Okinawan Horror: Upside-Down Ghost - Chinese Horror: Breaking a Coffin

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During a fever, Tateo, the male protagonist believes he is dying and has the hallucination that his beautiful wife, Reiko (Tamaki Katori), the daughter of a wealthy family, is having an affair w/ another man. He then tells her an ancient Chinese story: the ancient Chinese philosopher Zhuangzi wanted to test the faithfulness of his wife, so he faked his own death; the wife was grief-stricken and went into mourning. While funeral arrangements were in progress, a handsome young man came to call on Zhuangzi. Zhuangzi's wife soon fell into love w/ the young man and decided to marry hi. However, the young man fell ill; his servant said that the only medicine to cure him is human brain. Zhuangzi's wife eventually decided to break his husband's coffin and take his brain. However the young man turns out be Zhuangzi in disguise.

$0

Budget

$0

Revenue

13-06-1962

Release Date

JPTW

Country

5

Rating

1

Votes

-

Age Rating

88 min

Runtime

Released

Status

Japanese

Language

Popular actors
Media

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Director
Shao Lo-Hui

Shao Lo-Hui

Shao Lo-Hui (邵羅輝) was a Taiwanese actor, director and writer. Born as Shao Shouli( 邵守利), he lived in the city of Tainan before his family moved to Japan. He studied direction at the Imperial Film and Drama School in Tokyo. After graduation, he worked as an actor for Shochiku Pictures Co., Ltd. in Osaka under the stage name Nakamura Bunzo (中村文藏). After World War II, he returned to Taiwan and worked for the Guofeng Theater Company (國風劇團). He later formed his own theatre troupe, Mei Fangyu Theatre Company (梅芳玉劇團). In 1955, he was hired to direct the Hokkien language film Six Gifted Scholars' Romance of the West-Chamber (六才子西廂記).
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