
I’ve talked about the J-Horror craze of the 2000s in these pages a few times. Generally speaking, Japanese horror from this time period relied more on mood than gore. Their stories often involved elements of folklore, and the villains were often ghosts or other supernatural elements.
But there is another side to the J-Horror phenomenon that is part of the larger Asian Extreme horror movement. Folks like Takashi Miike were making films filled with heavy violence and gruesome depravity.
Evil Dead Trap falls into the latter category.
It is the kind of film I would have loved back in the late 2000s, when I was first discovering horror films outside the slashers I loved as a teenager and the classic Universal stories I loved in college. Back then I loved extreme horror. I thought it was cool to discover these weird little films that took gore to the max.
These days I prefer my horror a bit more gothic and subdued.
This film starts out promising. Nami Tsuchiya (Miyuki Ono) hosts a late-night TV show. It is the sort of thing that likes showing off the wild and the weird. She often asks folks to send her videotapes of their crazy stuff. One day she gets a tape showing a woman (that looks remarkably like her) having her eyeballs sliced open and her stomach stabbed. It looks real. She is intriged. She takes her fellow showmakers to an abaonded military base where she thinks the film was shot.
Naturally, things go bad. A killer starts picking them off in some pretty gruesome ways. It feels a lot more like those slashers from the 1980s than a typical Japanese horror movie. This is especially true in the buildup. Our heroes consist of five girls and one guy. Of course they split into groups to explore the grounds. Nami goes at it alone. The guy and the girls have sex. Then he hides and jumps out to scare everyone.
Nami runs into a creepy guy, Daisuke Muraki (Yuji Honma) who says he’s there looking for his brother. He warns Nami to stay away from the place, then goes off on his own. There is a touch of Saw in one scene with a complicated trap set, forcing one of the girls to kill the other. The score is reminiscent of something Goblin would do for Dario Argento, with a main theme repeating every time the killer comes near.
It is unnerving, and it pushes hard into the extreme horror ideas with lots of gore and a pretty horrific rape scene. The last act gets really goofy, weird, and gross.
It really is the kind of film I would have loved twenty years ago. It is one of those things I’d love to ask other people if they’d seen it, feeling cool because they hadn’t. And then going into some of the wilder details.
These days I can admire what it’s doing and appreciate the weirdness, but I can’t say I really liked it.







