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Dis­cov­er the ama­teur insan­i­ty of this Japan­ese Evil Dead rip-off

17 Apr 2017

Words by Anton Bitel

Two individuals engaged in physical altercation, one attempting to restrain the other with their hands.
Two individuals engaged in physical altercation, one attempting to restrain the other with their hands.
Shinichi Fukazawa’s Super‑8 gem Bloody Mus­cle Body Builder in Hell is a throw­back to 80s horror.

Deriv­ing from the French for lover’, ama­teur is a word that comes with a dou­ble edge. On the one hand, it can sug­gest the sort of incom­pe­tence and inep­ti­tude that you just would not accept from a pro­fes­sion­al artist. On the oth­er, it can con­jure the image of the out­sider artist, dri­ven by pure pas­sion – and more obscure impuls­es – to cre­ate a labour of love out­side of any pro­duc­tion system.

Open­ing with a vicious argu­ment between lovers that ends in a messy mur­der, Bloody Mus­cle Body Builder in Hell is most def­i­nite­ly an ama­teur work, made over sev­er­al decades by its director/​writer/​star Shinichi Fukaza­wa, shot on Super‑8 (the choice of ama­teurs) and using only a panoply of sim­ple yet effec­tive prac­ti­cal effects, some basic stop-motion tech­niques, and a lot of fake blood.

The plot is sim­ple. Nao­to (Fukuza­wa) receives a phone call from his ex Mika (Asako Nosa­ka), whose dump­ing of him a year ago had led him to quit his job and devote him­self to body build­ing while liv­ing off the lega­cy of his recent­ly deceased father (also played by Fukuza­wa). Mika is a pho­to­jour­nal­ist putting togeth­er an arti­cle on the para­nor­mal, and she remem­bers a pho­to that Nao­to had once shown her of a house with an out­sized female face smil­ing in its win­dow. So the reunit­ed pair pays a vis­it to the house – a part of Naota’s inher­i­tance – with Mika’s col­league the psy­chic Mizuguchi (Masaa­ki Kai) in tow.

Only, as the pro­logue reveals, Naoto’s dad had mur­dered his lover there 30 years ear­li­er in the ear­ly 70s, and buried her corpse beneath the floor­boards. Now she is deter­mined to find new flesh and build her own bloody mus­cle body, so that she can exe­cute a venge­ful grudge against those that she has locked in the house with her. The only way to end her curse is through rad­i­cal dis­mem­ber­ment and the judi­cious use of gym equipment…

If at first it seems a pecu­liar merg­er of the win­dows from Pupi Avati’s The House With The Laugh­ing Win­dows and the lo-fi DIY insan­i­ty from Nobuhiko Obayashi’s House, very quick­ly the genre-savvy Bloody Mus­cle Body Builder in Hell estab­lish­es itself as a Japan­ese homage to the ultra-low-bud­get exu­ber­ance of Sam Raimi’s The Evil Dead, as Nao­to must cut his demon­i­cal­ly pos­sessed com­pan­ion into tiny pieces, and even, hav­ing armed him­self, deliv­ers the icon­ic Ash-ism Groovy”.

Mixed in there are also plen­ty of allu­sions to oth­er films: there is the rot­ten corpse using the flesh and blood of the liv­ing to recon­sti­tute itself from Hell­rais­er; the ani­mat­ed sev­ered hand from Evil Dead II; the spi­der crea­ture formed of a dis­em­bod­ied head from The Thing; and even the shirt burst and ripped by flex­ing mus­cles from the Incred­i­ble Hulk. That is a lot for a sin­gle film to accom­mo­date, espe­cial­ly in 61 min­utes, but the small house bequeathed to Nao­to comes with many rooms.

Fukuza­wa start­ed his script in 1995, but after strug­gling to finance both pro­duc­tion and post-pro­duc­tion, he was not able to com­plete the film until 2009. It was released inde­pen­dent­ly in Japan in 2012, and then a slight­ly altered ver­sion (indeed, the com­plete edi­tion’ found on this DVD release) enjoyed a brief the­atri­cal release in 2014, fol­lowed by the offi­cial Japan­ese DVD.

It is a rough-hewn throw­back to a pre-CG era when straight-to-VHS pro­duc­tions were cheap and tawdry, with low-grade stock and poor light­ing all con­tribut­ing to the air of, well, ama­teur­ish­ness. Although that is of course the whole appeal of this film, which plays out its absurd plot­ting and over-the-top ges­tures with a sin­cer­i­ty that only adds to the sense of old-school authen­tic­i­ty. Put sim­ply, despite, or even because, of all its naïve, straight-faced earnest­ness, Bloody Mus­cle Body Builder in Hell comes with real heart – not to men­tion kid­ney, liv­er, intestines and brains…

Bloody Mus­cle Body Builder In Hell is released by Ter­ror Cot­ta on DVD, 24 April, 2017.

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