Belladonna

Full title: Kanashimi no Belladonna
- Trailer on YouTube* (see note below)
- Biography of Eiichi Yamamoto (director)
- DVD sold at CDJapan (region 2, no English subtitles)
- Mushi Production DVD movie 3 pack at CDJapan (includes Belladonna, Cleopatra & Arabian Nights - region 2, no subtitles)
The storytelling style of Belladonna is based on medieval European witchcraft legends, focusing on the parallel development of female sexual power and mystical power, and directly based on Jules Michelet's 1864 novel about Joan of Arc, La Sorciere. The treatment is not unlike that Tezuka gave the subject in the Barbara manga, written around the same time, 1973. It is a highly erotic film. Jeanne is raped on her wedding night by the local lord, and is thereafter rejected by her husband – her awakened and unsatisfied libido develops into a devilish power which leads her to develop supernatural abilities and a mystical communion with nature.
The most striking aspect of the film is its unique art style. The images are rendered in extremely beautiful detail in a style based on classic Western tarot illustrations, largely in white with colored lines and highlights, without any hint of the standard animation palette or style. In effect, the film is more like a series of watercolor paintings with moving sections which flow one into another than it is like a simulation of a realistic world. So western is the imagery, that, without the dialogue giving away its native language, a viewer would be more likely to guess that the film is the product of American 1970s experimental animation than a work of Japanese anime.
Tezuka's influence may be seen most clearly in the pivotal scenes of the film, a series of mystical sex scenes which begin with the initial rape and recur throughout the witch's development. These highly erotic sequences are not rendered literally , but as a series of abstract images, sometimes of plants or elements of nature, but more often as simple abstract shapes whose motion and interaction express the emotion and sensuality of sex without depicting any sexual organs. Readers familiar with Tezuka will immediately recognize the sexual abstracts he used in series such as Adolf, Ayako, Swallowing the Earth, Barbara and MW or the short film Memory.
FILM DATA:
Mushi Productions
Director: Eiichi Yamamoto.
Animators: Gisaboru Sugii, Shinichi Tsuji, Yasuo Maeda.
Writers: Eiichi Yamamoto, Yoshiyuki Fukuda.
Original Theatrical Release in 1973 (approximate)