Kandagawa Pervert Wars | |
---|---|
Directed by | Kiyoshi Kurosawa |
Written by | Kiyoshi Kurosawa |
Starring | Usagi Aso |
Edited by | Junichi Kikuchi |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | Million Film |
Release date
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August 1983 |
Running time
|
60 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Kandagawa Pervert Wars (神田川淫乱戦争 Kandagawa Inran Sensō?) is a 1983 Japanese pink film directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa who would later go on to a career directing mainstream horror films.
A young girl, Akiko, in a tenement block in Tokyo's Kandagawa area, uses a telescope to spy on her neighbors in between lovemaking sessions with her boyfriend. When she finds what seems to be an incestuous relationship between a mother and son, she decides, with her boyfriend and her friend Masami, to rescue the son from this predicament and introduce him to a "healthy sex life".
Kiyoshi Kurosawa was one of a number of young Japanese filmmakers, several associated with Nikkatsu, who belonged to a production organization called the Director's Company which had been founded in 1982. Through the influence of fellow Director's Company member Banmei Takahashi, Kiyoshi was offered a chance to direct a pink film for Million Film. This film became Kandagawa Pervert Wars with its references to Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window, inventive directorial devices, playful mannerisms and in-joke allusions to Kurosawa's favorite western films. Jasper Sharp suggests that the studio was less than delighted with the result and Million shelved his second pink film effort College Girl: Shameful Seminar as not sexy enough. Kurosawa was able to buy the footage and reworked it into the 1985 non-pink film The Excitement of the Do-Re-Mi-Fa Girl.
The cast and staff of Kandagawa Pervert Wars present a kaleidoscope of figures who would become an important part of film making in Japan in the 1990s and later. These include Chief Assistant Director Toshiyuki Mizutani, Second Assistant Director Masayuki Suo who also had a minor role in the film, Third Assistant Director Akihiko Shiota, and actor Tatsuya Mori.