Studio: Toei
Director: Takashi Shimizu
Writer: Takashi Shimizu
Producer: Takashige Ichise, Kazuo Kato, Masaaki Takashima
Stars: Yurei Yanagi, Yue, Ryota Koyama, Hitomi Miwa, Asumi Miwa, Yumi Yoshiyuki, Kazushi Ando, Chiaki Kuriyama, Takako Fuji, Takashi Matsuyama, Yuko Daike, Makoto Ashikawa
Review Score:
Summary:
Six intertwining vignettes tell the story of a family’s violent murder, which curses a house along with anyone who enters it.
Review:
While Westerners wouldn’t get an English-language taste of the “Ju-On” franchise until 2004’s “The Grudge,” Japanese audiences had their first bites in the form of a 1998 anthology movie for TV titled “Gakko no kaidan G” (“School Ghost Story G”). Still searching for his break at the time, filmmaker Takashi Shimizu took the task of writing and directing two three-minute segments for the project. Shimizu’s shorts, “Katasumi” and “4444444444,” assumed a second life two years later by doubling as prequel material for his feature-length follow-up “Ju-On: The Curse.”
Watch “Katasumi,” retitled “In a Corner” for its U.S. release as a DVD extra, and “4444444444,” aka “Ten Fours” (even though the phone number featured technically displays twelve fours), with foreknowledge of the franchise they would spawn and surprise might be the first reaction. Both shorts are shot on video with an unsteady camera, lending the look of cheap rush jobs by person(s) charitably described as “aspiring” when “amateur” might be more appropriate. Climactic scares then arrive without context, quite literally limited to a chalk-skinned woman in the first and a chalk-skinned boy in the second appearing with an open mouth before quickly cutting to black. Had these premiered as part of a horror shorts block during a film festival, it is unlikely either would imprint enough of a memory to warrant a write-up in post-fest coverage.
Creative types, take note. If you’re familiar with the concept of “idea debt,” you know what goes into creating story bibles, concept sketches, outlines, and exhaustive notes while painstakingly plotting the next “Star Wars” saga, “Harry Potter” series, or million dollar entertainment idea. Maybe you’re inventing too much work for yourself.
With two one-note shorts comprising six minutes of material, Takashi Shimizu unknowingly founded a profitable property consisting of movies numbering in the double digits, over a half-dozen novels, comic books, a video game, even a pachinko machine. The inspirational lesson here is figure out details later, focus on producing content first.
Although the success of Shimizu’s accomplishment is unassailable, effectiveness of execution on the series’ earliest entries is open to debate. Like the pair of three-minute pieces preceding it, first feature in the franchise “Ju-On: The Curse” operates with minimalism as its mantra. For good and for bad, that simplicity applies to style as well as scares.
A “juon” is a curse created from such strong vengeance that the place where the death took place gathers the victim’s grudge as an evil force. Anyone coming into contact with that curse subsequently dies, birthing another curse in the process.
“Ju-On: The Curse” is an anthology of sorts centered on a different character for each 10-ish minute segment. Chapters, as well as events depicted, are arranged out of chronological order, ultimately interconnecting into the tale of the Saeki family’s juon and its ripple effect on the Murakamis, a family unfortunate enough to move into the Saekis’ cursed home.
Viewer and reviewer comments made closer in time to the movie’s release mention confusion stemming from this disjointed structure. Coming at “Ju-On: The Curse” for the first time many years after the fact, when genre entertainment has ensured some knowledge of ghost boy Toshio and his contortionist corpse mother Kayako, impartiality evaluating a confusion factor is challenging. I didn’t have difficulty following along, actually feeling that gradually filling in the background enhances the storytelling, though I also knew some of the outcome. For those going in blind, mentally refitting each piece into a coherent timeline once the credits roll might not come easily.
The movie’s greater issue is that all six segments end exactly the same way. If this were written in annoying contemporary vernacular, the previous sentence would have concluded in all caps, or with a period following each of the last four words.
Toshio sits behind a protagonist and meows from his gaping mouth. Kayako confronts a protagonist and croaks from her gaping mouth. Toshio confronts another protagonist and meows from his gaping mouth. The fourth segment ups the gaping mouth ante by having a character confront a ghost whose entire jaw is missing. Then back to Kayako croaking while confronting one more person. The final chapter concludes with yet another ghost vs. human confrontation, but cuts to credits before the mouth can go Grand Canyon.
I would have written SPOILERS above that paragraph except I don’t see how those revelations spoil anything, much less how reusing an identical beat could still be a surprise by its sixth usage. I understand that numerous people have expressed finding “Ju-On: The Curse” to be nightmarishly frightening, haunting imaginations endlessly even after the movie is over. What I don’t understand is how this holds true after seeing six consecutive setups lead to six duplicate climaxes. Characters aren’t serving story at this point. They are serving a simple scare, and the lack of context behind the repeated reveal dulls any impact beyond a visual impression.
Its origins as a direct-to-TV production don’t lend “Ju-On: The Curse” a very cinematic look. The 4:3 frame feels claustrophobic. The shot-on-video grain looks cheap. The camera is restricted to often uninteresting shots, occasionally canting itself or shooting through a window to add some sort of personality to the presentation.
“Ju-On: The Curse” is an atmospheric mystery, to be sure. But disassociating it from the juggernaut it would become and taking it at face value, the movie has a hard time holding up to fresh eyes over 15 years later.
“Ju-On: The Curse” can always be appreciated for its globe-spanning grip on pop culture and its importance in horror film history. Barring a time travel trip to before the J-horror enthusiasm balloon burst, when it could be experienced in the original moment, appreciating the movie as a trip into terror is now dependent on tolerance for low-quality technical aesthetics, and a proclivity for finding fright in an underwear-clad Japanese boy meowing menacingly.
Review Score: 65
Before you know it, viewers gradually transform into frogs slowly boiled alive without realizing the dangerous heat enveloping them until it’s too late.