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 A masterpiece of filmmaking artifice and mood-setting  atmosphere, Kwaidan consists of four ghost stories adapted from  the fiction of Greek-born Lafcadio Hearn (a.k.a. Yakumo Koizumi,  1850-1904), who assimilated into Japanese culture so thoroughly that his  writings reveal no evidence of Western influence. So it is that these  four cinematic interpretations--perhaps more accurately described as  tales of spectral visitation--are sublimely Japanese in tone and  texture, created entirely in a studio with frequently stunning results.  There are painterly images here that remain the most beautiful and  haunting in all of Japanese cinema, presented with the purity of silent  film, sparsely accompanied by post-synchronized sounds and music (by  Toru Takemitsu) that enhance the otherworldly effect of director Masaki  Kobayashi's meticulous imagery. When viewed in a receptive frame of  mind, Kwaidan can be intensely hypnotic.
   Each of the four stories find their protagonists confronted by spirits  that compel them to (respectively) make amends for past mistakes,  maintain vows of silence, satisfy the yearnings of the undead, or  capture phantoms that remain frightfully elusive. As each tale  progresses, their supernatural elements grow increasingly intense and distant from the confines of reality. With careful use of glorious  color and wide-screen composition, Kwaidan exists in a  netherworld that is both real and imagined, its characters never quite  sure they can trust what they've seen and heard. Vastly different from  the more overt shocks of Western horror, the film casts a supernatural  spell that remains timelessly effective. --Jeff Shannon
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