Movie · 1965 · Horror, Fantasy, Drama · 3h 3m · PG-13 · Japanese
Curator score: 9.3/10 (23K ratings)
In the tradition of "RASHOMON" and "GATE OF HELL."
Overview
Taking its title from an archaic Japanese word meaning "ghost story," this anthology adapts four folk tales. A penniless samurai marries for money with tragic results. A man stranded in a blizzard is saved by Yuki the Snow Maiden, but his rescue comes at a cost. Blind musician Hoichi is forced to perform for an audience of ghosts. An author relates the story of a samurai who sees another warrior's reflection in his teacup.
A landmark of stylized ghost-story cinema: eerie, painterly, and more like a moving folktale than a conventional horror film. Its anthology structure is uneven for some viewers, but the visual design, soundscape, and mournful atmosphere make it essential for fans of art-horror and Japanese folklore.
Best for
art-house horror fans
viewers who like slow, atmospheric ghost stories
fans of Japanese folklore and classical period drama
cinéphiles interested in bold production design and color
people open to anthology films with a literary, fable-like feel
Skip if
you want fast pacing or constant scares
you dislike anthology films with uneven segments
you prefer modern horror realism over stylized theatricality
you need a tightly plotted, character-driven narrative
Overview
Kwaidan is one of the great examples of horror as pure visual composition. Masaki Kobayashi turns four old ghost tales into something closer to a waking dream, using painted backdrops, saturated color, and meticulous blocking to make every frame feel ceremonial and haunted. The result is less about jump scares than about being slowly enveloped by dread, beauty, and melancholy.
Worth noting
What lingers most is the film’s sense that the past is not dead, only waiting. Each story explores a different form of human weakness—greed, desire, vanity, duty, or fear—and each ends with the feeling of a moral fable delivered by spirits. The anthology format creates some variation in strength, but even the weaker passages are carried by the film’s extraordinary atmosphere and sound design.
Bottom line
For viewers who respond to cinema as an immersive art object, Kwaidan is indispensable. It’s spooky, yes, but also elegiac and almost operatic in its restraint. This is a ghost movie that feels ancient and modern at once, and its images tend to stay with you long after the credits.
Top Letterboxd reviews
laird (5★) · 1694 likes
Takes the experiences of watching a play, reading a book of folk tales, viewing a painting, listening to avant garde music, and having a dream and turns them into a movie. A stylized theatrical back drop, a lighting change, a slightly off-kilter motion, a slightly off-sync cue in Toru Takemitsu's otherworldly soundtrack and suddenly you're transported into the dream. Timeless, but maybe 1960s Japan would have special attraction to moral lessons like: "next time stay at home" or "keep your… more Takes the experiences of watching a play, reading a book of folk tales, viewing a painting, listening to avant garde music, and having a dream and turns them into a movie. A stylized theatrical back drop, a lighting change, a slightly off-kilter motion, a slightly off-sync cue in Toru Takemitsu's otherworldly soundtrack and suddenly you're transported into the dream. Timeless, but maybe 1960s Japan would have special attraction to moral lessons like: "next time stay at home" or "keep your… more
Josh Lewis (5★) · 1070 likes
Scary stories to tell in lush unreality.
matt lynch (5★) · 672 likes
the past is jealous.
SilentDawn (4.5★) · 547 likes
88/100
As a collection of spooky, transfixing stories fabricated through heightened artificiality and blooming colors, Kwaidan slams the viewer into a mesmerizing trance. It's a beautiful mix of apparitions, surreal visions, and stories birthed from the past, and while the stories vary in quality (1st two - stunning, 2nd two - merely good), by the film's startling, dissonant conclusion, it doesn't really matter. This is a masterful movie.
Matt! (4.5★) · 465 likes
(Generally ominous noises)
……
…*TWANG*…
……
…*screeeeeech*………
Japanese folklore really knows how to transfix you in its ambience, doesn’t it? An anthology consisting of four hauntingly dream-like ghost stories, all of which originate from tales told over a century ago (and compiled by a Greek dude?), Kwaidan is a mesmerizing exercise in the power of the surreal. Though the last of the four stories is easily the weakest, all serve as timeless fables encapsulated in trance-inducing images and sounds,… more