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The Living Skeleton

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Wikipedia article




is a 1968 Japanese tokusatsu horror film directed by Hiroshi Matsuno. The film's plot begins in the past where a gang of pirates commandeer a ship and kill everyone on board. Three years later in a seaside village, a Catholic priest (Masumi Okada) has offered shelter to Saeko (Kikko Matsuoka) as her twin sister, Yoriko (also Matsuoka) has disappeared with her new husband at sea. Saeko later scuba dives with her boyfriend, the couple find a group of submerged human skeletons, chained together at the ankles near the ocean floor. That night, a ghost ship appears in the mist offshore as a voice from the ship calls out for Saeko.

Production



Director Hiroshi Matsuno began working at the film production company Shochiku in 1950 and worked as an assistant director for filmmakers such as Daisuke It, Mikio Naruse, and Yoshitar Nomura. Matsuno directed a few films starring Bunta Sugawara in the early sixties before working on 'The Living Skeleton'.

'The Living Skeleton' was co-written by Kikuma Shimoiizaka, a prolific mystery novelist in Japan.

Release



'The Living Skeleton' was released on November 9, 1968 in Japan. It was released as a double feature with 'Genocide'.

It was released on DVD by the Criterion Collection in a box set on November 20, 2012. The other films in the box set included 'The X from Outer Space', 'Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell', and 'Genocide'.

Reception



Slant Magazine referred to 'The Living Skeleton' as "representing the peak of Shochiku's dalliance with horror convention" and a "chilling and genuinely unnerving black-and-white update of the bygone kaidan tradition". The 'Austin Chronicle' referred to the film as "probably the most conventional of Schochiku's horror releases"

Professor Wheeler Winston Dixon of the University of NebraskaLincoln referred to the Criterion Collection's Eclipse set, calling the film "the most accomplished and sophisticated of the quartet in terms of its visual structure and narrative" and along with 'Genocide', "easily the most interesting entries".

See also



* List of horror films of 1968

* List of Japanese films of 1968

References



Footnotes



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