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Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands

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Wikipedia article




'aka' 'Dutch Wife of the Wasteland' 'and' 'The Dutch Wives of the Wild', originally released as , is a 1967 Japanese 'pink film' written and directed by cult filmmaker Atsushi Yamatoya, starring the first "Queen" of 'pink film', Noriko Tatsumi, and with music by the noted jazz pianist, Ysuke Yamashita.

Synopsis



A wealthy real estate investor receives a film showing the rape and murder of his girlfriend. He hires a private detective, and shows him the filmwhich he criticizes for its poor cinematographyso that the detective can find the criminals and bring them to justice. The detective discovers that the woman is not dead, but doesn't inform his employer because the detective has romantic intentions towards her as well. His search leads him to a warehouse in the wastelands, filled with flies and sex dolls modeled on the woman. A gunshot is heard and the detective is engaged in target practice in the desert with the realtor. The realtor says he has a case he would like to be investigated, which returns the film to the first scene.

Cast



* Noriko Tatsumi as Sae

* Yichi Minato as J

* Miki Watari as Mina

* Shhei Yamamoto as K

* Seigi [Masayoshi] Nogami as Naka

* Hatsuo Yamaya as Doctor

* Mari Nagisa as Rie

* Akaji Maro

* Taka kubo

* Kohei Tsuzaki

Background



Director Atsushi Yamatoya was one of the group of writers on Seijun Suzuki's 'Branded to Kill' (1967). Yamatoya had co-directed the 'pink film' with Kji Wakamatsu in 1966, but 'Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands' was his solo feature film directorial debut.

He directed a few more 'pink film's such as for Wakamatsu's production company, but found writing to be more to his taste. He often wrote anonymously for Wakamatsu during the 1960s,Sharp, p. 60. and was later regularly credited for his script work at Nikkatsu on their 'Roman porno' series. He revisited the sex-doll theme in his script to Chsei Sone's 'Roman porno' 'Love Doll Report: An Adult Toy' (1975).Weisser, p. 251. Sone was one of Yamatoya's co-workers on 'Branded to Kill', and Yamatoya wrote several of Sone's 'Roman porno' scripts, notably 'Showa Woman: Naked Rashomon', an erotic restructuring of Kurosawa's 'Rashomon' (1950).Weisser, p. 389.

Yukihiro Sawada, who worked with Yamatoya on the script for 'Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands', also went on to work at Nikkatsu, where he directed such 'Roman porno's as 'Sex Hunter: Wet Target' (1972).Weisser, pp. 380-381. During the filming of 'Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands', lead actors Noriko Tatsumi and Yichi Minato worked together on director Ario Takeda's pink film 'Love's Milky Drops' for Okura Eiga studio. This film used the same sets as Yamatoya's.Weisser, p. 254.

Critical appraisal



In their 'Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films', the Weissers write that 'Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands' is "one of the major cult films of the '60s". They give the film a rating of three out of four stars, noting that, due to the surrealistic and hallucinatory nature of the plot, the film may not be to all viewers' tastes. They judge the film is "even more eccentric" than director Seijun Suzuki's 'Branded to Kill' (1967), which Atsushi Yamatoya helped write. According to the Weissers, despite several very erotic scenes, because the film emphasizes a hard-boiled mystery plot rather than sexploitation, it is not technically a 'pink film'.

Jasper Sharp writes that the film shows how versatile the 'pink film' genre could sometimes be, calling it "probably the most idiosyncratic work the genre has ever produced", and noting that it out-does Suzuki's 'Branded to Kill' in terms of "dreamlike illogicality". Of the plot, Sharp writes that, in spite of its disjointed nature, "as with Suzuki's film, there is clearly some method behind the onscreen madness". Sharp remarks that a comparison with Suzuki's better-known film is inevitable. Besides the sharing of a main character's name ("Joe") with the star of Suzuki's film (Joe Shishido), Sharp lists some similarities between the films: "the striking high-contrast monochrome cinematography; the quirky, hard-boiled performances; the hypnotic disjunction between sound and image; the use of montage to construct a surreal, alien-looking landscape that bears little resemblance to any recognisable vision of Japan; and the atonal jazz soundtrack, full of chaotic fanfares that blare out to punctuate the action."

Availability



'Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands', first known as 'Horror Doll', was released theatrically on October 3, 1967. It was released in VHS format in Japan in May 1997, and on DVD on August 23, 2002.

'Chirashis', or movie flyers, advertised this DVD release as "60s Sex Play".Sharp, p. 102. The film's title was also used for a book on Yamatoya's films issued in June 1994.

Notes



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Category:1967 films

Category:1960s Japanese-language films

Category:Pink films

Category:1960s Japanese films

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