Evil Dead Trap
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Get this...you will not be disappointed.
  • Argento influenced Japanese horror.
  • JAPANESE ITALIAN-LIKE HORROR FLICK
  • Entertaining but uneven Japanese slasher
  • Shiryo no wana.
Evil Dead Trap
Starring: Miyuki Ono , Aya Katsuragi , Hitomi Kobayashi , Eriko Nakagawa , and Masahiko Abe
Director: Toshiharu Ikeda
Manufacturer: Image
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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  5. Evil Dead Trap 2 (Shiryo No Wana 2: Hideki) Evil Dead Trap 2 (Shiryo No Wana 2: Hideki)

ASIN: 6305789649
Release Date: 2000-11-07

Description

Arguably the most controversial and popular Japanese horror film ever made, Evil Dead Trap (aka Shiryo no Wana) is finally on DVD in the United States from Synapse Films! Nami, a talk show hostess, tells her audience to send in home videos to profile on her late night program. Soon, she receives anonymous videotape in the mail^Ea tape containing terrifying imagery. She watches in horror as an unseen filmmaker follows a route to an abandoned factory^Eand brutally tortures and kills a woman on camera. A camera crew is assembled and they set off to follow the videotape^R s trail to the foreboding location. What they find there is a horror beyond imagination! There is someone^Eor something^Ein the mysterious building. Something waiting in the shadows to torture and murder them one by one^E This film has a huge cult following and is sure to please any serious horror film fan!

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Get this...you will not be disappointed........2006-10-10

Before Ringu made Japanese horror films mainstream in the west, there was Evil Dead Trap...probably the most well known Asian horror film of its time. A late night news program recieves an apparent snuff film from an obsessed viewer. Hoping this will be the big story she has been looking for, anchorette Nami and her crew decice to investigate. Once the bodies start to drop though, it becomes clear to Nami that there may be more to this story than meets the eye.

This is a great Japanese horror film from the 80's with an ending reminescent of early Cronenberg. Any fan of the genre should be more than pleased.

3 out of 5 stars Argento influenced Japanese horror........2006-07-04

A reporter looking for her big break finds it when a maniac mails her a snuff film and directions to an abandoned factory. Without telling anybody she and four co-workers go to investigate (great idea!) and are shocked to find out there really is a killer on the loose and he's after them (imagine that!).

One by one the killer knocks off the victims in violent ways (cleaver to the head, decapitation, massive spearing) all leading up to his main prize: the girl he mailed the tape to. With such an exciting start you'd think that this film would just get creepier and creepier, but instead when it gets down to the Final Girl it actually slows way down then drags on to some confusing nightmarish ending that caused me to make a face like I was eating a lemon while reading an advanced physics math book.

4 out of 5 stars JAPANESE ITALIAN-LIKE HORROR FLICK.......2005-11-12

This is a very bizzare and I won't hesitate to say - one of the best Japanise horror flicks I've seen. First if your opinion on Japanise horror tradition is based on such titles as "The Ring", "Grudge" and "Dark Water", you may forget about them - that is to say the latest Japanise wave. In 1980-s it was by far different. "Evil Dead Trap" has some supernatural elements as well, but it's made in a totally different style. I'd call it Japanise-Italian style no mater how funny that may sound. This movie reminds of giallo films in general and of some particular works by Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci. Everything is done here in Italian manner - cinematography, music, camera angles, ghastly murder scenes. I'm far from thinking it was the director's intention but sometimes I got the feeling I was watching some tribute to Italian masters of horror. I'm sure there were scenes imitating the ones from "Suspiria" and "Phenomena" for example, and eyeball-slitting scene was a flat-out homage to Fulci's "The New York Ripper". And music - if I heard it while my eyes were blindfolded and was asked what it is - I'd say it's Goblin's soundtrack to some new Argento movie.
"Evil Dead Trap" (apart from having a stupid title) is at times absurd, surreal and strange but without a doubt very stylish, original and fresh although as I said is reminiscent of many Italian horrors. That's a very pleasant fact considering it was made in 1988. I'm not sure you'll like it if you have just a shadowy idea about Japanise horror, but if you are an aficionado - I bet this movie would be interesting for you.

3 out of 5 stars Entertaining but uneven Japanese slasher.......2005-03-27

Until its final (disappointing) reels, "Evil Dead Trap" is basically a slasher film with an intriguing premise: The hostess of a late-night TV show for Insomniacs solicits home videos from her viewers. She receives a tape that follow a van as it makes its way outside the city to an abandoned military complex. Inside, the faceless videographer appears to torture and then murder a woman. The TV show host gets a crew together to investigate - WRONG move. Someone or some thing lies in the shadows, ready to torture and murder Nami's crew one by one. What could he want with Nami?

The first thing you should know about "Evil Dead Trap" is that its violence is far more intense than your average US slasher. Fans of Dario Argento or Lucio Fulci (whose work "EDT" mines extensively) probably won't be shocked by the level of violence, but your casual viewer might be turned off by the sheer brutality of the carnage. Unlike say Jason or Freddy, the faceless killer of "Evil Dead Trap" isn't content to just murder his victims. Nope, this baddy wants to actually torture them in a series of highly sadistic and elaborate set pieces. The body count isn't especially high, but it does include intense, graphic scenes of eye-gouging, a cleaver to the head, a garote/neck-snapping, etc. Gorehounds will love it; casual horror fans might be seriously put off.

Aside from the brutality, what sets "Evil Dead Trap" apart for me is the stylish camera work and chilly atmosphere of the film. Corridors of the labyrinthian military base are lit with bold Technicolors. There's a gorgeous scene set in the fog-drenched woods outside. The soundtrack is unintrusive but effectively creepy. I'd never realized how much Japanese horror was incluenced by Italian gaillo and gore films, but fans of Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci will recognize little stylistic flourishes throughout "Evil Dead Trap."

There are some plot gaps. For one thing, if I'd received a snuff film in the mail, my first response would be to contact the police - NOT to investigate the source on my own! Even assuming the film was fake, the kind of person who'd stage a mock snuff that features a woman getting her eye pierced by a large, sharp poker (in graphic, disgusting detail) is not the kind of person I want to meet. The first few minutes of the movie require some serious suspension of disbelief ...

And the ending is a letdown. "Evil Dead Trap" is so stylish that for the first hour or so I started to enjoy the fairly by-the-numbers predictability of it all. The last half an hour veers into some highly ridiculous Freudian psychobabble terrain that didn't seem to fit. I give the screenwriter/director credit for trying to do something different, but the ending is a serious departure from the rest of the film. The last half an hour or so seems to lag, and things get uninteresting once "Evil Dead Trap" tries to explain itself.

Anyway, all that said - ANY fan of Japanese or Eurohorror will enjoy the movie, and US horror fans who have a stomach for graphic violence should be entertained. "Evil Dead Trap" is uneven and flawed, but it kept me rivetted for most of the film.

4 out of 5 stars Shiryo no wana........2005-02-08

The evil dead trap is definently a strange film but it is enjoyable to a certain level, it seems that it just suffers from a bad and confusing ending. Nami who is a female reporter works for a late night T.V. show that specializes in bizzare happenings and weird hauntings or something like that, but soon a delivery arrives for Nami with a video tape that has a snuff film that shows a girl being tortured and killed in a very graphic way, Nami then decides to go to the place where this girl was killed and brings some of her collegues and friends with her and in typical fashion they all get killed. Now this is where the film gets more intresting as each member of Nami's team gets killed in a very gory way like in a slasher film only 10 times as gross especially when one of the women gets spikes petruding through her body is very painful to watch, I noticed another thing which is that the director seems to have taken or stolen some scenes from other horror film directors like Mario Bava, Dario Argento, Lucio Fulci, Sam Raimi and other directors as well but he definently made the film seem different then those. The film was very popular in Japan and seem to have brought in a new wave of other japanese horror films. Other japanese horror films like the guinie pig series were also released during that year in the 80's were just to gross for people to watch, I would definently not watch it as it seems to be just a stupid and fake gore film with no story at all even if I am a hardcore horror fan it doesn't seem that interesting to me.
Evil Dead Trap 2 (Shiryo No Wana 2: Hideki)
Average customer rating: 2 out of 5 stars
  • An Over-Hyped, And Very Bad Film!
  • A waste of time.
  • My Unusual Dilemma....
  • Ok, so J-Horror wasn't always good...
  • Escape this Trap by Hitting Eject!!!!!
Evil Dead Trap 2 (Shiryo No Wana 2: Hideki)
Starring: Shoko Nakajima , Rie Kondoh , Shirô Sano , and Shino Ikenami
Director: Izô Hashimoto
Manufacturer: Eclectic DVD Dist.
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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ASIN: B00009QG90
Release Date: 2003-08-05

Description

A killer is on the loose in Japan. Young women are being horribly mutilated. Aki, a young woman who works as a film projectionist, is haunted by a childlike ghost. Her girlfriend Emi is a TV news reporter covering the horrible mutilations. Emi introduces Aki to Kurahashi, a married man with a haunted past. Everyone involved has a dark secret and something evil is taking control of them. They are pawns in a game being played by forces beyond their understanding. This eerie descent into madness takes us on a journey into an abyss only the Japanese know how to create. For the first time in North America, the terrible truth is revealed in HIDEKI EVIL DEAD TRAP 2.

Customer Reviews:

1 out of 5 stars An Over-Hyped, And Very Bad Film!.......2006-12-05

This is my first one star viewing ever on amazon. I was not going to review the film, however, after my nephew [who likes the film] continously told me to view the film again, I did [unfortunately] and it did not get any better than when I first viewed the film many years ago. Now I will be the first to admit that I have my share of film in the horror and thriller genre that many would consider bad. However, I LIKE THEM!

This film on the other hand was not good when I first viewed it many years ago, and it sure didn't get any better with time. In fact, I could barely make it through this viewing. But, since my nephew sat and watched it with me, I figured the least I could do was warn others to rent the film before you purchase it. I will not write that you should not see it, however, by renting it first you will save yourself some money. Horror and thrillers are a genre that each of us view differently. Therefore, watch it with caution. I don't recommend it, however, you must decide for yourselves if it is worth the purchase.

1 out of 5 stars A waste of time........2006-07-04

Fans of the first film can forget about this one cause it's nothing like part one. An overweight female serial killer who kills her victims off screen is creeped out when she keeps seeing a young boy in the background of the news broadcasts reporting her murders. Oddly enough the reporter on the TV is also her only friend and she has a guy friend who's interested in the plump girl. How exciting!

After 70 minutes of pointless talking and long, boring scenes of nothing I turned this mess off. Forget it.

4 out of 5 stars My Unusual Dilemma.... .......2005-01-24

~
How does one go about recommending a movie that the reviewer thoroughly enjoyed but who is at the same time unpretentious in realizing that the greater viewership has & will continue to thumb its nose at it? The answer, I suppose, is that he "doesn't."

So how is it that I have come to appreciate this disturbing "buckets-o-gore" stomach-turner even as everyone else who has viewed it wants to "re-bury" it? (inside joke). Well, it may have something to do with the fact that I had never (and to this day still have not) seen the so-called "prequel" to this film.

Having heard so much positive feedback from multiple sources regarding that first film ("Shiryou no Wana" - aka "Evil Dead Trap"), I decided to find out what I could about the movie before making any purchasing decisions. You see, I often like to make 'chance' purchases of movies I had never seen nor heard of before (as indicated in a couple of my "So You'd Like to..." Amazon reviewer guides), but usually not without at least 'some' story & production information. And what I discovered was that while "Shiryou no Wana" was being praised to the hilt, THIS film ("Hideki" - aka "Shiryou no Wana 2" aka "Evil Dead Trap 2" - the supposed 'sequel') was being "stink talked" to the same degree.

The biggest complaint which stemmed from most of those familiar with both of these films was, for me at least, this film's ("EDT2") best selling point -- that these two semi-similarly titled movies have virtually nothing to do with each other, except for sharing a common theme of extreme gory violence and a rarely-seen antagonist named "Hideki." This revelation fueled my interest in "EDT2" because the premise of the first movie sounded hyper-contrived and entirely bogus, whereas this, the second film, seemed more plausible and sounded much more intriguing & compelling.

My interest in this film was also further aroused by the ambiguity of the female lead character: a shy & somewhat unpretty girl named Aki, who works as a film projectionist at a Korean movie house -- (Is she 'heroine' or 'villain'? 'Perpetrator' or 'victim'?) I was also captivated with the idea of casting a "plump & heavy" girl in the lead role.

Another complaint from viewers of both films was that "EDT2" was not nearly as graphic, gory & sadistic as the earlier film -- which simply has to be a plus in EDT2's favor as far as I'm concerned, since this movie is without question one of the most sickening bloodbath movies I've ever laid eyes upon, and it is certainly the most graphically gruesome of any of the movies in my personal DVD collection, with the exception of "Starship Troopers." I am by no means a raving anti-slice&dice puritan, but I do believe that even "splatter movies" should exercise at least 'some' restraint (as can probably be evidenced by the fact that the only other movies related to this particular genre-- those that DON'T involve monsters, mutants, aliens, demonic possession, 'killbots' or zombies --in my entire movie collection consist only of the original "Friday the 13th," the very first "Chucky" movie, "Psycho" I & II, the "Scream" trilogy, "Urban Legends: Final Cut," "Silent Night, Deadly Night," "Se7en" and "Sleepaway Camp"). Hence, my characterization of "EDT2" as one of my REALLY GUILTY "guilty pleasures."

I am also at a complete and utter loss as to how practically everyone else viewing this movie says they don't understand it or that they can't make any sense out of it. I find this most odd, because it all made near-perfect sense to me -- despite (or perhaps maybe even 'because' of) not having seen "EDT1." As a result, this places me in yet another difficult situation: Do I share what I know in hopes of helping others overcome their confusion? Or do I keep what I know to myself in hopes that others will eventually put the pieces of the puzzle together and decipher the code themselves? I faced this same dilemma when recommending the "Geobreeders" anime; the difference this time, however, is that the "horror" audience is much more fickle than the "anime" crowd -- so, sadly, I digress. And with so much of the consensus speaking of this film in the most negative terms anyway, I could not possibly hope to sway any pre-held opinions on the basis of some clarifying information. The most I can possibly hope for, I guess, is that anyone new coming to this film does so without having had any prior exposure to the first film, so as not to have any advance prejudices going into this one -- then perhaps on that basis "Hideki: Shiryou no Wana 2" ("Evil Dead Trap 2") could find a wider audience of acceptance.

2 out of 5 stars Ok, so J-Horror wasn't always good..........2004-12-11

Most people probably haven't seen this movie. It's an in-name-only sequel to a Japanese horror film of abivalent reputation. Sometimes it's hard writing reviews of movies like this, so I'm going to take the "watch this if..." approach. (I could always try not writing a review at all, but I don't have anything else to do today.) One reason why you should watch this is if you are familiar with the recent wave of Japanese horror (or "J-Ho," as we call it in my neighborhood) that has mastered the emphasis of atmosphere over gore, and you're interested in learning about J-Ho's much simpler times, when it was completely inept at both.

To be fair, I didn't get this DVD, I watched some old Dutch VHS version that some poor soul begged my video store to take off their hands. The back of the box promised, "State of the art special effects," and a "great plot," so I figure there must have been a mix-up, and these things were left off of the verson I watched. Maybe they found them and added them to the DVD as extra features.

The story centers around 3 people, Aki, her friend Emi, and Emi's married male friend, whose name I can't remember, and neither will you. And although all of them end up committing bloody murder at some point, the interactions between these 3 are far too boring to get into. But the glue that holds them all together is this cool little malevolent child by the name of Hideki. If you're reading this exceedingly negative review and wondering why this movie got 2 stars instead of 1, it's all because of this kid. I love a good Malevolent Child in a horror movie, and considering the low budget, he really delivers. He looks almost like a prototype for Toshio-kun, the freaky kid from the Ju-on series, although I'm not exactly sure how much influence this movie had (if I had to wager, I'd probably say "none," but if it did, I don't think anyone would admit it).

I suppose it could be a bold move for the female lead to be fat and ugly. I say this not to be cruel, but because it is firmly established that this character of Aki is indeed fat and ugly. I can appreciate that. Us feminists are always complaining about films, especially horror films, having the female lead as a pretty girl/ingenue type. But since it's obvious from the appearance of her allegedly "attractive, successful friend," as well as the rest of the cast, that they just didn't have a budget to afford a more attractive actress anyway, I can't really see it as that bold of a move. It might have been interesting if they had established a fat ugly woman as a real person with complex human emotions, instead of having her run around like, "I'm fat, and that pisses me off, I think I'll go around killing people." But then again, there is no one in Evil Dead Trap 2 who even resembles a real person, so I'm just going to let that one go, even though screaming "misogyny!" is so much more fun.

The thing that irritates me the most about this movie is the persistant mention of the word "abortion" in an attempt to connect it to the horror. I know that Japan does not have a history of moralistic horror films like the US does, but the implication that Aki is being haunted by Hideki because she had an abortion is just silly. It's not like I'm afraid that the Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life are going to start forcing doctors to tell their patients that abortion could cause them to be stalked by a pale little boy with black eyeballs. But it's not good character development at all, and it is oversimplification of a serious issue for a cheap scare (if you can call it that). For this reason, I feel this aspect of "Evil Dead Trap 2" is in poor taste.

Throughout the course of the movie, we are treated to scenes that could be described as "macabre ballet," that looked so much cooler when filmed by Dario Argento, and some more excuses for Hideki to unnerve the viewer by showing up in places a child just should not be. A news broadcast, a murder scene, a back alley in which Aki is about to get it on with two thugs. And through it all, Hideki never disappoints by hinting that he may be the troubled spirit of an innocent child who needs help. He does what he does, because he's pure EEEE-VILLLL!!!!

Watch this if you're curious about how bad Japanese Horror used to be. If you like a good Malevolent Child, watch Juon: The Grudge.

2 out of 5 stars Escape this Trap by Hitting Eject!!!!!.......2003-08-19

For fans of the first film, be advised that this "sequel" has very little connection to the original. In fact, "Evil Dead Trap 2" is so out of control it should have been titled differently. The story concerns a woman who goes through her pathetic life apparently searching for a male companion and is also a deranged serial killer. The graphic killing sequences and gross-out images of the first film are generally absent here except in the last half hour (if you make it that far). By the time anything of interest starts happening, it is so disjointed from the rest of the film, making little sense on any level, that it is a sure sign of a corrupted screenplay. The three main leads are entirely unattractive and are possibly the worst actors in all of Asian cinema. The film also drags scenes out way too long, an example being a totally useless opening of the main character walking through the city in slow motion. The scene could have been removed entirely and would have spared the viewer precious minutes of their lives. Unfortunately, there are too many of these types of exposition throughout the entire film. I gave the film two stars instead of one based primarily on a few graphic set pieces towards the end that are possible indicators that somewhere in this mess a good movie may have existed. Anyway, "Evil Dead Trap 2" is not a good movie, certainly not worth a purchase or possibly even a rental....view at your own risk.
Evil Dead Trap [Region 2]
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Get this...you will not be disappointed.
  • Argento influenced Japanese horror.
  • JAPANESE ITALIAN-LIKE HORROR FLICK
  • Entertaining but uneven Japanese slasher
  • Shiryo no wana.
Evil Dead Trap [Region 2]
Starring: Miyuki Ono , Aya Katsuragi , Hitomi Kobayashi , Eriko Nakagawa , and Masahiko Abe
Director: Toshiharu Ikeda
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

GeneralGeneral | Horror | Genres | DVD | Video
JapaneseJapanese | By Original Language | Art House & International | Genres | DVD | Video
( E )( E ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
JapaneseJapanese | By Original Language | Foreign & International | Stores | DVD | Video
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  5. Evil Dead Trap 2 (Shiryo No Wana 2: Hideki) Evil Dead Trap 2 (Shiryo No Wana 2: Hideki)

ASIN: B000083EDZ

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Get this...you will not be disappointed........2006-10-10

Before Ringu made Japanese horror films mainstream in the west, there was Evil Dead Trap...probably the most well known Asian horror film of its time. A late night news program recieves an apparent snuff film from an obsessed viewer. Hoping this will be the big story she has been looking for, anchorette Nami and her crew decice to investigate. Once the bodies start to drop though, it becomes clear to Nami that there may be more to this story than meets the eye.

This is a great Japanese horror film from the 80's with an ending reminescent of early Cronenberg. Any fan of the genre should be more than pleased.

3 out of 5 stars Argento influenced Japanese horror........2006-07-04

A reporter looking for her big break finds it when a maniac mails her a snuff film and directions to an abandoned factory. Without telling anybody she and four co-workers go to investigate (great idea!) and are shocked to find out there really is a killer on the loose and he's after them (imagine that!).

One by one the killer knocks off the victims in violent ways (cleaver to the head, decapitation, massive spearing) all leading up to his main prize: the girl he mailed the tape to. With such an exciting start you'd think that this film would just get creepier and creepier, but instead when it gets down to the Final Girl it actually slows way down then drags on to some confusing nightmarish ending that caused me to make a face like I was eating a lemon while reading an advanced physics math book.

4 out of 5 stars JAPANESE ITALIAN-LIKE HORROR FLICK.......2005-11-12

This is a very bizzare and I won't hesitate to say - one of the best Japanise horror flicks I've seen. First if your opinion on Japanise horror tradition is based on such titles as "The Ring", "Grudge" and "Dark Water", you may forget about them - that is to say the latest Japanise wave. In 1980-s it was by far different. "Evil Dead Trap" has some supernatural elements as well, but it's made in a totally different style. I'd call it Japanise-Italian style no mater how funny that may sound. This movie reminds of giallo films in general and of some particular works by Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci. Everything is done here in Italian manner - cinematography, music, camera angles, ghastly murder scenes. I'm far from thinking it was the director's intention but sometimes I got the feeling I was watching some tribute to Italian masters of horror. I'm sure there were scenes imitating the ones from "Suspiria" and "Phenomena" for example, and eyeball-slitting scene was a flat-out homage to Fulci's "The New York Ripper". And music - if I heard it while my eyes were blindfolded and was asked what it is - I'd say it's Goblin's soundtrack to some new Argento movie.
"Evil Dead Trap" (apart from having a stupid title) is at times absurd, surreal and strange but without a doubt very stylish, original and fresh although as I said is reminiscent of many Italian horrors. That's a very pleasant fact considering it was made in 1988. I'm not sure you'll like it if you have just a shadowy idea about Japanise horror, but if you are an aficionado - I bet this movie would be interesting for you.

3 out of 5 stars Entertaining but uneven Japanese slasher.......2005-03-27

Until its final (disappointing) reels, "Evil Dead Trap" is basically a slasher film with an intriguing premise: The hostess of a late-night TV show for Insomniacs solicits home videos from her viewers. She receives a tape that follow a van as it makes its way outside the city to an abandoned military complex. Inside, the faceless videographer appears to torture and then murder a woman. The TV show host gets a crew together to investigate - WRONG move. Someone or some thing lies in the shadows, ready to torture and murder Nami's crew one by one. What could he want with Nami?

The first thing you should know about "Evil Dead Trap" is that its violence is far more intense than your average US slasher. Fans of Dario Argento or Lucio Fulci (whose work "EDT" mines extensively) probably won't be shocked by the level of violence, but your casual viewer might be turned off by the sheer brutality of the carnage. Unlike say Jason or Freddy, the faceless killer of "Evil Dead Trap" isn't content to just murder his victims. Nope, this baddy wants to actually torture them in a series of highly sadistic and elaborate set pieces. The body count isn't especially high, but it does include intense, graphic scenes of eye-gouging, a cleaver to the head, a garote/neck-snapping, etc. Gorehounds will love it; casual horror fans might be seriously put off.

Aside from the brutality, what sets "Evil Dead Trap" apart for me is the stylish camera work and chilly atmosphere of the film. Corridors of the labyrinthian military base are lit with bold Technicolors. There's a gorgeous scene set in the fog-drenched woods outside. The soundtrack is unintrusive but effectively creepy. I'd never realized how much Japanese horror was incluenced by Italian gaillo and gore films, but fans of Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci will recognize little stylistic flourishes throughout "Evil Dead Trap."

There are some plot gaps. For one thing, if I'd received a snuff film in the mail, my first response would be to contact the police - NOT to investigate the source on my own! Even assuming the film was fake, the kind of person who'd stage a mock snuff that features a woman getting her eye pierced by a large, sharp poker (in graphic, disgusting detail) is not the kind of person I want to meet. The first few minutes of the movie require some serious suspension of disbelief ...

And the ending is a letdown. "Evil Dead Trap" is so stylish that for the first hour or so I started to enjoy the fairly by-the-numbers predictability of it all. The last half an hour veers into some highly ridiculous Freudian psychobabble terrain that didn't seem to fit. I give the screenwriter/director credit for trying to do something different, but the ending is a serious departure from the rest of the film. The last half an hour or so seems to lag, and things get uninteresting once "Evil Dead Trap" tries to explain itself.

Anyway, all that said - ANY fan of Japanese or Eurohorror will enjoy the movie, and US horror fans who have a stomach for graphic violence should be entertained. "Evil Dead Trap" is uneven and flawed, but it kept me rivetted for most of the film.

4 out of 5 stars Shiryo no wana........2005-02-08

The evil dead trap is definently a strange film but it is enjoyable to a certain level, it seems that it just suffers from a bad and confusing ending. Nami who is a female reporter works for a late night T.V. show that specializes in bizzare happenings and weird hauntings or something like that, but soon a delivery arrives for Nami with a video tape that has a snuff film that shows a girl being tortured and killed in a very graphic way, Nami then decides to go to the place where this girl was killed and brings some of her collegues and friends with her and in typical fashion they all get killed. Now this is where the film gets more intresting as each member of Nami's team gets killed in a very gory way like in a slasher film only 10 times as gross especially when one of the women gets spikes petruding through her body is very painful to watch, I noticed another thing which is that the director seems to have taken or stolen some scenes from other horror film directors like Mario Bava, Dario Argento, Lucio Fulci, Sam Raimi and other directors as well but he definently made the film seem different then those. The film was very popular in Japan and seem to have brought in a new wave of other japanese horror films. Other japanese horror films like the guinie pig series were also released during that year in the 80's were just to gross for people to watch, I would definently not watch it as it seems to be just a stupid and fake gore film with no story at all even if I am a hardcore horror fan it doesn't seem that interesting to me.
Evil Dead Trap 2 [Region 2]
Average customer rating: 2 out of 5 stars
  • An Over-Hyped, And Very Bad Film!
  • A waste of time.
  • My Unusual Dilemma....
  • Ok, so J-Horror wasn't always good...
  • Escape this Trap by Hitting Eject!!!!!
Evil Dead Trap 2 [Region 2]
Starring: Shoko Nakajima , Rie Kondoh , Shirô Sano , and Shino Ikenami
Director: Izô Hashimoto
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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ASIN: B000094P4G

Customer Reviews:

1 out of 5 stars An Over-Hyped, And Very Bad Film!.......2006-12-05

This is my first one star viewing ever on amazon. I was not going to review the film, however, after my nephew [who likes the film] continously told me to view the film again, I did [unfortunately] and it did not get any better than when I first viewed the film many years ago. Now I will be the first to admit that I have my share of film in the horror and thriller genre that many would consider bad. However, I LIKE THEM!

This film on the other hand was not good when I first viewed it many years ago, and it sure didn't get any better with time. In fact, I could barely make it through this viewing. But, since my nephew sat and watched it with me, I figured the least I could do was warn others to rent the film before you purchase it. I will not write that you should not see it, however, by renting it first you will save yourself some money. Horror and thrillers are a genre that each of us view differently. Therefore, watch it with caution. I don't recommend it, however, you must decide for yourselves if it is worth the purchase.

1 out of 5 stars A waste of time........2006-07-04

Fans of the first film can forget about this one cause it's nothing like part one. An overweight female serial killer who kills her victims off screen is creeped out when she keeps seeing a young boy in the background of the news broadcasts reporting her murders. Oddly enough the reporter on the TV is also her only friend and she has a guy friend who's interested in the plump girl. How exciting!

After 70 minutes of pointless talking and long, boring scenes of nothing I turned this mess off. Forget it.

4 out of 5 stars My Unusual Dilemma.... .......2005-01-24

~
How does one go about recommending a movie that the reviewer thoroughly enjoyed but who is at the same time unpretentious in realizing that the greater viewership has & will continue to thumb its nose at it? The answer, I suppose, is that he "doesn't."

So how is it that I have come to appreciate this disturbing "buckets-o-gore" stomach-turner even as everyone else who has viewed it wants to "re-bury" it? (inside joke). Well, it may have something to do with the fact that I had never (and to this day still have not) seen the so-called "prequel" to this film.

Having heard so much positive feedback from multiple sources regarding that first film ("Shiryou no Wana" - aka "Evil Dead Trap"), I decided to find out what I could about the movie before making any purchasing decisions. You see, I often like to make 'chance' purchases of movies I had never seen nor heard of before (as indicated in a couple of my "So You'd Like to..." Amazon reviewer guides), but usually not without at least 'some' story & production information. And what I discovered was that while "Shiryou no Wana" was being praised to the hilt, THIS film ("Hideki" - aka "Shiryou no Wana 2" aka "Evil Dead Trap 2" - the supposed 'sequel') was being "stink talked" to the same degree.

The biggest complaint which stemmed from most of those familiar with both of these films was, for me at least, this film's ("EDT2") best selling point -- that these two semi-similarly titled movies have virtually nothing to do with each other, except for sharing a common theme of extreme gory violence and a rarely-seen antagonist named "Hideki." This revelation fueled my interest in "EDT2" because the premise of the first movie sounded hyper-contrived and entirely bogus, whereas this, the second film, seemed more plausible and sounded much more intriguing & compelling.

My interest in this film was also further aroused by the ambiguity of the female lead character: a shy & somewhat unpretty girl named Aki, who works as a film projectionist at a Korean movie house -- (Is she 'heroine' or 'villain'? 'Perpetrator' or 'victim'?) I was also captivated with the idea of casting a "plump & heavy" girl in the lead role.

Another complaint from viewers of both films was that "EDT2" was not nearly as graphic, gory & sadistic as the earlier film -- which simply has to be a plus in EDT2's favor as far as I'm concerned, since this movie is without question one of the most sickening bloodbath movies I've ever laid eyes upon, and it is certainly the most graphically gruesome of any of the movies in my personal DVD collection, with the exception of "Starship Troopers." I am by no means a raving anti-slice&dice puritan, but I do believe that even "splatter movies" should exercise at least 'some' restraint (as can probably be evidenced by the fact that the only other movies related to this particular genre-- those that DON'T involve monsters, mutants, aliens, demonic possession, 'killbots' or zombies --in my entire movie collection consist only of the original "Friday the 13th," the very first "Chucky" movie, "Psycho" I & II, the "Scream" trilogy, "Urban Legends: Final Cut," "Silent Night, Deadly Night," "Se7en" and "Sleepaway Camp"). Hence, my characterization of "EDT2" as one of my REALLY GUILTY "guilty pleasures."

I am also at a complete and utter loss as to how practically everyone else viewing this movie says they don't understand it or that they can't make any sense out of it. I find this most odd, because it all made near-perfect sense to me -- despite (or perhaps maybe even 'because' of) not having seen "EDT1." As a result, this places me in yet another difficult situation: Do I share what I know in hopes of helping others overcome their confusion? Or do I keep what I know to myself in hopes that others will eventually put the pieces of the puzzle together and decipher the code themselves? I faced this same dilemma when recommending the "Geobreeders" anime; the difference this time, however, is that the "horror" audience is much more fickle than the "anime" crowd -- so, sadly, I digress. And with so much of the consensus speaking of this film in the most negative terms anyway, I could not possibly hope to sway any pre-held opinions on the basis of some clarifying information. The most I can possibly hope for, I guess, is that anyone new coming to this film does so without having had any prior exposure to the first film, so as not to have any advance prejudices going into this one -- then perhaps on that basis "Hideki: Shiryou no Wana 2" ("Evil Dead Trap 2") could find a wider audience of acceptance.

2 out of 5 stars Ok, so J-Horror wasn't always good..........2004-12-11

Most people probably haven't seen this movie. It's an in-name-only sequel to a Japanese horror film of abivalent reputation. Sometimes it's hard writing reviews of movies like this, so I'm going to take the "watch this if..." approach. (I could always try not writing a review at all, but I don't have anything else to do today.) One reason why you should watch this is if you are familiar with the recent wave of Japanese horror (or "J-Ho," as we call it in my neighborhood) that has mastered the emphasis of atmosphere over gore, and you're interested in learning about J-Ho's much simpler times, when it was completely inept at both.

To be fair, I didn't get this DVD, I watched some old Dutch VHS version that some poor soul begged my video store to take off their hands. The back of the box promised, "State of the art special effects," and a "great plot," so I figure there must have been a mix-up, and these things were left off of the verson I watched. Maybe they found them and added them to the DVD as extra features.

The story centers around 3 people, Aki, her friend Emi, and Emi's married male friend, whose name I can't remember, and neither will you. And although all of them end up committing bloody murder at some point, the interactions between these 3 are far too boring to get into. But the glue that holds them all together is this cool little malevolent child by the name of Hideki. If you're reading this exceedingly negative review and wondering why this movie got 2 stars instead of 1, it's all because of this kid. I love a good Malevolent Child in a horror movie, and considering the low budget, he really delivers. He looks almost like a prototype for Toshio-kun, the freaky kid from the Ju-on series, although I'm not exactly sure how much influence this movie had (if I had to wager, I'd probably say "none," but if it did, I don't think anyone would admit it).

I suppose it could be a bold move for the female lead to be fat and ugly. I say this not to be cruel, but because it is firmly established that this character of Aki is indeed fat and ugly. I can appreciate that. Us feminists are always complaining about films, especially horror films, having the female lead as a pretty girl/ingenue type. But since it's obvious from the appearance of her allegedly "attractive, successful friend," as well as the rest of the cast, that they just didn't have a budget to afford a more attractive actress anyway, I can't really see it as that bold of a move. It might have been interesting if they had established a fat ugly woman as a real person with complex human emotions, instead of having her run around like, "I'm fat, and that pisses me off, I think I'll go around killing people." But then again, there is no one in Evil Dead Trap 2 who even resembles a real person, so I'm just going to let that one go, even though screaming "misogyny!" is so much more fun.

The thing that irritates me the most about this movie is the persistant mention of the word "abortion" in an attempt to connect it to the horror. I know that Japan does not have a history of moralistic horror films like the US does, but the implication that Aki is being haunted by Hideki because she had an abortion is just silly. It's not like I'm afraid that the Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life are going to start forcing doctors to tell their patients that abortion could cause them to be stalked by a pale little boy with black eyeballs. But it's not good character development at all, and it is oversimplification of a serious issue for a cheap scare (if you can call it that). For this reason, I feel this aspect of "Evil Dead Trap 2" is in poor taste.

Throughout the course of the movie, we are treated to scenes that could be described as "macabre ballet," that looked so much cooler when filmed by Dario Argento, and some more excuses for Hideki to unnerve the viewer by showing up in places a child just should not be. A news broadcast, a murder scene, a back alley in which Aki is about to get it on with two thugs. And through it all, Hideki never disappoints by hinting that he may be the troubled spirit of an innocent child who needs help. He does what he does, because he's pure EEEE-VILLLL!!!!

Watch this if you're curious about how bad Japanese Horror used to be. If you like a good Malevolent Child, watch Juon: The Grudge.

2 out of 5 stars Escape this Trap by Hitting Eject!!!!!.......2003-08-19

For fans of the first film, be advised that this "sequel" has very little connection to the original. In fact, "Evil Dead Trap 2" is so out of control it should have been titled differently. The story concerns a woman who goes through her pathetic life apparently searching for a male companion and is also a deranged serial killer. The graphic killing sequences and gross-out images of the first film are generally absent here except in the last half hour (if you make it that far). By the time anything of interest starts happening, it is so disjointed from the rest of the film, making little sense on any level, that it is a sure sign of a corrupted screenplay. The three main leads are entirely unattractive and are possibly the worst actors in all of Asian cinema. The film also drags scenes out way too long, an example being a totally useless opening of the main character walking through the city in slow motion. The scene could have been removed entirely and would have spared the viewer precious minutes of their lives. Unfortunately, there are too many of these types of exposition throughout the entire film. I gave the film two stars instead of one based primarily on a few graphic set pieces towards the end that are possible indicators that somewhere in this mess a good movie may have existed. Anyway, "Evil Dead Trap 2" is not a good movie, certainly not worth a purchase or possibly even a rental....view at your own risk.
Evil Dead Trap 2
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Evil Dead Trap 2
    Director: Izo Hashimoto
    Manufacturer: Unearthed
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

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    ASIN: B00096S444
    Release Date: 2005-07-12

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