Tokugawa III – Im Rausch der Sinne (1969)

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Tokugawa III – Im Rausch der Sinne: Directed by Teruo Ishii. With Teruo Yoshida, Toyozô Yamamoto, Masumi Tachibana, Michiyo Ai. A collection of stories dealing with punishment toward women.

“Set during the golden age of Edo, Teruo Ishiiu0026#39;s Orgies of Edo is an anthology consisting of three twisted tales that document the depravity and sickness of the soul behind the pomp and prosperity of the era.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBefore the tales, we get a surreal credits sequence in which a wild-haired man in a floral dress and knee-high socks crawls out of a giant Billy bookcase (also inhabited by other weirdos and a dog) and does some expressive dance, followed by a man drooling blood and carrying a chicken in his mouth through a hall of mirrors. This kinda sets the demented tone for the rest of the film…u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eStory one sees scoundrel Hanji (Toyozô Yamamoto) tricking gullible babe Oito (Masumi Tachibana) into becoming a geisha to help him pay his supposed debts. While sheu0026#39;s selling her body to strangers for cash, sneaky Hanji is shacked up with Oitou0026#39;s sister Kinu (Kei Kiyama). Even when Oito discovers the truth, Hanji is able to turn on the charm and get a freebie from the reluctant geisha, but this act results in both Oito and Hanji being severely beaten by the owners and staff of the brothel. Hanji gets chili peppers rubbed in his eyes, but when it is revealed that Oito is pregnant, the poor woman has a rock dropped on her stomach. Oito is taken to a doctor, Gentatsu (Teruo Yoshida, whose character links all three stories), but, unsurprisingly, she carks it, leaving a beaten and bruised Hanji to regret his actions. This tawdry tale features Ishiiu0026#39;s trademark u0026#39;tits and tortureu0026#39; formula, but it is artfully shot, with Hanji seducing Oito in a field of patterned cloth being the visual highlight.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eChapter two starts with a pair of dwarfs breaking into the home of wealthy merchantu0026#39;s daughter Ochise (Mitsuko Aoi). After the little people sexually assault her, she turns the tables on them and gives them a whipping. It transpires that the dwarfs were hired by the womanu0026#39;s besotted servant Chôkichi (Akira Ishihama), his boss only capable of being aroused by men with abnormal bodies. Concerned Chôkichi talks Ochise into visiting Gentatsu, who uses hypnotism to discover the reason for her fetish: he discovers that she was abducted by a disfigured man when she was seventeen and subjected to a series of sexual ordeals (including the obligatory rope bondage). Chôkichi believes he can help Ochise break her habit, and maybe even love him as he loves her, but after she orders the delivery of a big black man (just a tad racist, the suggestion that being black is abnormal), the servant takes desperate measures. I donu0026#39;t want to spoil the ending, but itu0026#39;s wonderfully ironic and perverse.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe last tale opens in fine deviant style, with a sadistic lord (Asao Koike) unleashing a herd of bulls with flaming horns on a crowd of young female servants dressed in red. As the bulls charge at the women, the lord takes pot-shots at them with his bow and arrow while advising them to strip. One woman, Mitsu (Miki Obana), catches the tyrantu0026#39;s eye: she seems to enjoy the whole experience, and so becomes his favourite concubine. The lord continues his cruelty, coating one of his servants, Okon (Yujie Kagawa), with lead-based gold paint for betraying him with a dog. However, Okon is spared a painful death when she tells the lord that she has a special game to share with him. Again, to give away this twist would spoil the fun, suffice to say that it ends with a graphic (but not very convincing) Caesarian via katana (as performed by Gentatsu, of course), followed by a fiery fate for the lord.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003e6/10. Not the best film that I have see by Ishii to date – Boachi Bushido: Code of the Forgotten Eight (1973) and Horrors of Malformed Men (1969) are more enjoyable – but better than Yakuza Law (1969) and Inferno of Torture (also u0026#39;69 – he was a busy boy that year!), and nowhere near as bad as his sci-fi clunkers Invaders from Space (1965) and Evil Brain from Outer Space (1966).”

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