Mari Asato

Mari Asato (安里 麻里, Asato Mari) is a Japanese film director born in Okinawa on 14 March 1976. Primarily known for the film Ju-On: Black Ghost (2009), part of The Grudge film installments, her other films include the politically undertoned Samurai Chicks (Dokuritsu Shôjo Gurentai) (2004), the cinematic rendition of Boy From Hell (2004), Twilight Syndrome: Dead Go Round (2008), Ring of Curse (2011), Bilocation (2012), and Fatal Frame (2014).

Mari Asato
Born14 March 1976
OccupationFilm director
Years active1999–present

Early life

Mari Asato began her career as a photographer working as an apprentice under Kiyoshi Kurosawa during the filming of Barren Illusions in 1999.[1] A few years later she worked under Hiroshi Takahashi as an assistant director on the production of Sodom the Killer (2004). It was after this time Asato began directing her own films, mostly contributing to already well-known horror franchises. In 2011, she entered her most successful and active phase of film-making, continuously releasing sequels and feature films.[1]

Career

Ring of Curse (Gomennasai) (2011)

Gomennasai (ごめんなさい )

Also known as Gomennasai, Ring of Curse literally means “I’m sorry”. The film is an adaptation of Yuka Hidaka’s mobile phone novel Gomennasai. Structured similarly to the original novel, the film follows a chaptered structure of diary entries.[1]

Bilocation (2012)

Asato’s second feature film, released in 2012, is based on an award-winning novel by Hojo Haruka in 2010 which won best Japanese Horror novel of the year. Noted for its near all-female production team and cast, Bilocation is a revolution to the doppelgänger genre. Directed by a woman and starring a female lead, as well as being an adaptation drawing from the works of Hojo, the female-authored Bilocation distinguished itself from the male-dominated genre.[2]

Composed on the basis Freudian themes of human desire, Bilocation or ‘the state of being in two places simultaneously’ is the overriding theme of the film. Starring a veteran of Japanese horror (Asami Mizukawa) the film draws multiple hidden parallels to doppelgänger tropes and religion (specifically the story of Cain and Abel in the Book of Genesis).[2]

Fatal Frame (Gekijōban Zero) (2014)

Otherwise known as Gekijoban Zero, Fatal Frame is a dark horror film playing with themes of sexuality and intense atmospheric tones. Drawing direct inspiration from the original Fatal Frame video-game franchise also known as Project Zero for PlayStation 2, Fatal Frame's horror experience mimics the atmosphere of the game, a style that is well known in contemporary Japanese horror genre.[1] Also an adaptation of Eiji Otsuka’s original novel Fatal Frame: A Curse Affecting Only Girls, Asato uses the graphic description and contents to build a greater horror base in visual effects.[1]

Set in an all-girls high school, Asato plays with both underlying and prominent aspects of homosexual interactions. With an all-female cast, Fatal Frame actively presents a classic horror genre film in a pro-female light. Regarding the Bechdel Test, the female interactions coincide with the lack of male presence and minimal verbal mention of male characters. In reference to the all-girl high school, Asato either builds upon or avoids generalized female gender tropes while casting new unknown actresses.[3]

The story is comparable to Arthur Millers’ play The Crucible (1953) on the Salem Witch Trials. Reminiscent of the Millerian study of the vulnerability of young minds to become clouded to unrealistic fears.[4]

The film often references John Everett Millais’s famous painting Ophelia, the mid-Victorian piece in which Shakespeare’s famous character Ophelia, from his play Hamlet, drowns herself in a stream due to madness. Asato's style is directly referencing the eerie beauty of Ophelia’s corpse floating in the river. She has been referred to as creating an ‘Ophelia’ world in rural Japan.[4]

Filmography

See also

References

  1. Murguía, Salvador Jimenez (29 July 2016). The Encyclopedia of Japanese Horror Films. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 9, 10. ISBN 9781442261679.
  2. Brown, Steven T. (5 February 2018). Japanese Horror and the Transnational Cinema of Sensations. Springer. pp. 91–93. ISBN 9783319706290.
  3. "Fatal Frame". The Bechdel Scream. 11 January 2017. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  4. Schilling, Mark. "Fatal Frame: Mari Asato's uncanny, ghostly dopplegangers | The Japan Times". The Japan Times. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  5. "Live-Action Japanese Fatal Frame Film's 1st Trailer Posted". Anime News Network. 28 June 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
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