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The Ghost of Yotsuya (Daiei film) The Ghost of Yotsuya (Shintoho film) Ghost Stories of Wanderer at Honjo; Ghost Theater; Ghost Train (2006 film) Ghost-Cat of Arima Palace; Ghost-Cat of Gojusan-Tsugi; Ghost-Cat Wall of Hatred; God's Left Hand, Devil's Right Hand; Godzilla (1954 film) Godzilla Minus One; Gozu; Grotesque (2009 film) The Guard ...
Horror films released in the 1970s are listed in the following articles: List of horror films of 1970; List of horror films of 1971; List of horror films of 1972; List of horror films of 1973; List of horror films of 1974; List of horror films of 1975; List of horror films of 1976; List of horror films of 1977; List of horror films of 1978
One of the first major Japanese horror films was Onibaba (1964), directed by Kaneto Shindo. [10] The film is categorized as a historical horror drama where a woman and her mother-in-law attempt to survive during a civil war. [10] Like many early Japanese horror films, elements are drawn largely from traditional Kabuki and Noh theater. [9]
The following are lists of films produced in Japan in the 1970s: List of Japanese films of 1970; List of Japanese films of 1971; List of Japanese films of 1972; List of Japanese films of 1973; List of Japanese films of 1974; List of Japanese films of 1975; List of Japanese films of 1976; List of Japanese films of 1977; List of Japanese films of ...
House (Japanese: ハウス, Hepburn: Hausu) is a 1977 Japanese comedy horror film directed and produced by Nobuhiko Obayashi.It is about a schoolgirl traveling with her six friends to her ailing aunt's country home, where they come face to face with supernatural events as the girls are, one by one, devoured by the home.
Bakumatsu (film) Ballad of Orin; Bandits vs. Samurai Squadron; Banned Book: Flesh Futon; Barefoot Gen (1976 film) Barefoot Gen: Explosion of Tears; The Barren Zone; Battle of Okinawa (film) Battles Without Honor and Humanity (film) Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Deadly Fight in Hiroshima; Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Final Episode
[7] [11] In his book Japanese Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films, Stuart Galbraith IV referred to the film as an "acceptable, if unexceptional film" and that "the story is generally routine, but the Eastern locale and attempt (slight as it is) to add a little dimension to its main characters make this somewhat above average for the genre".
Dead of Night (1945) helped to popularize the format for horror anthology films—although they had existed as far back as Unheimliche Geschichten(1919) or Waxworks (1924)—and British company Amicus made several such films in the 1960s and 1970s.