The Secret of the Telegian
The Secret of the Telegian | |
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Theatrical poster for Densō Ningen (1960) | |
Directed by | Jun Fukuda |
Produced by | Tomoyuki Tanaka |
Written by | Shinichi Sekizawa |
Starring |
Koji Tsuruta Akihiko Hirata Yoshio Tsuchiya Tadao Nakamaru Yumi Shirakawa Seizaburô Kawazu Sachio Sakai Yoshifumi Tajima |
Music by | Sei Ikeno |
Cinematography | Kazuo Yamada |
Edited by | Kazuji Taira |
Distributed by |
Toho Herts-Lion International Corp. |
Release dates | April 10, 1960 |
Running time | 85 min. |
Country | Japan |
Language |
Japanese English |
The Secret of the Telegian, released in Japan as Densō Ningen (電送人間, lit. "The Teleporting Man"), is a 1960 tokusatsu sci-fi/horror/mystery film. Produced by Toho Company, Ltd., the film was directed by Jun Fukuda (this was his first tokusatsu work), and written by Shinichi Sekizawa, with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya and some scenes by Teruyoshi Nakano. Herts-Lion International Corp. acquired the western hemisphere rights to the film in January 1964 and planned to release it theatrically in the US in February of that year on a double bill with Dungeons of Horror. This proposed US theatrical release was aborted, and the film was subsequently syndicated to TV. Besides being in black and white, the TV prints were identical to Toho's uncut international English version, dubbing and all.[1]
Plot
At an amusement park 'Cave of Horrors' spook show, a man is stabbed to death with a knife. Left behind at the crime scene are a gold-plated name tag, a note from an unknown source asking the victim to meet him there and a piece of Cryotron transistor wire.
Reporter Kirioka (Koji Tsuruta), who has a background in science, Detective Kobayashi (Akihiko Hirata), a childhood friend of the reporter, and a slew of other police officers led by Captain Onosaki (Yoshio Tsuchyia) begin investigating... and end up involved with an even stranger case than they could have ever imagined. Clues lead them to the Military-Land Cabaret, a nightclub that serves drinks like "Hand Grenades" and "Missiles," has waitresses dressed in cute little sailor uniforms and a gold-painted dancer as the evening's entertainment. The club is owned by a man named Onishi (Seizaburo Kawazu), who is rumored to run an illegal narcotics smuggling ring out of his establishment and has a few dark secrets in his closet. Something that went down fourteen years earlier right as Japan was about ready to surrender to Allied Forces during WWII that's about to come back to haunt both him and the others who were involved.
As it turns out, Onishi , along with the man found dead at the funhouse (a former sergeant) and two others; former intelligence agent Takashi and Construction Corp. foreman Taki (Sachio Sakai), were all military men 14 years earlier. They had been assigned to help protect scientist / electrical engineer Dr. Kajuro Nikki's (Takamaru Sasaki) top secret experiments in creating electronic weaponry. Instead, the men decided to throw out the doctor's experiment and fill the crates with stolen gold bars. The only opposition they faced was from Lance Corporal Tsudo (Tadao Nakamaru), who insisted the gold belonged to the people of his country. Onishi and the others stabbed Tsudo, shot Dr. Nikki and barely made it out of the cave before it's blown up with dynamite. They returned there a year later, only to discover that both men's corpses and the gold were missing.
Both Tsudo (now using the alias Goro Nakamoto) and Nikki (confined to a wheelchair and missing both legs) live quietly in seclusion on a remote farm... located near an active volcano! Over the years, Nikki has perfected a transportation device capable of moving matter from one place to another in a matter of seconds. Unbeknownst to the good doctor, a (rightfully) bitter and vengeful Tsudo is secretly using his contraption to leap back and forth from his desired locations to get revenge on Onishi and the others; easily alluding the police in the process. Tsudo sends the gold dog tags as sort of a death sentence, sends audio tapes or notes to each of the men informing them when he plans on killing them and stabs each with a bayonet.
They trace Tsudo to a desolate farm, but can prove nothing. The police find Nikki there, and his machines, but still no proof. Tsudo disappears. Meanwhile, one of the gangsters, Taki, is killed while in police protection. The gangster leader, Onishi, hides in a remote coastal village, but Sudo somehow knew he would and has a transmitter machine delivered there. Tsudo appears and stabs Onishi with a bayonet.
The police give chase. Tsudo makes it to his hidden transmitter and starts the process. However, back at the ranch, a nearby volcano erupts. The tremors damage the house, shutting down the receiver. Tsudo dissolves amid moans of agony into oblivion.
Cast
- Koji Tsuruta - Masaru Kirioka (Journalist)
- Akihiko Hirata - Kobayashi (Inspector)
- Yumi Shirakawa - Akiko Nakajou
- Tadao Nakamaru - Corporal Sudo/“Densou-Ningen”/Goro Nakamoto
- Seizaburou Kawazu - Oonishi (President of Kainan)
- Yoshifumi Tajima - Ryuu-Syougen (Owner of cabaret Dai-hon-ei)
- Sachio Sakai - Taki (President of building company)
- Yoshio Tsuchiya - Okazaki (Detective chief investigation)
- Fuyuki Murakami - Dr. Miura
- Takamaru Sasaki - Dr. Niki
- Jun'ichirou Mukai - Director at Metropolitan Police Department
- Shin Ootomo - Tsukamoto
- Shirou Tsuchiya - Director of Tamagawa-En
- Ikio Sawamura - Attraction man of Chiller House
- kiyoshi kodama - Man Visitor of Chiller House
- Sachiyuki Uemura - Man Visitor of Chiller House
- Jirou Kumagai - Man visitor of Chiller House
- Yoshie Kidaira - Woman visitor of Chiller House
- Akira Sera - Genzou (Villager)
- Senkichi Oomura - Otokichi (Villager)
- Yutaka Nakayama - Oono (Employee of Dai-hon-ei)
- Toshio Miura - Waiter of Dai-hon-ei
- Yasuhiko Saijou - Waiter of Dai-hon-ei
- Kenzou Echigo - Driver of Jeep
- Toshiko Higuchi - Yumiko (Hostess of Dai-hon-ei)
- Rumi Konishi - Tomiko (Hostess of Dai-hon-ei)
- Akemi Ueno - Hostess of Dai-hon-ei
- Eisei Amamoto - Employee of trading company Kainan
- Syouichi Hirose - Employee of trading company Kainan
- Nadao Kirino - Employee of trading company Kainan
References
- ↑ January 6, 1964. Boxoffice Magazine. Pg. 13
- Ragone, August (2007, 2014) Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-0-8118-6078-9.
External links
- "電送人間 (Densô Ningen)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
- The Secret of the Telegian at the Internet Movie Database
- The Secret of the Telegian at AllMovie
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