Dir: KAZUI NIHONMATSU
Country: JAPAN
AKA:
Konchû daisensô
Genocide
War of the Insects
One of the more intriguing responses to the monster movie (kaiju-eiga)
boom of the 1950’s and 1960’s was the one undertaken by Shochiku. The studio
was more commonly associated with the prestigious and formally precise
productions of Kenji Mizoguchi and Yasujiro Ozu, and the burgeoning formal
experimentation of the politically motivated Japanese new wave. But in the late
1960’s the studio produced four science-fiction/horror/fantasy productions in
quick succession in order to reap the fertile and profitable soil sown by the
likes of Godzilla, Gamera, Mothra, King Kong and Ghidorah. The first was the laughably inept The X from Outer Space (1967), a film
generally regarded as one of the weaker entries in the kaiju-eiga cycle. The
next was the more conceptually ambitious Goke,
Bodysnatcher from Hell (1968), an intriguing blend of UFO’s, vampirism and
apocalyptic disaster. The films arresting visual palette and its strong premise
have enabled it to become the most visible of the Shociku quartet. The third
was the peculiar The Living Skeleton
(1968), which was shot in black and white, and was an eerie tale of revenge
overflowing with the atmospherics of kaidan. The fourth and final effort is the
film under discussion here, a revolt of nature horror film with an elaborate
and complicated narrative that includes the search for an H-bomb, a man wrongly
convicted of murder, communist infiltrators, a survivor of the Holocaust, and
the apocalypse. It’s a heady mix, drowning in a sea of ideas, an unwieldy beast
that ultimately slays itself on its own convolution.