Angel of Darkness (anime)

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Angel of Darkness (anime)
Cover of the Japanese DVD release of the first episode of Angel of Darkness
淫獣教師
(Injū Kyōshi)
GenreHentai, Horror
Original video animation
Directed byKanenari Tokiwa
StudioPink Pineapple
Licensed by
Released1994
Runtime180 minutes (total)
Episodes4
Live-action video
StudioCritical Mass (expired)
Adult Source Media
Released2006 (2006)
Runtime450 minutes (total)

Angel of Darkness (Japanese: 淫獣教師, Hepburn: Injū Kyōshi) is a four-part hentai anime series released in 1994 by Pink Pineapple in Japan. The series focuses on tentacle rape and S&M. It was adapted into a live-action series.[1] The animated series was released in North America by ADV Films under their SoftCel Pictures label. The genre is situated between sci-fi horror and the slasher film.[2]

Plot[edit]

During a rainy night in a thunderstorm, Professor Goda is digging under a large tree in the schoolyard of Siren Academy, a prestigious boarding school for girls. He breaks through a mysterious stone tablet and is attacked by a large tentacled monster and is suddenly infected. Later, students are attending the opening ceremony of the new school semester. After the ceremony ends, a group of five girls discover a goblin-looking creature in the background of one of their photos after getting the picture taken; they decide to throw away the picture due to its frightening appearance.

The scene then shifts to an underground basement in the school's church, where Professor Goda and The Director are raping a freshman student who is tied up and gagged. The Director is wearing black S&M bondage gear, while Goda is naked. Goda comments that he needs the extracts of younger women in order to provide food for an organism that he just discovered. The Director appears to be enjoying watching the torture and involves herself in the process by whipping the freshman with her riding crop until the freshman faints from shock.

The scene cuts to the dormitory where Sayaka and Atsuko are currently engaging in heavy fondling and passionate kissing in their dorm room, developing into a full sex scene until they are interrupted by a group of fellow students knocking at the door asking them to come to dinner. All the girls appear to be listless and uninterested in anything, including Atsuko's "impressions".

Yuko manages to wake them through her violin playing, but it is clear there is still something wrong. Professor Goda is in the church listening to the music when he is suddenly attacked by what appears to be a fairy, later revealed to be named Rom. The show then cuts to a montage of Sayaka and Atsuko's life at their new school where Atsuko proves to be an apt athlete in lacrosse, and is very popular with the other girls in the school to the disapproval of Sayaka, who wants Atsuko all for herself.

Characters[edit]

First story[edit]

Atsuko Yoshikawa (吉川 カガリ, Yoshikawa Atsuko)
Voiced by: Naoko Matsui

Sayaka's lover. The two of them have dated since high school, and are trying to hide their affair from Atsuko's older sister.

Sayaka Matsumoto (松本 才加, Matsumoto Sayaka)
Voiced by: Sonoko Hosoi

Atsuko's lover. The two of them have dated since high school, and are trying to hide their affair from Atsuko's older sister.

Yuko Yoshikawa (吉川 裕子, Yoshikawa Yuko)
Voiced by: Minako Arakawa
Professor Goda (合田-先生, Goda-sensei)
Voiced by: Shinya Ohtaki

Goda is a young science professor at the prestigious Siren Women's Academy who broke a seal on a tree and was attacked and possessed by a tentacle monster.[3]

Siren Director
Voiced by: Yoshino Ohtori
Rom (ロームー, Rōmū)
Voiced by: Takehito Koyasu

Second story[edit]

Haruka Tachibana (橘 はるか, Tachibana Haruka)
Voiced by: Emi Motoi
Reiko Yoshinaga (吉永 レイコ, Yoshinaga Reiko)
Voiced by: Midori Nakazawa
Midori Anzai (アンザイ ミドリ, Anzai Midori)
Voiced by: Miho Yoshida
Professor Shimazaki (島崎-先生, Shimazaki-sensei)
Voiced by: Shinya Ohtaki
Kazuya Matsui (松井 カズヤ, Matsui Kazuya)
Voiced by: Kousuke Okano
Hiromi Takabe (タカベ ヒロミ, Takabe Hiromi)
Voiced by: Tomoko Kawakami
Ryoko Mamiya (マミヤ 涼子, Mamiya Ryoko)
Voiced by: Misa Watanabe
Minako Yamashina (山科 ミナコ, Yamashina Minako)
Voiced by: Naoko Matsui

Production[edit]

Considered soft porn, Angel of Darkness' attempts to merge the magical girl anime formula with the tentacle rape hentai genre. This was done in order to circumvent stringent Japanese censorship laws at the time that did not allow the animation of the pubic region and identifiable genitalia. As such, hentai films began using monsters with phallic tentacles to "rape" women in films.[4]

Media[edit]

Anime[edit]

Angel of Darkness series was licensed by ADV Films and released under their Softcel label. All four episodes were released on VHS and DVD with subtitles only.

Live-action[edit]

Angel of Darkness was adapted into five live-action adult films and were released in English by Critical Mass Video.[5]

Reception[edit]

Patrick Drazen regards Angel of Darkness as being an example of the use of "horror to express sexual anxiety", and as an example of Gothic fiction.[6] Chris Beveridge regards the hentai to be "neither the best nor the worst" that he had seen, but enjoyed the third episode over the last, as it was more plot-oriented.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Beveridge, Chris. "Angel of Darkness Vol. #1". Mania.com. Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  2. ^ Ortega-Brena, Mariana (2009). "Peek-a-boo, I See You: Watching Japanese Hard-core Animation". Sexuality & Culture. 13 (1). New York: Springer New York: 17–31. doi:10.1007/s12119-008-9039-5. ISSN 1095-5143. S2CID 143481005.
  3. ^ Drazen, Patrick (April 2014). Anime Explosion!: The What? Why? And Wow! Of Japanese Animation, Revised and Updated Edition. Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 9781611720136.
  4. ^ Harper, Jim (May 12, 2008). Flowers from Hell. Noir Publishing. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-9536564-7-9.
  5. ^ "AX 2002: TRSI Confirmed list". Anime News Network. 2002-07-06. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-21.
  6. ^ Patrick Drazen, (2003) Anime Explosion pp. 70-71
  7. ^ "Angel of Darkness Vol. #2 - Mania.com". Archived from the original on 2009-04-02. Retrieved 2010-05-21.

External links[edit]