| Film |
![]() |
| Video |
![]() |
| Audio |
![]() |
| Extras |
![]() |
| Overall |
![]() |
Distributor:
Mondo Macabre
Running Time:
72 mins approx
DVD Release Date:
out now
DVD Country:
United States of America
Screen Format:
2.35:1 Anamorphic NTSC
Discs / Sides / Layers:
1 / 1 / Dual
Soundtracks:
Japanese Stereo
Subtitles:
English
Special Features:
Documentary on Nikkatsu
Text essays on Nikkatsu and this film
Trailer reel
Interview with Jasper Sharp
Nikkatsu Trailers for Naked Rashomon, Assault, The Sins Of Sister Lucia, Watcher in the Attic and Female Prisoner: Caged!
Mondo Macabre
Running Time:
72 mins approx
DVD Release Date:
out now
DVD Country:
United States of America
Screen Format:
2.35:1 Anamorphic NTSC
Discs / Sides / Layers:
1 / 1 / Dual
Soundtracks:
Japanese Stereo
Subtitles:
English
Special Features:
Documentary on Nikkatsu
Text essays on Nikkatsu and this film
Trailer reel
Interview with Jasper Sharp
Nikkatsu Trailers for Naked Rashomon, Assault, The Sins Of Sister Lucia, Watcher in the Attic and Female Prisoner: Caged!
Certificate:
Not Rated
Country:
Japan
Directed by:
Yasuhara Hasebe
Starring:
Yutaka Hayashi
Tamaki Katsura
Genre(s):
Adult
Crime
Cult
Exploitation
Not Rated
Country:
Japan
Directed by:
Yasuhara Hasebe
Starring:
Yutaka Hayashi
Tamaki Katsura
Genre(s):
Adult
Crime
Cult
Exploitation
Assault! Jack the Ripper (1976)
Region 0 DVD Video Review
Region 0 DVD Video Review
07-12-2008 12:00 | 2684 views
|
John White
| My Other Content
The Film
The second of Mondo Macabro's recent Nikkatsu releases is an excellent example of how desperate the roman porno and pink sub genres became in trying to find an audience. Like other exploitation genres like spaghetti westens and gialli, violence and growing levels of explicitness offered a way of making products more intense and unlike what people could catch on their TVs. In fact, this film actually seems to be so deliberately extreme that it is almost a satire on the genre it represents.After ploughing the furrows of geishas, kinky sex and sadomasochism, filmmakers turned to the taboo of rape and murder. Much as American filmmakers looked at outsiders in works like Badlands, this film found inspiration from real life to offer a supposed record of social perversion. Truthfully though this was sleaze for tired palattes and Yasuharu Hasebe's film seems to hammer home just how exhausted the audience's appetites have become.
Objectively, the director seems to give his audience what they want whilst satirising his own work at the same time. This story of a chef who discovers his sexual bloodlust through his relationship with a rebellious waitress is never quite what it seems. For a start, the female lead, supposedly the leading eye-candy, is far from an oil painting, and the initial drive of this couple to carry out a social rebellion as oppressed workers taking vengeance against more powerful types is eventually abandoned for the simple excess of meeting depraved tastes.
On one level this is clearly very offensive material which equates sexual assault with erotica. And that seems to be the point as Hasebe satirises and unsettles as the film builds to the deeply disturbing resolution. Some probably leave the film having had their cheap thrills, but I am not sure you are meant to leave it thinking better of yourself or the appetites that you have sated through watching it. I do rather think that you are meant to dislike how this mild mannered killer affects you and I think the proof of that is the choice to end the film as the director does.
If you enjoy knowing transgression in your cinema, then you may very well enjoy an interesting work. If you don't, then this is certainly something you need to avoid.


