A mysterious cabal of red-garbed magicians have been murdering inhabitants of an unnamed Japanese city. Their latest victim is a woman who is decapitated while the magicians perform a ritual with a voodoo doll. The object of the murders to provide the five geographical points of a giant pentagram, with a high school in the nexus. The magicians' ultimate aim is to summon Lucifer himself. Misa Kuroi, a transfer student at the school, is a witch of considerable power and has come to battle the evil magicians. However, Misa has some difficulty getting classmates to trust her.
Cast
Kimika Yoshino as Misa Kuroi
Miho Kanno as Mizuki Kurohashi
Miho Tamura as Maki Yoshida
Kanori Kadomatsu as Kazzumi Tanaka
Production
, the director of Eko Eko Azarak: Wizard of Darkness, had previously filmed Tale of a Vampire in the United Kingdom. She returned to Japan with the desire to make a film about witchcraft and magic. She recalled the manga seriesEko Eko Azarak from the 1970s, and began adapting it for cinema. The film was shot in two weeks, and featured the cinematic debut of Kimika Yoshino. Yoshino received her script a day before shooting had started and before she had even met the director.
Release
Eko Eko Azarak: Wizard of Darkness was released in Japan on April 8, 1995. It was shown at the Toronto Film Festivalin September 1995. A DVD of the film was released by Tokyo Shock on December 16, 2003. The disc included footage of the films premiere, the trailer, and interviews with the director and Kimika Yoshino.
Reception
Variety gave the film a positive review, referring to it as "high-octane, modestly produced occult thriller is top-notch genre fare", and that "obviously plowing a familiar celluloid field, director/co-writer Sato demonstrates not only a visual flair for the genre, but a wicked sense of humor that deftly counterbalances the per force conventions of this type of story." The film won the Minami Toshiko Award at the 1995 Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival. It was also selected for the official competition for best film at the 1997 Fantasporto.
Aftermath
Shimako Sato returned to the direct the follow-up film Eko Eko Azarak II: Birth of the Wizard.