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A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

author:Movie fungus

Nagisa Oshima,"World of Senses"

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

Source: "The Abe-Din Incident"

The maid Abe was scheduled to hang her lover and amputate her genitals on May 18, 1936, at the tea room in Ozahisa, Arakawa-ku, Tokyo, Japan. The outcome of the trial was determined to be the result of infatuation. Abe accepted a sentence of six years of service and was released from prison in 1941. After that, Abe lived an ordinary civic life, but suddenly disappeared in 1971 and his whereabouts are unknown.

The "Abe Incident" was later rewritten by Junichi Watanabe as Paradise Lost, but their true endings were very different.

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

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Masahira Imamura, "Revenge on Me"

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

source:

The film is based on a serial murder case of a real person. The criminal in the case, Makitsu-yan, has been in prison often since he was a teenager, and when he grew up, he used his fake identity to deceive and rob more times. Masahira Imamura uses meticulous and extremely calm techniques to record Makizuyan's criminal process, but completely refuses to explain his criminal psychology.

Kei Kumai, "Japan's Black Summer"

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

Source: "Matsumoto Sarin Gas Incident"

A terrorist attack in Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture, Japan. From dusk on 27 June 1994 to early morning on 28 June 1994, nine assailants spread sarin gas on residential streets in Fukashi District, killing seven people and injuring 660 others.

The attack was carried out by an emerging religious group called Aum Shinrikyo. From 1994 to 1995, Aum Shinrikyo under the direction of the original leader Akira Asahara, planned and created a number of sarin gas incidents.

According to the testimony of the Tokyo District Court synthesizing the testimony of nine defendants who spread sarin on that day, before the Matsumoto Sarin incident, the order of Aum Shinrikyo in Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture was asked by the owners to reclaim the land, and the two sides filed a lawsuit. The leader of the original religion, Akihō Asahara, knowing that the chances of winning the case were not high, instructed the believers to poison the judges of the Matsumoto Branch of the Nagano District Court and the residents around the regimental headquarters and spread poison gas in Matsumoto City. Shoko Asahara has always denied anything to do with the incident.

"Unjust Case": The first person to report the incident, Yoshiyuki Kono, was once regarded as the number one suspect by the Japanese police. The suspicion was further exacerbated by the discovery of a large number of pesticides in his residence (later scientific investigation by the police confirmed that these pesticides could not produce sarin). Mass communications and police intelligence leaks have made Kono almost a criminal. Until the sarin gas incident on the Tokyo subway the following year, it was found that the mastermind of both incidents was Aum Shinrikyo. Kono's righteous deeds exonerated. Afterwards, the chairman of the Japanese National Public Security Commission at the time publicly apologized on behalf of the Nagano Prefecture police.

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

Akira Kumai, Imperial Case: Death Row Inmates

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

After 3:00 p.m. on January 26, 1948, a man claiming to be a medical doctor of the Ministry of Health and Welfare, came to a branch of the Imperial Bank in Tokyo, exchanged business cards with the person in charge, and let 16 people present take two cups of preventive drugs in the name of preventing the epidemic, poisoned in an instant, 12 people were killed, the murderer stole 160,000 yen and a cash check, and the Imperial Silver Incident immediately shook the whole of Japan and became the focus of national attention. In April 1987, the 18th retrial request was submitted, and in May, the main offender of the incident, Hirazawa Sadatsu, fell ill with pneumonia and died at the age of 95 at the Hachioji Medical And Punishment Office, and hirazawa was arrested for 39 years and sentenced to death for up to 32 years, which is the longest prison sentence in Japanese history and a rare senior among Japanese prisoners.

Akio Yoshida,"Ghost Family Strange Talk"

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

Source (authenticity does not know how much): taken from the sensational Japanese social news incident, the origin of this social news case is a rare murder that occurred in the Kyoto area 30 years ago, a female high school student disappeared after school, people disappeared out of thin air and could not find the body, this murder case was a sensation in the conservative Kyoto area at that time, but the police also had no clue, the disappearance of the girl became a suspense case, but then the apartment where she originally lived gradually rumors came out: the tenants who moved in did not wait for the new residents to move in before moving out, Arbitrary relocation will inexplicably kill you, at first the locals thought it was just gossip, but strange things really happened one after another...

Immersed in the pain of bereavement, Yamato Chong, with his daughter Aishi, moved into an old apartment that was remote but very cheap from the station, but unexpectedly fell into an unexpected nightmare... The Aishi family has been experiencing strange things since the beginning of the move: the strange figure on the eaves, the mysterious girl in the empty house, the white line in front of the apartment before midnight, the terrible prophecy that they will be ravaged to death by evil spirits, the strange rumors that 13 families will be persecuted by the ghosts because they want to move, and so on... All kinds of strange things, strange things without interruption, constantly happening, this is a cursed horror house, all kinds of evil spirits take turns every night, constantly torturing Aishi, she can neither escape nor hide. She gradually fell into the dark memories of her own heart...

Yuan Ziwen "Cold Tropical Fish"

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

Kuma City, Saitama Prefecture, 1993. Seki and his wife run a dog pet store. After the economic bubbling and bursting, the business was not as good as before, and coupled with the expansion of the breeding site and their own home, the couple owed a high debt. So they began to manipulate the goods, followed by complaints and complaints from customers

The first victim was a member of a waste treatment plant. At that time, eager to develop a new business, he became interested in the dog dealer business under the persuasion of Seki Gengen, so he spent 11 million yen in one go. But then he learned that such a sale would probably cost only hundreds of thousands, and that dogs that were too old to breed were not suitable for breeding. When he discovers that he has been deceived, he immediately asks the Sekine couple to return the cash, and the couple, who are in deep economic crisis, are determined to kill him. April 20, 1993. Guan Genyuan asked the first victim out under the pretext of paying back the money, mixed the capsule containing the poison as a nutrient into the victim's drink, killed him, and threatened a clerk with the safety of his family to help him dispose of the body.

The second murder took place in July of the same year. The leader of the local underworld, Endo, senses that Sekinemoto and his wife are very suspicious, so the two conspire to poison them again, and kill the driver who is traveling with Endo at the same time. A month later, Seki and his wife were again embroiled in a buying and selling dispute, brutally killing a housewife after defrauding her of 2.7 million yen.

In 1995, the two were arrested by the police. During the interrogation, they confessed to the police the method of destruction of the four bodies, which was extremely cruel. The threatened clerk transported the body to a feedlot in Gunma Prefecture, where the couple used kitchen knives to separate the flesh, bones and internal organs of the corpse, then chopped the meat and offal into small pieces and scattered them in a river deep in the mountains, while the bones and the victim's belongings were burned to ashes.

Akiji Fujita, "Three Hundred Million Yen Shocking Robbery", "Yukinari Tsuka", "Three Hundred Million Yen Pole Robber First Love"

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

Perfect Crime: 300 million yen cash truck robbery

Kazuhiko Hasegawa, "The Murderer of Youth"

A collection of Japanese films based on true cases

Source: Based on a real murder case that occurred in 1974 in Ichihara City, Chiba Prefecture.

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