If just the thought of the larval form of the order or Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths) make you a bit queasy, then you might want to skip this 2010 Japanese film now available on Netflix. Directed by Joji Wakamatsu the movie is based on Edogawa Rampo's 1929 anti-war oddly erotic short story "The Catepillar" (芋虫 Imomushi).
Not everyone was gungho and ready to rape and pillage in order to have Asia for the Asians as if Asian imperialism in Asia was better than European (or American) imperialism there. That's a bit of delusion equal to the white man's burden.
Edogawa Rampo is the nom de plume of Tarō Hirai (平井 太郎 1894-1965). Rampo was a great admirer of Edgar Allen Poe hence the name. This tale, like many others written by him, is characterized by eroticism, grotesquerie and the nonsensical. This particular story was censored in 1939 which was two yars after the beginning of the second Sino-Japanese War. Censors were perhaps troubled that the storyline would detract from the war effort.
"Caterpillar" is not a bug, but a human who is reduced to nothing more than a human larva. Without arms or legs, deaf and mute with a face that is horribly scarred, he cannot communicate, he cannot eat, bathe or dress himself. He, Lt. Kurokawa (Keigo Kasuya) was not a good man during the war, having committed rape and murder and these memories come back to haunt him. Yet he still wants sex and his wife (Shinobu Terajima), though repelled by his form and greedy lust, feels duty bound to service him.
Yet eventually Kurokawa finds sex with his wife reminds him of his war crimes and he begins to find his current situation unbearable. Love of country and patriotism become empty words for both Kurokawa and his wife.
The late Wakamatsu is perhaps best known for producing Nagisa Oshima's "In the Realm of the Senses" and this movie is in keeping with his pink film legacy. Wakamatsu died in October of 2012 and "Caterpillar" is his penultimate film.
"Caterpillar" is an uncomfortable mix of erotic scenes of the attractive naked Terajima and the frightful flashbacks of the war and Kurokawa's currently pitiful state. "Caterpillar" is not a pro-war movie but it also isn't quite erotica. "Caterpillar" can be streamed on Netflix.
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