Featured Post

Pre-Thanksgiving OT – The Inevitable Food and Festivities Post

Feasts, gatherings and get-togethers, and food. I remember tossing the old pigskin around with my dad while turkey and sundry sides were bei...

Friday, October 21, 2022

Friday Evening Post

 Good evening. 


Kwaidan (1964)
After more than a decade of sober political dramas and socially minded period pieces, the great Japanese director Masaki Kobayashi shifted gears dramatically for this rapturously stylized quartet of ghost stories. Featuring colorfully surreal sets and luminous cinematography, these haunting tales of demonic comeuppance and spiritual trials, adapted from writer Lafcadio Hearn’s collections of Japanese folklore, are existentially frightening and meticulously crafted. This version of Kwaidan is the original three-hour cut, never before released in the United States.



Classic Horror Film Kwaidan is Moody and Surreal

Masaki Kobayashi’s 1965 horror anthology Kwaidan is not the type of movie you watch if you’re looking for hideous monsters or gallons of gore. It’s not even the kind of movie you watch if you want to be scared. It is, however, the kind of movie you watch if you’re looking to immerse yourself in atmosphere and masterful cinematography.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Popular