Kaibyô Otama-ga-ike (1960) Poster

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6/10
Nice visual presentation punches up a routine, too-familiar storyline.
capkronos19 January 2009
KAIBYO OTAMAGA-IKE (THE GHOST CAT OF OTAMA POND), based on the story "Sotoo Tachibana" by Yoshihiro Ishikawa and Jiro Fujishima, opens with a great shot of the camera pulling back from a foggy marsh to reveal a young couple and then a hissing black cat on a tree branch. Tadahiko and Keiko, set the be married the following day, become lost in the woods and discover that no matter which direction they walk, they end up back at the same exact spot near a pond. Exhausted, and with both nightfall and and approaching thunderstorm heading their way, the two decide to follow a black cat back to a seemingly-abandoned home where they can spend the night. There, Keiko encounters an old woman (who may be a witch), passes out and comes down with a fever. Tadahiko and Keiko promptly leave, but a visit to a doctor reveals Keiko has the "mark of death" and has been somehow cursed by the cat. After an exorcism, the doctor explains to Tadahiko how the curse came about in the first place, and then we go into flashback mode, which takes up the bulk of the run-time.

The flashback scenes center around a pair of star-crossed lovers; samurai Yachimaru and maid Kozaso, whose families are sworn enemies. Kozaso's father is not only abusive and controlling, he's also carrying on a not-too-secret affair with his mistress and has sided with the corrupt village magistrate; arranging for for his daughter to marry the magistrate's brother against her wishes. While Yachimaru is away, Kozaso's father, the magistrate and the magistrate's brother murder his father and grandmother, burn down his home and attempt to rape his sister, who chooses to kill herself with a hairpin instead of being shamed. Yachimaru returns, learns his entire family is dead and then is murdered himself. Naturally, all the victims return in ghost form to settle the score by tricking those responsible for their murders into killing each other and those around them. So what part does the wronged family's pet kitty Tama play in all this? Best I could make of it is that she serves as the conveyance between the natural world and spirit world.

If you're familiar with Japanese horror of the 50s and 60s, this film doesn't really offer up anything new or different. You can see the same exact characters going through the same murdered-innocents- return-as-vengeance -seeking-ghosts plot in dozens of other films from this time period. The cat angle also isn't anything new. Do a title search here and you'll see at least a dozen 'Ghost Cat' films were made in Japan between 1953 and 1968. However, judged as a separate entity or from the viewpoint of someone not familiar with these kind of films, this isn't bad at all. The art direction, camera-work and lighting are all good, and if the script isn't particularly insightful or layered, it's at least competent. I still prefer what I've seen from Nobuo Nakagawa thus far, as his films tend to be better written, paced and acted than this one, but Ishikawa (who wrote several of Nakagawa's films) does a fairly good job orchestrating the action. Cinematographer Kikuzo Kawasaki also does a good job; utilizing brown/muddy earth tones that makes the key supernatural images; a pond full of bright red blood, green-lit ghosts, a black cat's yellow eyes, etc., stand out.

Just like several other Japanese horror films from this period, the amount of violence and actual blood, as well as the body count, far exceed what was going on in horror cinema in most other countries during the same time. This was, after all, made three years before Herschell Gordon Lewis created the "first gore film" with BLOOD FEAST, and there are other Japanese movies made years before this one with just as much violence and blood. I'm not saying they're to the extreme of Lewis' films or were designed specifically to be gross like Lewis' films, but this still has lots of the red stuff, slashings, stabbings, grueling prolonged deaths, gashed faces, impalements, burnt corpses and other things that may surprise those used to tamer films from this era.
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7/10
black woollen gloves does not a cat woman make
christopher-underwood16 February 2013
Well, there is a cat, lots of ghosts and there is indeed a pond, but this was clearly a fairly low budget affair and some of the effects are a little, although overall, this is a rather beautiful looking film. This begins slowly, but eerily and with considerable beauty but by the end has picked up quite a pace with apparitions popping up all over the place as well as the attempt to convince that there is a cat woman. So much of this is so well done but the lady with long hair and black woollen gloves does not a cat woman make. A bit confusing in the middle section with two opposing families and complications because of some local government corruption but a surprising amount of blood, which helps to make the pond appear increasingly spooky. Worth a look.
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8/10
Not one of the best Japanese ghost movies, but worth a look
Alex Klotz27 January 2004
Although somewhat inferior to Nobuo Nakagawa's black and white version of a similar story, Borei Kaibyo Yashiki, this movie makes extensive use of its color footage, especially when showing the apparitions in a ghostly green light or the pond from the title tinted red. The furry cat-ghost-woman DOES look a bit ridiculous, as do some rather cheapish superimposed images, but the marvelous cinematography and the effective score still work pretty well to create a very creepy atmosphere. All in all, another example to make you wish more of these classic Japanese ghost chillers will be released for today's western audiences.
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Bad but interesting
white pongo23 October 2000
A soon-to-be-married couple get lost in the woods near Otamo pond.When they stumble across an old house in the woods, we get a feature length flashback about the curse surrounding the house and pond (the usual edo-period tale of murder and revenge).The acting is pretty bad and most of it is boring, but it's kind of interesting for a "gaijin" (foreigner) interested in Japanese horror cinema (like myself).It's surprisingly bloody for the time (compared to European and American cinema), with a vividly colourful pond full of blood and a decapitation by samurai sword.What's also interesting is that it's beautifully photographed, the Japanese (to this day) taking non "respectable" genre films just as seriously as their arthouse dramas and more conventional "quality" cinema.Along the same lines, the Japanese seem to take film restoration seriously.Therefore even this mostly forgotten potboiler was perfectly realised in Widescreen on the videotape i rented from a Tokyo video shop.By the way, the human/cat monster is pretty laughable-just a long haired woman wearing furry gloves!
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8/10
Otama's cat.
morrison-dylan-fan17 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Finally getting my internet service back up and running,I decided that it was time to catch-up on recommended viewings. Reading praise for the title from fellow IMDber manfromplanetx,I decided it was time to pull the tail,and see the ghost cat.

View on the film:

Capping the film with the "present" couple at the beginning and the end, (In a similar style to the wraparound tale in anthology flicks) co-writer/(with Jiro Fujishima) director Yoshihiro Ishikawa nicely uses it to catch the remaining Gothic ripples across Otama Pond,as the young couple find themselves unable to exit the maze of restlessness that has haunted the place for a century,which the writers cleverly give them a spiritual connection to.

Giving the tale an (un)dead ghost cat bounce, the screenplay by Ishikawa and Fujishima seeps the ghostly revenge in gradually,as the vile spat between the Yachimaru and Kozaso's intensifies.

Casting Yachimaru and Kozaso as star-crossed lovers, the writers cast open horrors from their abusive families,that bring out the shadow of the cat,as Kozaso and Yachimaru get snarled in the bloodthirsty,ghostly revenge. Clawing into his directing debut after writing a number of films, director Yoshihiro Ishikawa & cinematographer Kikuzô Kawasaki link the past and the present together with refined whip-pans covered with overlapping images.

Following a black kitty between the families, Ishikawa draws the ghostly revenge with lush stylisation colouring the pond in candle wax red,and keeping the revenge going across the century with the ghost sprayed in shining green,as the ghost cat jumps into the Otama pond.
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