Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl explained

Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl
Director:Yoshihiro Nishimura
Naoyuki Tomomatsu
Producer:Masatsugu Asahi
Screenplay:Yoshihiro Nishimura
Starring:Yukie Kawamura
Eri Otoguro
Takumi Saito
Music:Kou Nakagawa
Cinematography:Shu G. Momose
Distributor:Excellent Film
Eleven Arts
Runtime:85 minutes
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese

is a 2009 Japanese gore film.[1] It was directed by Yoshihiro Nishimura and Naoyuki Tomomatsu and premiered at the New York Asian Film Festival in June 2009.[2] It is based on a manga of the same name by Shungiku Uchida.[3]

Plot

In a typical Tokyo high school, a perpetually teenage vampire named Monami (played by Yukie Kawamura) falls for her male classmate, Mizushima (played by Takumi Saito); however, despite him reciprocating her feelings, the young man is already (reluctantly) dating a girl named Keiko (played by Eri Otoguro) who's both the leader of a Sweet Lolita gang and the vice principal/science professor's daughter.

The ensuing love triangle soon leads Keiko to seek the assistance of her father who, unbeknownst to his daughter, moonlights as a Kabuki-clad mad scientist with the school nurse as his assistant. The pair experiment on students in the school basement, hoping to discover the secret of reanimating corpses in a matter akin to the work of the fictional mad scientist, Victor Frankenstein.

Their hopes are soon answered when they discover a solution of Monami's blood holds the properties to bring life to dead body parts and inanimate objects.

The story begins to unfold after Mizushima carelessly accepts a honmei choco spiked with Monami's blood, turning him into a half vampire. When Keiko discovers their secret, she attacks Monami but accidentally throws herself off the school roof in the process. Her premature death leads to her father using the blood solution to transform her into a vicious Frankenstein's monster determined to get revenge against Monami.

From then on, Monami and Keiko battle each other in the pursuit of winning Mizushima's heart, regardless of his feelings towards either of them. Monami ultimately kills her archrival by ripping the flesh off the latter's body using droplets of her own blood to form spikes and impaling her skeletal corpse on top of Tokyo Tower.

At the end, Keiko's father turns himself in a Franken Advanced Composite Life Form with use of Monami's blood, and it is revealed that Igor was turned into a vampire by Monami a hundred years ago, and that Mizushima is only one in a long succession of boyfriends.

Subculture references

The film parodies subcultures prevalent in Japan, including ganguro and Lolita. Wrist cutting is a theme that returns from Nishimura's 2008 film, Tokyo Gore Police.[4]

Release

In the United States, the film was released on 26 June 2009 from American Film Market.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hollywood Reporter - Entertainment News. The Hollywood Reporter. 16 July 2018.
  2. Web site: Vampire Girl Vs. Frankenstein Girl's Wrist-Cutting Rally Is Deeply Disturbing. Io9.com. June 9, 2009.
  3. Web site: 吸血少女対少女フランケンのブログ. Ameblo.jp. 16 July 2018.
  4. http://www.ponycanyon.co.jp/Kyuketsu-syojyo/
  5. Web site: Vampire Themed Films Saturate AFM - Dread Central. Dreadcentral.com. 8 November 2009 . 16 July 2018.