Sunday, August 17, 2025

Female Prisoner Scorpion: Jailhouse 41 (1972)

With the smashing box-office success of Female Prisoner #701: Scorpion (alias Joshū Nana-maru-ichi Gō / Sasori, 1972), audiences were clamoring for more and a once reluctant Toei Studios essentially tripped over themselves to oblige, reuniting director Shunya Itō and star Meiko Kaji for Female Prisoner Scorpion: Jailhouse 41 (alias, Joshū Sasori – Dai 41 Zakkyobō 1972), which hit theaters a mere four months after the premiere of its predecessor.

The sequel picks up a year after the bloody conclusion of the first film, with Matsu (Kaji) back in prison. Now, Matsu has spent that entire year trussed up in the deepest, darkest, and dankest recesses of the prison in solitary confinement. 

And she probably would’ve remained there until she rotted away but her old pal and resident sadist, Warden Goda (Watanabe), has decided to let her out to see the sun one last time before he transfers out via a promotion. (I just love how these two are the constant banes of each other’s existence.)

This does not go well at all. And so, with his promotion derailed, Goda orders a Sisyphean group punishment for all prisoners at a local rock quarry, where he has a skeevy surprise planned for our protagonist as well, to make her an even more abject lesson to the other convicts.

However, and sticking with the theme, this plan also backfires when Matsu and six other prisoners engineer an escape and spend the rest of the film on the run, with Goda and his goons and their own past sins hot on their heels. Again, this does not end well.

Now, I had heard good things about this series but, great googly-moogily, two films in and this is patently ridiculous how great these Female Prisoner Scorpion films have been.

I talked about the international influences of Itô on the first film but we can add traditional Japanese theater, Masaki Kobayashi’s Kwaidan (1964), and I swear to god, the musicals of Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly as several phantasmagorical dream sequences just scream, “Man, this really reminds me of the 'Gotta Dance!' sequence from Singing in the Rain (1960)."

But those explosions of color are rare this go ‘round, with a more subdued palette as this one kinda sorta comes off as a ghost story. The scenes where the fugitives hide in the ruins of a village, abandoned due to an apparent volcanic eruption, providing a surreal moonscape, are hypnotic -- though the bit with the stray dog was a tad disturbing.

As are later scenes with the discovery of a body in a river and the waterfall suddenly disgorging a torrent of blood; or where our heroine gets lost in a mountain range landfill that quietly tells you all you need to know about what the director is trying to say. (There’s also an early scene where he shows the passage of time by showing Matsu grind a spoon into a shiv using only her teeth.)

Thus, no matter how many influences you cite, Itô combines them all into one unique, demented, and brain-boggling experience.

Meiko also delivers again, too, as our silent assassin; though I think she only says three words during the whole movie. Never fear, Kayoko Shiraishi says plenty as fellow prisoner Oba, in a performance for the ages in this primal scream and raised middle finger at the entrenched corruption of the powers that be in post-war Japan and its oppressive patriarchal system.

A primal scream that once again had audiences clamoring for yet another sequel. Again, Toei didn’t hesitate and Female Prisoner Scorpion: Beast Stable (1973) was soon in production. Stay tuned!

Originally posted on on July 31, 2016, at Micro-Brewed Reviews.

Female Prisoner Scorpion: Jailhouse 41 (1972) Toei Company / P: Kineo Yoshimine / D: Shun'ya Itô / W: Shun'ya Itô, Fumio Kônami, Hirô Matsuda, Tooru Shinohara (manga) / C: Masao Shimizu / E: Osamu Tanaka / M: Shunsuke Kikuchi / S: Meiko Kaji, Fumio Watanabe, Yukie Kagawa, Kayoko Shiraishi, Eiko Yanami, Hiroko Isayama

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