Director: Shunya Ito
Notable Cast: Meiko
Kaji, Fumio Watanabe, Kayoko Shiraishi, Yukie Kagawa, Yuki Arasa
There is no series of films quite like the Female Prisoner Scorpion films. They are
unique, impactful, and layered to the point pure density. While I reviewed the
first film for our Meiko Kaji celebration earlier this year [check out that
review HERE], Arrow Video has been kind enough to package all four of the
original Female Prisoner Scorpion
films in a new box set for collectors and this vulgar auteur could not be
happier with the results. So it’s with great pleasure that the next three
installments of the series will get official reviews here on the site and
hopefully, in all seriousness, these reviews convince someone to purchase and
experience these films for the first time – or again – so that the legacy of their
artful approach to exploitative cinema can only grow. The films are all worthy
enough that they deserve that much.
This leads me to the focus of this review, the second film
in the series and the widely acclaimed Female
Prisoner Scorpion: Jailhouse 41. In many circles, this is the considered the
best of the series and for legitimate reason. Jailhouse 41 is not only a film that continues on with the themes,
style, and story that the first film established, but it takes each one to the
next level and punches it through with a thoughtful (and forceful) impact that
simply cannot be ignored. This is the kind of film, like its predecessor, that
nimbly elevates itself to a high art level of creative cinematic purpose where
the exploitative elements on its surface only help to craft a foundation for the
art to exist on. This is a film that entertains ultimately with its prisoners
on the run plotting, but it leaves such a resonating message and feeling that
it lasts well beyond its time frame and might even be just as relevant now as
it was in 1972.