Onibaba

E824156

Onibaba is a 1964 Japanese horror film by Kaneto Shindō, renowned for its stark black-and-white imagery and allegorical tale of survival, violence, and desire set in medieval rural Japan.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (50)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Japanese horror film
film
basedOn Buddhist parable about a demon mask
blackAndWhite true
cinematographyBy Kiyomi Kuroda NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin Japan
criticalReception acclaimed
director Kaneto Shindō NERFINISHED
distributor Toho NERFINISHED
editedBy Hisao Enoki NERFINISHED
festivalScreening Venice Film Festival NERFINISHED
filmingLocation Chiba Prefecture NERFINISHED
genre art film
horror film
period drama film
psychological horror film
hasCharacter Hachi NERFINISHED
older woman
younger daughter-in-law
homeMediaRelease Criterion Collection Blu-ray NERFINISHED
Criterion Collection DVD NERFINISHED
influenced later Japanese horror cinema
musicBy Hikaru Hayashi NERFINISHED
narrativeFocus two women surviving by killing lost samurai
notableFor allegorical storytelling
stark black-and-white imagery
use of Noh-inspired demon mask
originalLanguage Japanese
originalTitle 鬼婆 NERFINISHED
premiereEvent 1964 Venice Film Festival NERFINISHED
productionCompany Kindai Eiga Kyokai NERFINISHED
releaseYear 1964
runtimeMinutes 103
screenwriter Kaneto Shindō NERFINISHED
settingPeriod Muromachi period NERFINISHED
settingPlace reed-filled marsh
rural Japan
settingTime medieval Japan
stars Jitsuko Yoshimura NERFINISHED
Jūkichi Uno NERFINISHED
Kei Satō NERFINISHED
Nobuko Otowa NERFINISHED
theme jealousy
moral corruption
sexual desire
survival
violence
war
title Onibaba NERFINISHED
writtenBy Kaneto Shindō NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.