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  • The Snow Woman (1968) “Let it Snow, Let it Snow, Please Let it End.”

The Snow Woman (1968) “Let it Snow, Let it Snow, Please Let it End.”

Posted on August 3, 2025 By admin No Comments on The Snow Woman (1968) “Let it Snow, Let it Snow, Please Let it End.”
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Ah, The Snow Woman. A cinematic snowdrift of moody lighting, icy vengeance, and feudal-era woodcarving that moves at the breakneck pace of… well, permafrost melting. Directed by Tokuzō Tanaka and loosely adapted from Lafcadio Hearn’s haunting tale, this film promises spectral elegance and delivers two hours of snowfall, solemnity, and awkward Buddhist statue drama so slow it might spiritually qualify as a meditation retreat.

This is not so much a horror movie as it is a seasonal affective disorder with subtitles.

Plot: Frozen Stiff

The story begins in classic Japanese ghost fashion: two sculptors, one elderly, one conveniently young and hot, stumble into an abandoned hut during a snowstorm. While the old man is freezer-burned to death by a ghostly snow sorceress in white lipstick, the younger one, Yosaku, is spared. The catch? He must never speak of it. Because nothing builds tension like ominous NDAs from supernatural ice queens.

Flash-forward, Yosaku is now carving a statue of Kannon, the goddess of mercy, which is ironic because absolutely no one in this movie is granted mercy—not the characters, and certainly not the audience.

Enter Yuki (guess what her name means), who arrives in a downpour and starts acting like Florence Nightingale if she were one twinge away from a full-blown weather apocalypse. She marries Yosaku, becomes a mother, heals sick kids with snowstorms, and occasionally explodes into blizzards when men try to get handsy. So basically Elsa from Frozen, if she were a 300-year-old assassin ghost with unresolved statue-related trauma.


Characters: Frostbitten and Forgettable

Let’s start with Yosaku, who is best described as “man-shaped tofu with a chisel.” His emotional range falls somewhere between a wooden plank and an actual Buddha statue. He spends most of the movie carving, pining, or blinking slowly at emotionally significant moments.

Yuki, meanwhile, is played by Shiho Fujimura with a kind of frozen serenity that might be captivating if it didn’t also suggest she was hypnotized into appearing in this movie. Her performance walks the fine line between ethereal mystery and visible boredom. Honestly, the real star here is the wind machine, which delivers more dramatic tension than any living actor in the cast.

Then there’s Lord Jito, the feudal jerk with a wig that looks like it was stolen from a deranged poodle. He exists purely to be detestable, so naturally he tries to assault Yuki and ends up flash-frozen like a bag of peas. Justice is served with a side of icicles.


Atmosphere: Snowbound and Sleepy

To be fair, the film is beautifully shot. Cinematographer Masayuki Kato leans hard into the poetic melancholy: every scene is glazed in powdery snow or bathed in flickering torchlight. But while it’s visually pretty, so is a snow globe—and you wouldn’t want to spend two hours trapped inside one with Buddhist chanting and statue competitions.

The pacing is glacial. I’m not using that as a metaphor. It’s literally glacial. Entire subplots are dedicated to tree transport logistics, statue face-carving inspiration, and a five-minute sequence in which someone just… walks quietly through snow. It’s a film that moves so slowly, it might qualify as anti-cinema performance art.


Scares? More Like Cold Shoulder

Remember, this is technically a horror film. But unless you’re deathly afraid of emotional restraint or the thought of whittling for eternity, there’s not much here to spook you. Yuki’s transformation into the Snow Woman involves a light breeze, a blank stare, and some dramatic music that sounds like a tea kettle boiling in slow motion.

Even the big moments—like Yuki freezing Lord Jito or confronting her husband about their snowy origin story—are handled with the excitement of a Zen garden being quietly raked.

The shamaness, who tries to out-Yuki Yuki, appears periodically to hiss, boil water, and try to toss it at the snow ghost like she’s cooking haunted ramen. These scenes should be terrifying. Instead, they play like minor skirmishes in a ghostly game of water polo.


Themes: Cold Hearts and Warmer Statues

The Snow Woman wants to be about love, sacrifice, and the tension between spiritual duty and human emotion. It couldhave been haunting. Instead, it’s like being slowly lectured by a ghost who only half remembers the story she’s telling.

The final twist—that Yuki is the ghost from the hut, that she spared Yosaku out of love, and that now she must leave for revealing herself—is handled with all the urgency of a weather report. “A cold front is moving in… and so am I. Goodbye forever. Bundle up.”


Final Thoughts: Frostbitten but Not Chilling

The Snow Woman had the potential to be a haunting tale of regret, vengeance, and unearthly beauty. Instead, it’s like watching an emotional drama being acted out by very polite snowmen. It’s not scary. It’s not thrilling. It’s quiet, ponderous, and emotionally distant—like being ghosted by a kabuki performer in real time.

If you enjoy watching people slowly remember things they were explicitly told not to remember, then carving a statue, then staring meaningfully into middle distance while snow falls… have I got a movie for you.


Final Rating: 1.5 out of 5 Frozen Lovers

As a horror film, it’s frostbitten. As a love story, it’s chilly. As entertainment, it’s a gentle avalanche of meh.

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