The Embryo Hunts in Secret (1966) Poster

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7/10
Wakamatsu's first self-produced film blurs the line between art and pornography
agboone719 August 2015
"The Embryo Hunts in Secret" is the type of film that critics can have a field day with (especially if they weren't limited to a thousand words). It raises all the controversial issues in cinema: art versus pornography, gratuitousness, pretentiousness, violence, et cetera. As a community of film lovers, how do we judge a film like this? Certainly, the issue of artistic merit being sacrificed for less noble purposes goes all the way back to the first primordial twitches of the cinematic medium, when Edison/Dickson/Heise films were being churned out in the mid-1890s almost entirely for the sake of profit, with little to no regard for artistic legitimacy. Of course, one could argue that artistry is too much to expect from an art form still in its infancy, but Lumière and Méliès proved otherwise (it should be to no one's surprise that the roots of art in cinema are French, while the roots of capitalism in cinema are American).

In any case, we have here a much more complex issue than the mere streamlining of commercial films for profit. Wakamatsu can be and has been criticized on many levels, but artistic corruption for monetary gain is not one of them. He began his career at Nikkatsu, prolifically churning out pinku eiga for the studio ("pink films", generally referring to the Japanese genre of softcore sex films, from my understanding). While these films were beginning to dominate domestic cinema in Japan, the government did not like them, and they weren't considered critically or artistically legitimate. As a result, when Wakamatsu submitted one of his films to the Berlin International Film Festival in 1965, Nikkatsu gave it a very quiet, low-profile release, and Wakamastu was not happy. He quit the studio, formed his own production company, and began self-producing films.

The first of these films was "The Embryo Hunts in Secret" (1966). The film is about a man who brings home a woman that physically resembles his ex-wife, who ran out on him. He proceeds to drug her, tie her up, and torture her. This constitutes the entire length of the film, start to finish, although there's much more to it, otherwise I wouldn't even be bothering to review it. Wakamatsu imbues his films with undeniable poetry, and as harsh as his films may be in content, they are formally much more comparable to respected art house films than they are to traditional exploitation films, or what some have dubbed "torture porn". Moreover, Wakamatsu is interested not only in the violent/sexual act itself, but in the psychology that produces it. His deconstruction of the basic human need to self-destruct leaves him open to comparisons with the great Japanese filmmaker Nagisa Ôshima, who once said Wakamatsu was the only pink film director that interested him. In Wakamatsu films, there is more of a focus on sadomasochistic tendencies, and issues of dominance and submission, but both filmmakers analyzed human self-destructiveness with political overtones.

There's no doubt that there's more here than just pornography. There is art present in Wakamatsu's films. Anyone at all versed in artistic cinema will recognize that instantly. The question is, what kind of art? True art? Pornographic art? Artistic pornography? I don't pretend to have the answer. Wakamastu, thankfully, is not so easy to classify. Is he just another shameless filmmaker bastardizing the medium by exploiting the darkest of human desires? Or is he an artist that is simply willing to explore aspects of humanity that others refuse to address? Pasolini believed fervently that burying ugliness and depravity — hiding it away from human sight — was the one surefire way to ensure its continued existence. That's why he repeatedly showed us things we didn't want to see. It's also why so many of his films ended on an unnerving note of conspiratorial silence. Wakamatsu's cinema, however, can not be categorically called art as simply and obviously as Pasolini's can, even "Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom". I know many have quite ignorantly called that film pornography, but one glance at a dictionary will dispel any such notions. Pornography is defined as material that is intended to be erotically stimulating and sexually gratifying. Needless to say, there is not one single image anywhere in Pasolini's film that can be considered remotely erotic, or even slightly gratifying on a sexual level. Wakamatsu's film, however, isn't as easy to defend. Yes, there is art here, without question, but there is also a definite sense of an individual purging on screen his darkest desires. In my opinion, "The Embryo Hunts in Secret" is actually surprisingly unerotic, certainly by comparison to what it could have been, but we do get the feeling that Wakamatsu is, at least to a certain extent, exploiting the uglier aspects of human nature and desire.

Overall, I really can't categorize Wakamatsu's films. They are art, certainly, but they also possess a pornographic element, admittedly. Somehow, they utilize pornography and transcend it simultaneously. Wakamatsu is truly an enigma. I think "The Embryo Hunts in Secret" is a legitimately good film, and while there is a certain degree of gratuitousness that would be hard to deny, I don't think it's a fully, overtly gratuitous work. By and large, there is substance beneath the violence on the screen. Nevertheless, the element of exploitation is present, so ultimately I call it a good film that falls short of being a great film. I definitely thought it was better than his 1967 film, "Fallen Angels". Wakamatsu is working with much better actors in this film, and the female lead, unlike in the other film, actually seems to mind being tortured. She did quite well with a difficult role here.

I'm out of space, so suffice it to say that this is a film worth seeing, so long as you're not too squeamish.

RATING: 7.33 out of 10 stars
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7/10
An Early "Precursor" To Japanese Exploitation Cinema...
EVOL66611 February 2006
EMBRYO HUNTS IN SECRET is the earliest example of film I've seen so far that paves the way for the explicit and violent films that Japan churned out in record numbers just a few years later, and are still quite known for to this day. That's not to say that this is the first Japanese film to show strong exploitative elements - it's just the earliest example that I've personally seen. My copy has no subtitles or English dubbing, so any speculations that I make about the plot are just that - speculation...

The film surrounds a man and his wife (girlfriend, lover..don't really know for sure...) who have a strange nurturing/violent relationship. At some points they seem like your typical "happy" couple, especially in the beginning of the film, but as the story goes on, the man binds and continuously beats, whips, and humiliates her. There are some strange flashbacks that happen throughout the film which appear to be from the past, and show another couple where the man beats and whips the woman in much the same fashion. Due to how the flashbacks were inserted, I got the feeling that maybe they were "scenes" from the main character's past - perhaps his father and mother - which would help explain his penchant for spousal abuse...but again, this is strictly conjecture. The odd mix of violence and tenderness goes on for most of the running time of the film, until the wife gets free and gets even...

Unfortunately, I didn't understand enough of what was going on in EMBRYO to get a real grasp on the storyline. It seemed that this could have been a quite haunting film if I'd have understood the character's motivations - but as it is, it's pretty much a bunch of scenes of a guy beating his significant other. Cinematography-wise, the film appears to be pretty ahead of it's time with good editing, and some effective "art-house" style scenes. Overall, I would recommend this one to anyone interested in the origins of Japanese exploitation cinema. EMBRYO is not nearly as strong in terms of violent content as many of the exploit films that came out of Japan in the 70's through today, but it is still an interesting early foray into the genre. 7/10 - would probably have rated it higher had I understood the storyline...
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7/10
Mother!
Meganeguard19 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Having only watched Go, Go Second Time Virgin (1969) and Violent Virgin (1969) I can hardly be considered well versed in the films of Wakamatsu Koji, but of what I have seen so far, it seems that he tried to create films within the lowly genre of pink films that could have artistic merit, but sometimes seemingly within the throes of his own artistic intentions, Wakamatsu might have left his viewers in quite a confused state at the end of his films. Confusion is good. Please do not get me wrong there, but it can be taken a bit too far and a film full of artistic intentions might be nothing more that a vacuous entity, for example, in my opinion at least, Alejandro Jodorowsky's Fando y Lis. I do not feel that Wakamatsu's films are a waste because they epitomize the potential of films made on a limited amount of money and actors and actresses with limited talent. Also, his films tend to have a pulsating soundtrack of rock music that really adds something favorable to the chaos of the films themselves. Therefore, when I heard the classical harpsichord music playing at the beginning of The Embryo Hunts in Secret (1966), I knew that this film was going to be something different from the Wakamatsu films that I had viewed earlier.

The film begins simply enough with Yuka, a salesgirl, making out with her manager in the back of his car after a party. After things get a bit heavier, Yuka asks the manager if it would be possible for them to go inside his apartment. Yuka is quite impressed by the apartment, but finds it a bit odd that there is very little décor. Eventually the two begin making out again, but now the manager has become a bit rougher and begins to interrogate the girl concerning such things as how many men she has slept with, she eventually answers maybe seven or eight, and this causes the manager to grow a bit angrier because Yuka is the spitting image of his ex-wife. The manager eventually drugs the girl and beats her with a whip which leaves huge welts on her body. However, being drugged, Yuka eventually passes out and when she wakes the next morning her memories are quite foggy, but soon the pain of last night's beating flares up. To shut her up, the manager tosses 30,000 yen in front of her. Later, while Yuka straightens her hair, the manager promises her the apartment, etc., but soon his memories flare up again and he beats her with the whip again. He becomes determined to "train" Yuka and make her his "dog" which he repeatedly calls her and forces her to call herself.

Sadomasochism and rape are common features within the pink film genre and, as a small sampling anyway, a good number of the sex scenes within them are nonconsensual and they rarely stem from a desire of pleasure, but more from a desire to inflict pain or to seek revenge on a surrogate for past "wrongs." The manager shifts from being a brutal tyrant who beats Yuka with a whip and his closed fists to a man whimpering and telling the beaten girl how much he loves her and begs her to be his wife. These scenes reflect his relationships with his ex-wife and mother. Wakamatsu includes a scene in which the manager beats his then wife with a belt after she becomes pregnant by another "man" which infuriates him because she belongs to him.

Some have called this film "poetic" because of the Manager's dialogue, but for me the true impact of the film is the claustrophobic feeling it produces within the two rooms of the apartment. The viewer can almost sense the destruction of the human qualities of Yuka when the manager beats her like a "dog." The sense of helplessness that she feels really comes through in the film, and this helplessness help create one of the most heinous villains I have ever come across in film.

Definitely not a film for those who shy away from films with unbridled cruelty, I am not sure if I could actually recommend this film to anyone, but if the viewer desires to see a film that made Wakamatsu one of Japan's most infamous directors, this would be it.
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Early Wakamatsu art-sleaze
Rapeman138 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
*Note: my copy of this film has no subtitles, so sadly all of the dialog (of which there is a lot) was lost on me. Although it's completely watchable based on visuals alone.

Japan has made some of the most stunning & original cinema of all time, but some of the most misogynistic & sadistic as well - Koji Wakamatsu's film is an excellent mixture of both forms. This film can also be seen as a pretty good indicator as to the extremes Japanese Pink cinema would eventually progress to in the 70's, although this is still very strong stuff for its time.

The plot – what little there is of it – revolves around a female trapped in a sadomasochistic relationship with her psychotic boyfriend. The film opens with a man taking his girlfriend back to his small apartment, where he almost immediately begins viciously beating her for no reason at all. For the next hour and ten minutes we are subjected to watching this man degrade and abuse his helpless girlfriend - he relentlessly flogs her with a bull whip, makes her crawl around on all fours and beg for food like an animal, repeatedly holds her head under water, ties her up in various different positions of Shibari-style rope bondage (she's pretty much tied up for the entire duration of the film), and slices her up with a straight-razor, all the while laughing with sadistic glee. Intercut with these acts of humiliation are flashbacks to the mans childhood where we see his father inflicting the same treatment on his mother. There are also strangely perverse ''tender'' moments as when the boyfriend breaks down crying and lays his head in his bound spouses lap as she gently strokes his hair and sings him a lullabye. Eventually though, the abused female manages to cut through her ropes and stab her deranged boyfriend to death. Afterwards she sits on the bed staring at his mutilated body while humming the same lullabye.

While this all sounds like the usual Japsploitation, there is much more to this film than pure exploitation. The combination of a confined space and lots of extreme close-ups, leads to a foreboding feeling of claustrophobia. There are also a lot of different camera techniques used, such as freeze-frames, still montages, superimposition and gorgeous b&w photography, which make this a bit more interesting visually than the regular formulaic Nikkatsu rape n' torture flicks of the 70's. I like a bit of art with my sleaze! Recommended for fans of avant garde cinema and Pinku Eiga. 8/10
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6/10
THE EMBRYO (Koji Wakamatsu, 1966) **1/2
Bunuel197624 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
A mildly interesting if more explicit (as is to be expected of the Japanese) variation on William Wyler's THE COLLECTOR (1965), the film nevertheless doesn't quite equal the deliriousness of Yasuzo Masumura's similar BLIND BEAST (1969): as a matter of fact, the obsessiveness of the relationship at the centre of that film is infinitely more compelling, since the female victim here never seems to grow from the intense experience she goes through and only wants to escape her predicament, without ever striving to understand the motives of her captor! Indeed, the film's depiction of the aggressor as mother-fixated (screaming for her even at the moment of death) is perhaps its only novelty...
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10/10
A disturbing and violent masterpiece.
libertyvalance26 April 2001
I've seldom seen such a mixture of disturbing violence and heartrending visual poetry as in this film by Koji Wakamatsu. There is but so much you can do with the story of a woman who is kept prisoner in an apartment; where she is repeatedly humiliated, beaten and tortured by her psycho boyfriend. Unless your name is Wakamatsu. This is 1966 and we are treated to visual experimentation from bleachers to freeze frames, inventive choice of camera angles and virtuoso editing. In one torture scene the sound completely disappears and we can only see the woman's face contort with pain. This is not cheap sensationalism but a highly inventive film which, here and there, makes excellent use of classical music to underline the action. Although the violence is disturbing one cannot help but feel sorry for the man. His sick, twisted mind is torn between tender feelings for his prisoner and the violent impulses that make him torture her. Koji Wakamatsu's handling of the script manages to convincingly show this duality. Fascinating in its austere and brutal poetry, this film paved the way for other Wakamatsu masterpieces like Violated Angels (1967) and Go,Go, Second Time Virgin (1969).
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4/10
Early torture movie
Leofwine_draca20 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Japan has long had a history of bizarre torture films which feature young, often beautiful women being abused and mutilated by the men in their lives. This genre of film-making reached its zenith with the notoriously nasty GUINEA PIG series of the 1980s, but it had its origins in films like THE EMBRYO HUNTS IN SECRET, a dated, black and white, but still strong movie. It's a near plotless thing about a man who ties his girlfriend to a bed and proceeds to whip and torture her with a razor blade. There are occasional surrealistic psychological touches, which are well done, and some random flashbacks to another couple exhibiting the same behaviour (the man's parents, perhaps). It doesn't make much sense and it's rather tamer than later torture flicks, but it's still strong stuff for its day and the subject matter is nothing but nihilistic.
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