Film Review – Onibaba
Jul 26, 2008 in asian film, film reviews, japanese film
Title: Onibaba
Director: Kaneto Shindo
Year: 1964
Genre: Horror
Format Reviewed: Film
The rich history of Japanese film can be overlooked these days, due to the prevalence of remade 90’s and 00’s J-horror movies which have over-saturated the American market. It may seem that Japanese film has only had one type of horror: your long-haired little girl, or pale-paced boy that seems to teleport to the scariest location right behind you. Although I believe a lot of this imagery stem from more ancient Japanese folk ghost stories, which can be seen on scrolls in some Japanese museum, there is a lot of original stuff out there, old and new. Onibaba is a great example of a very unique horror movie with a straightforward plot, a deeper message, and haunting silent imagery.
To even start to talk about the plot in Onibaba would tell you most of the story. Not too much happens in the movie overall, though this isn’t to be meant as a fault. A mother and daughter live in a field of tall grass (seen in the poster) during wartime between samurai, and they live by trading dead samurai’s equipment for food. Along comes a neighbor who is looking for company from the daughter, but the mother doesn’t want him to split up the mother-daughter living arrangement. She has to find some way of keeping her daughter from running away to him.
Like most Japanese horror, the horror of Onibaba doesn’t come from thrills of killing, but rather from a chilling atmospheric presence of inhumanity. This is really where the black & white color scheme actually is a complement to the film. Silent, still shots of scenes by the river contrast with sloppy and frantic close up shots of running through the fields. Slow-motion, flowing grass seems to characterize some sort of unknown life in the night.
The simple and slow-moving horror that builds through the night scenes climaxes with a horrific realization about the mother. Themes of sin and punishment, as well as war and humanity run throughout the plot, and the audience is left with a situation where one ultimately decides their own fate. Onibaba is a commentary on how little one often understands those consequences.
Rating: 4 /5




Title: One Missed Call 2 (Chaku-shin ari 2)
Title: The Great Yokai War (aka. Yokai Daisensou)