Tag Archive for 'faux-ripper'

07
Aug

japanese faux ripper porn

My husband, Brian, is on vacation, so we watched Assault! Jack the Ripper (a.k.a. Boko! Kirisaki Jack) together yesterday. After it was over, Brian needed to get outside into the fresh air, do some yardwork, and take a shower.

What can I say about the movie? It’s not poorly made. It’s not poorly acted. It’s not even poorly scripted. But man, can I think of a lot of ways I would rather have spent my time!

I’m calling it “porn” even though it doesn’t show any genitalia. Actually, that’s not quite right. For the Ripper character, his razor-sharp blade becomes his genitalia. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

BASIC PLOT SUMMARY: When a waitress with a bad attitude asks a pastry cook to take her home in the rain, they get diverted by a female hitchhiker who immediately strips from the waist up and starts cutting herself with a knife. When they kick her out, she gets killed by her own insistence on hanging onto the side of the car. Okay, so they stash the body in a nearby junkyard, and in the process tear her body up pretty badly. Back at the waitress’s apartment, they have hot sex, made more “exciting” by the pastry cook’s having seen the dead woman’s blood. From then on, the waitress encourages him to commit murder so they can continue to have hot sex. He doesn’t just kill women though. He stabs them in the crotch, then slits them up through their lower torso. You know… pretty similar to Jack the Ripper’s modus operandi. In the process, the cook discovers that he prefers killing women to having sex with the waitress. He becomes more and more sexually detached from her, and starts killing more and more women more and more recklessly. (The equation of the knife with his genitals is obvious, by the way, as he begins to stash the knife in his pants on top of his crotch). By the way, this guy ultimately outdoes the Ripper’s “Double Event” with the butchery of 5 women at once in an apartment.

So what do you say about a movie like this? Yeah, it’s a Faux Ripper “find.” But it’s not quite what I was hoping to find.

THE GOOD: Though it’s a Faux Ripper film, the movie really does deliver a pretty plausible explanation for the types of crimes that Jack the Ripper himself committed. It has been said that the Ripper murders were sex crimes. Well, in this film, we see the progression from how a seemingly ordinary man’s sexual excitement at the sight of blood becomes a (sexual) addiction to shedding female blood… and how that in itself ultimately becomes a substitute for genital sexual expression. The murders in this film are clearly the expression of a twisted and perverted sexuality (a sexuality in which murder becomes an aphrodisiac)… quite similar to the violent sexuality of Peter Kuerten–Germany’s infamous Dusseldorf Ripper. Jess Franco attempts (much less successfully imho) to show this sort of perverted sexuality in his 1976 film Jack the Ripper (a.k.a. Der Dirnenmoerder von London), and so does Girard Kikoine in Edge of Sanity (1989). Unlike these two Jack the Ripper films, though, this 1976 Faux Ripper movie actually does a decent job with presenting the subject matter.

THE UGLY: Virtually everything else. The leading actor and actress do a good job of bringing these despicable characters to life, and the minor roles are played with conviction. But aside from some victims, there are very few likable people in this film.

THE BAD: Almost no discernible moral center. Brian thought there was none at all, whereas I think there’s some slight hint of moral center. The victims are generally drawn sympathetically. The Ripper character goes more and more out of control (kind of like Hyde), and ultimately begins to kill people who are connected to him, and therefore certain to lead the police to him (though we never see that final outcome). Also, his blood lust leads him more into despair than into any discernible excitement. So this is not exactly an “isn’t murder sexy?” scenario.

That’s my take on it. Here’s the description at blockbuster.com, written by someone knowledgeable in this subgenre of Japanese “softcore”:

“Of any filmmaker pushing the boundaries of Nikkatsu’s successful “violent pink” line of softcore pinku eiga films in the mid-’70s, no one did it with more style and less conscience than Yasuharu Hasebe. This film comes off the outstanding Okasu! with another dazzling nightmare of erotic violence. Tamaki Katsura (nominated as Best Actress by the Japanese Academy for her role here) and Yutaka Hayashi star as a young couple whose increasingly kinky sex games lead them to slice and dice a number of young women with a cake-knife, starting a citywide panic. Hasebe strikes the perfect balance between blood and sex, which are intertwined as they rarely are in mainstream European films and almost never in American ones. Unfortunately, his next swing at the genre was the appalling Rape! 25-ji Bokan (1977), a film so unbelievably vicious and perverse that it all but halted Nikkatsu’s production of violent pink for nearly two years.” ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Well, frankly, this “erotic” nightmare is less than “dazzling,” but it is more than competently made. Even though Assault! Jack the Ripper is well made and well acted, though, I do not recommend that you seek it out.

Here are a couple of links to background info on the pinku eiga genre of Japanese cinema and its “violent pink” subgenre. (Oh, and need it be said that linking is for information purposes only and does not imply endorsement?):

31
May

faux ripper 101: new york ripper

New York Ripper is not a Jack the Ripper film. It’s not even about a Ripper copycat (though Jack the Ripper—JtR for short) IS mentioned at one point during the investigation. This film is what I call a “Faux Ripper” movie (i.e. a film which uses “Ripper” in one of its titles—generally for marketing reasons—but which is not about JtR). This film uses “Ripper” in its original Italian title, and in all English versions.

At any rate, this film is an Italian giallo film, by ultraviolent filmmaker Lucio Fulci. The killer in this movie is extremely sadistic (in the film’s most famous scene, he slits a woman’s eyeball with a razor), and he taunts the NYPD by phoning them up and speaking in a duck-quack voice.

Though this film fits into the giallo subgenre of Italian horror, it is not really representative of gialli as a whole. The giallo subgenre generally combines murder mystery, high body count, variety of killing styles, dazzling cinematography, and the ultimate unraveling of the mystery… kind of like Halloween (part ONE!) and Friday the 13th (part ONE!)–though neither of those movies has the high cinematic style of the typical giallo.

FYI: gialli are pretty violent films. BUT in New York Ripper Lucio Fulci goes beyond the violence of the standard giallo film… particularly the gialli by filmmakers like Mario Bava and Dario Argento. That’s partly why I’m saying it’s not really a representative giallo. But in addition, it has a much more gritty look than any Bava or Argento giallo would. If you watch Bava’s Blood and Black Lace or Argento’s Deep Red—and then watch New York Ripper—you’ll quickly understand what I mean.

The ultraviolence in Fulci’s film is not really surprising, given that one of the script writers also contributed to the script of Ruggero Deodato’s Cannibal Holocaust… a movie so extreme that many people thought it was a snuff film. Actually, you could say it was so extreme that it got banned in ITALY!!! (I believe that it’s still banned to this day in the U.S.).

Despite its ultraviolence (and the fact that it’s not about Jack the Ripper), New York Ripper is well-made, presents an interesting mystery, and really explores the seedy side of New York. But this film is not recommended for anybody who does not have a very strong stomach or who does not want to watch extreme screen violence. I’m saying that as a critic who has seen the film for professional reasons, but who does not generally watch movies THIS violent for pleasure.

So consider yourselves warned! :-)

Resources:

Giallo (Wikipedia)—Encyclopedia overview of giallo.
Mario Bava, “Bava Speaks”—What the “creator” of giallo says about his work.
Dario Argento, Dark Dreams—A UK website devoted to the work of Dario Argento
Lucio Fulci, Official Lucio Fulci Website—includes a useful bio




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