The great majin Arakatsuma: Fuck around with a mountain deity and find out. An
evil chamberlain, Ōdate Samanosuke (Ryūtarō Gomi), murders the local
royal family, all expect for the son and daughter who are spirited away
by Kogenta (Jun Fujimaki), a retainer loyal to their dead parents, and
takes over as lord of the area. His rule is a cruel one, with his men
enforcing a decree that worship of and rituals to appease the local
majin (demon god) Arakatsuma are now forbidden. A priestess of the
majin, Shinobu (Otome Tsukimiya), issues a grave warning against this,
but Samanosuke and his thugs refuse to heed it...
The retainer
takes the children up into the mountains, to a forgotten temple in taboo
territory, forgotten by all but the children's aunt. The area is marked
by a gigantic statue of the local mountain deity that sealed the majin
ages ago, so the locals avoid the place like the plague, so the children
are raised at the temple without fear of discovery. They grow to young
adulthood while the villagers endure the sadistic torments of
Samanosuke, including brutal torture and forcing every man in the
village into slave labor. Knowing that this abuse is going on, Kogenta
ventures into the town in an attempt to round up any surviving retainers
and overthrow the vicious despot, but he is immediately captured and
held captive. The young prince, Tadafumi (Yoshihiko Aoyama), gets word
of Kogenta's capture and attempts a rescue, but he too is trapped. With
our heroes slated for execution, Shinobu attempts to sway the evil lord
with a warning that his actions will earn him the curse of the mountain
god if he doesn't knock it off. Samanosuke, or course, ignores her
advice and has her killed, after which he orders the statue of the majin
demolished. As she dies, Shinobu curses Samanosuke to a merciless and
brutal death, underscored with a warning that if he goes forward with
his plan to destroy the majin, Arakatsuma will awaken, and he really,
REALLY does not want that...
A work crew is dispatched up the mountain to destroy the najin, and on their way they discover Tadafumi's sister, Kozasa (Miwa
Takada), whom they force to guide them to the statue. Once there they
drive a chisel into its forehead, but they run for their lives when that
action causes blood to drip from its stone forehead. The earth then
opens up and takes the desecrators into its depths. A desperate Kozasa
gets down on her knees and prays ti the majin, begging it to save her
brother and Kogenta from the evil warlord.
You can guess what happens next.
Released
by Daiei, the company responsible for the Gamera giant monster series
(the main competition to Toho's more upscale monster efforts), DAIMAJIN
played on TV in th U.S. as MAJIN: MONSTER OF TERROR, and it did not go
over well with American fans of daikaiju cinema back in the days. New
York's beloved 4:30 MOVIE weekday showcase would regularly run "Monster
Week" (a surefire ratings winner), and I, of course, never missed it. It
was there that I got my formative education on giant monster movies, so
I watched whatever they chose to feature, The rosters were dominated by
Godzilla and friends, or Gamera entries, but every now and then
something else would slip in, like THE X FROM OUTER SPACE (1967) or
MONSTER FROM A PREHISTORIC PLANET (1967). Among those oddities was
MAJIN, and back then I found it boring and not worth sitting through for
its payoff. (I think I was maybe nine when I first saw it.) Apparently I
was not alone in that assessment, as MAJIN was one of the rare 4:30
MOVIE entries that only played once. (The crappy dubbed print and the
commercial interruptions did not help.)
Skip
ahead to around the year 2002. I forget where I was when I found it,
but I got my hands on a handsome boxed set of all three Majin films —
turned out there was a trilogy — in gorgeous widescreen, subtitled
transfers, and watching DAIMAJIN again in that format and from the
perspective of a 37-year-old who in the intervening years had gotten
deep into samurai period dramas, it was a whole other experience than
what I saw on THE 4:30 MOVIE.
First
and foremost, DAIMAJIN is a straight-up samurai period piece that's
also a textbook example of the particular flavor of storytelling that I
call "the Japanese slow burn." If one goes into it blind, it's yet
another of the many, many jidai geka (period piece) films that
were being cranked out at the time, and as such its elements are nothing
fans of the genre have not seen before. What sets it apart is the
inclusion of the majin as a seemingly incongruous plot element, and that
inclusion makes the film. The samurai melodrama that takes up 4/5 of
the film is okay, but it absolutely sets the stage for when the majin
comes to life and goes on a most righteous rampage. When active, the
formerly relatively featureless statue takes on well-defined detail and
an unforgettable scowling visage whose effectiveness is compounded by
the actor's human eyes being visible through the makeup. It's a truly
startling effect.
The stone face of righteous justice.As
previously stated, DAIMAJIN is a straight-up samurai drama that
suddenly becomes a kaiju movie during the last reel. The tonal shift is
admittedly jarring, but that's what lends the sequence much of its
power. And powerful it is, as the now living — and very pissed-off —
majin implacably stomps its way through the village, wreaking
unstoppable destruction on the village and the lord and his men. The
good guys survive, but they are kind of forgotten amidst the stunning
destruction and top-notch suitmation acting. The majin is one of the
most believably-realized kaiju in all of cinema, and his rampage is ably
aided and abetted by gorgeous widescreen cinematography and an
evocative soundtrack by Toho/Godzilla stalwart Akira Ifukube, the John
Williams of the kaiju genre. From out of nowhere, DAIMAJIN turns into a
spectacle of righteous carnage, an epic display of justice being meted
out by the gods, and it is wondrous and terrifying to behold.
The
film was followed by two swiftly-released sequels — RETURN OF DAIMAJIN
and DAIMAJIN STRIKES AGAIN, with all three released within the space of
nine months (Daiei cranked out movies cheap and quick, as painfully
evidenced by the Gamera series — but neither followup was as solid as
the first entry. The only reason to see them is for the stunning special
effects, including a sequence where the majin parts a river, a la the
part of the Red Sea in THE TEN COMMANDMENTS (1956). The effects in the
Daimajin films are beyond criticism, as they are among the top tier of
the entire genre, so find the sequels' effects system online if you are
intrigued.
DAIMAJIN,
as previously noted, is a slow burn with a spectacular payoff, but it
is definitely not for all tastes, or even for all kaiju fans. It moves
at a glacial pace and not every viewer is into samurai dram without tons
of swordfights and spewing arterial spray, so individual mileage may
vary. That said, I recommend it for those who can handle its pacing.
Poster for the Japanese theatrical release.