Samenvattingen(1)
Shocking, outrageous, and poetic, Jigoku (Hell) is the most innovative creation from Nobuo Nakagawa, the father of the Japanese horror film. After a young theology student flees a hit-and-run accident, he is plagued by both his own guilt-ridden conscience and a mysterious, diabolical doppelganger. And in the gloriously gory final third of the film, Nakagawa offers up his vision of the underworld in a tour-de-force of torture and degradation. A striking departure from traditional Japanese ghost stories, Jigoku, with its truly eye-popping (and gouging) imagery, created aftershocks that are still reverberating in cinema around the world today. (officiële tekst van distribiteur)
(meer)Acteurs
Yôichi Numata
Japan
Beste films:
Ring (1998)
Džošú 701gó: Sasori (1972)
Jóen dokufuden: Okacu kjódžó tabi (1969)
Shigeru Amachi
Japan
Beste films:
Zatóiči monogatari (1962)
Tókaidó jocuja kaidan (1959)
Džigoku (1960)
Utako Mitsuya
Japan
Beste films:
Džigoku (1960)
Hiroshi Hayashi
Japan
Beste films:
Tókaidó jocuja kaidan (1959)
Džigoku (1960)
Taiheijó sensó to himejuri butai (1962)
Tomohiko Ôtani
Beste films:
Džigoku (1960)