Toire no Hanako-san (film)

Toire no Hanako-san (Japanese: トイレのはなこさん) (English: Hanako-san of the Toilet), also known as School Mystery or Phantom of the Toilet,[1][2] is a 1995 Japanese horror film directed by Jōji Matsuoka. Based on the Japanese urban legend of Hanako-san, the spirit of a young girl who haunts school bathrooms, the film stars Takayuki Inoue, Ai Maeda, Yuka Kōno, Etsushi Toyokawa, and Nene Ohtsuka.

Hanako-san of the Toilet
Promotional release poster
Japaneseトイレのはなこさん
HepburnToire no Hanako-san
Directed byJōji Matsuoka
Produced byHaruo Umekawa
Written byTakuro Fukuda
Jōji Matsuoka
StarringTakayuki Inoue
Ai Maeda
Yuka Kōno
Etsushi Toyokawa
Nene Ohtsuka
Distributed byShochiku
Release date
  • July 1, 1995 (1995-07-01)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot

On her first day at a new school, a young transfer student named Saeko Mizuno is seen leaving the last stall in the girls' bathroom. Students at the school believe that a young girl named Hanako-san committed suicide in that stall, and that her spirit remains there. Since the students who believe in the Hanako-san legend avoid using that stall, rumors begin to spread that Mizuno is actually Hanako-san herself. Many of the students also believe that Hanako-san is responsible for a series of child homicides which have been occurring in the area around the school, and so they assume that Mizuno has come to their school in search of victims. The real murderer decapitates the school goat one day, which raises further suspicions against Mizuno, since she was the one appointed to feed the animal that day.

Wanting to see if Mizuno truly is Hanako-san, Mizuno's classmates decide to lock her in the last stall in the girls' bathroom over night, surmising that, if she is still there in the morning, she must not be Hanako-san. Unbeknownst to Mizuno's classmates, the child killer is lurking around the school, and he eventually confronts Mizuno and one of her friends. The real Hanako-san appears, and is revealed to be a benevolent spirit. She summons a mob of students to the school, and they surround the killer, preventing him from escaping until the police and other adults arrive.

Cast

Critical reception

In his book Flowers from Hell: The Modern Japanese Horror Film, author Jim Harper writes: "Although it's difficult to imagine American or European parents allowing their offspring to watch a film in which young children are terrorized by a serial killer, Toire no Hanako-san is easily the best of the Japanese horror movies aimed at pre-teen audiences."[3]

gollark: Pascal's Wager might work if the only options are "no god" or "one god, and it's the one you believe in, and they'll reward you if you believe and punish you otherwise".
gollark: Also, I should be specific, "a god and associated religious claims", not just "a god".
gollark: Pascal's Wager is really stupid.
gollark: > I’d rather just have faith and get on with my lifeThis seems like a bizarre attitude, since if you... don't actually have evidence for a god at all... it's really weird for that belief to affect your decisions.
gollark: I'm not sure what you would call them, since "antitheist" is taken for "against belief in god".

References

  1. Jacoby & Richie 2008, p. 2002.
  2. Harper 2009, p. 19.
  3. Harper 2009, p. 20.

Sources

  • Harper, Jim (2009). Flowers from Hell: The Modern Japanese Horror Film. Noir Publishing. ISBN 978-0953656479.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Jacoby, Alexander; Richie, Donald (foreword) (2008). A Critical Handbook of Japanese Film Directors: From the Silent Era to the Present Day. Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 978-1933330532.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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