Edo Porn

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Edo Porn
Hokusai manga poster.jpg
Directed byKaneto Shindo
Written byKaneto Shindo
StarringKen Ogata
Toshiyuki Nishida
Music byHikaru Hayashi
Production
company
Release date
  • September 12, 1981 (1981-09-12)
(Japan)
Running time
119 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Hokusai Manga (Japanese: 北斎漫画), better known internationally with its exploitative title Edo Porn, is a 1981 biographical drama based on the life of Japanese artist Hokusai directed by Kaneto Shindo.[1][2][3] It draws visual and narrative inspiration from the artist's eponymous collection of sketches and focuses on an anachronistic story related to creation of The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife.

Plot[]

Tetsuzō (Ken Ogata) is an unsuccessful ukiyo-e painter who lives with his daughter Ōei (Yūko Tanaka) in poverty over a geta shop owned by Ōyaku (Nobuko Otowa), the older wife of the aspirant writer Sashichi (Toshiyuki Nishida) who is a childhood friend of Tetsuzō.

Tetsuzō lives by borrowing money from his adoptive father, the Shogunate mirror-maker Nakajima Ise (Frankie Sakai). One day, he meets a young, beautiful prostitute named Ōnao (Kanako Higuchi) and leaves her to Nakajima as a concubine. Meanwhile, Tetsuzō has grown a destructive obsession for Ōnao. Ōnao is a sadist with a traumatic past. She psychologically torments Nakajima until he hangs himself and leaves.

After Ōyaku dies, Sashichi, adopting the pen name Bakin, devotes his life to writing and ignores Ōei's advances who has intimate feelings for him. Nevertheless, Ōei continues to love him, which results in her celibacy.

Years later and after hard-earned fame, Tetsuzō (now Hokusai) is 89. He lives by painting Ichimatsu dolls with Ōei. One day, Ōei finds a peasant girl who looks like Ōnao (played by the same actress). After he sees a young ama playing with a dead octopus, Hokusai persuades the girl to pose for the shunga of an ama engaged in a threesome with two octopuses.

Cast[]

References[]

  1. ^ "北斎漫画". Kinema Junpo. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  2. ^ "北斎漫画". Agency for Cultural Affairs 映画情報システム. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  3. ^ "北斎漫画とは". kotobank . Retrieved 27 December 2020.

External links[]


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