keep their monsters hidden in shadows or obscured by camera angles until the last few minutes of the film, but Korean director Bong Joon-ho’s “The Host” dispenses with such trickery immediately, showing us the monster bursting out of the Han River in a broad-daylight attack on a crowded marketplace. One reason it can get away with this is that the creature was designed by Peter Jackson’s WETA special-effects shop; it looks as vividly realistic as anything in “Lord of the Rings.” But even better is the fact that “The Host” has more to offer than just special effects. It’s also the story of a fragmented, dysfunctional family in crisis (the crisis being that their little girl was taken alive back to the Host’s lair), and has plenty of pointed satirical commentary about the government’s ability to deal with the beast.

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“Ringu” (1998)
In this effective and hugely influential Japanese chiller based on Koji Suzuki’s novel, a TV reporter tries to track down the source of a cursed videotape that kills anyone who watches it seven days later. This is the only movie in this article that literally gave me nightmares. That’s because the real terror is not the tape, but the incredibly creepy, implacably evil being who haunts it: Sadako, the vengeful ghost of a murdered psychic girl. Her long black hair conceals a face we never see, but only get mere glimpses of the insanity and deformity caused by her long imprisonment in the well that is the videotape’s central image — the well out of which she will crawl to find you and kill you in one week’s time. Japan’s highest-grossing horror film, “Ringu” spawned a boatload of similar movies, including three sequels and the less-scary American remake “The Ring” starring Naomi Watts.

“Ju-on” (2003)
Takashi Shimizu’s “Ju-on” — which he later remade in the U.S. as “The Grudge” — packs a triple punch of terror with an entire family of relentlessly murderous ghosts who track down and destroy anyone who enters the house where father Takeo went insane and killed his wife Kayako and son Toshio. The evil lives on in their undead spirits, who maliciously thirst for blood. Toshio is now a croaking, sinister urchin who appears to the victims first, heralding the far more frightening appearance of his mother, who crawls like a lizard and announces her arrival with an unnerving, throaty death-rattle. “Ju-on” brings the scares when it needs to, but the storyline is needlessly convoluted, with too many overlapping, non-chronological plotlines to make sense of.

“Kwaidan” (1964)
At its time the most expensive movie ever made in Japan, director Masaki Kobayashi’s “Kwaidan” loosely links four of the ancient folk tales — known as kwaidan, or “ghost stories” — that had been popularized by Lafcadio Hearn, a Greek-Irish American journalist and Japanese emigrant who was one of the first people to bring Japanese culture to Western audiences. Elegant and beautifully shot, “Kwaidan” is not scary in the way we expect of a modern horror film, but it is full of eerie atmosphere, especially the segment “Hoichi The Earless,” about a blind musician summoned each night to play for a courtroom of otherworldly noblemen. Recommended for anyone with an interest in Japanese folklore, or fans of Akira Kurosawa’s similar “Dreams.”

“Godzilla” (1954)
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The giant city-stomping radioactive dinosaur is too big to ignore, and not just because he’s 400 feet tall. The success of the original “Godzilla” film launched not only a long series of his own, but an entire subgenre of Japanese giant-monster films — kaiju, as they’re known — including such beasts as Rodan, Mothra and Gamera. A malevolent black force of destruction, Godzilla’s invasion of Tokyo played on the dark memories that many Japanese people had of the devastating and then-recent bombing raids of World War II, especially Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The U.S. re-cut of the film watered a lot of that down, adding a pointless subplot featuring Raymond Burr as an American reporter, and it’s this version that most of us have seen. But in 2006, director Ishiro Honda’s original Japanese version was finally released on DVD in the States, and it’s well worth seeking out.

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“Matango: Attack of the Mushroom People” (1963)
Nine years after directing “Godzilla,” Ishiro Honda returned to the theme of nuclear-based horror with this claustrophobic tale of desperation and mutation. The setup of “Matango” is weirdly reminiscent of “Gilligan’s Island,” which debuted on American TV the following year: A luxury yacht shipwrecks on an uncharted Pacific island, with castaways including a professor, a rich industrialist, a famous actress and a bumbling ship’s captain and mate. They soon discover that their island is no paradise. The prospect of starvation leads to hoarding and squabbling, but things get worse when they discover the wreck of the ship that brought a now-vanished research crew to the island. Inside, in rooms coated with ominously colored fungus, they find a logbook with a warning not to eat the mushrooms, which are, of course, radioactive mutant mushrooms. One by one, the survivors succumb, not to be killed but transformed into what look like giant, mobile toadstools. 


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