Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - What are the movies about Japan's three great evil spirits

What are the movies about Japan's three great evil spirits

The Three Great Evil Demons of Japan are the Sakutani Kid, the nine-tailed fox Tamamochi, and the Great Tengu, the incarnation of Emperor Shundei, and are known as the three strongest and most evil demons in Japan.

Movies about the three greatest demons in Japan:

Dragon 3 Tides of the Black Moon, Rainy Moon, Hyakki no Yakko Copy, Summer Sunshine, Guardian Catwoman Himaju, Journey to Find a Former Life, Slider's Sun, Ojakusatsuko, Musha Ojakuso, Musha no Ojakusatsu 2, Orient Project

Collecting Demon Boys, The Undertaker's Tale (a Journey to Find a Journey to a Past Life" prequel), "Ten Ghosts' Trips", "Seconds! Extinct Yin-Yang Master" (lower part) "Harumi Night Dancing Sakura", "Hyakki no Yuuji - Born Like a Summer Flower", "Hyakki no Yuuji - Wind Flower Wonderland", and "Mistakenly Falling Sakura"

"Heian Jing's Story of the Yin-Yang Masters", "Heian Jing's Thousand Years Story", "Heian Jing's Millennium Dream Story", "Heian Jing's Twin Beauties Story", and "Heian Jing's Story of the Red Tears".

Expanded Information:

1, Sakutani Children

Also known as Sakutani Children or Sakutani Children, it is one of the major demons active in the Heian Period, and was once the king of the Hundred Ghosts in charge of all demons. The term "child" was originally used to refer to a young man who served in a temple, but out of reverence for the gods and spirits, people also referred to the family members of the gods as children; according to the novel Gokakusa-ko, Sakutsuko was originally a young man who served in Echigo Sawarayama Temple.

The Sakuton Kid was an extremely strong man, six meters long, with a tiger's back and waist, a blood-drinker, with a blood-red face, short, scraggly hair on top of a nearly bald head, five horns and a claimed fifteen eyes, and a plaid tunic with a beast's skin tied around his waist.

Of course, this is his evil form, but he is also considered one of the most handsome and handsome demons, as he often transforms into a handsome young man when he's out in the world.

2, the nine-tailed fox Tamao Qian

Nine-tailed fox recorded in the Classic of the Mountains and the Sea, Nanshan scripture and other ancient Chinese books: "and three hundred miles east, said the mountains of Qingqiu,.... There is a beast, its shape like a fox and nine-tailed, its voice like a baby, can eat people, eaters do not compulsion. The full name of the golden hair and jade face nine-tailed fox, is specializing in the illusion of absolute beauty of the demon, in King Zhou of the Shang Dynasty incarnated into Daji.

After the fall of the Shang Dynasty, it moved to Japan, where it is said to have been forced by Jiang Ziya (refer to the Romance of the Seal of the Gods) to call itself "Tamamochi" to gain the favor and trust of Emperor Toba. Later, the Emperor fell ill and became bedridden; the ministers became suspicious of her and asked Abe Haruaki to secretly perform a divination on her.

As a result, the true nature of "Tamamochi" was finally revealed, which turned out to be a nine-tailed demon fox from China (some people said it was Daji), so she fled the capital and hid in a faraway place.

3. The Great Tengu

Tengu is a creature of Japanese legend. The Tengu is also recorded in the Chinese Shanhaijing and described as a fox-like creature.

But nowadays in Japan, it is generally believed that the Tengu has a tall red nose, carries a fan, is tall and winged, wears the armor of the military generals of the past, has a katana at his waist, wears traditional Japanese clogs, carries a straw raincoat in order to hide himself at all times, and has a proud and imperturbable posture.

Baidu Encyclopedia - Japanese Monsters