- A mountain man captures a beautiful, but a manipulative city woman and goes to excessive lengths to please her every whim.
- "When cherry trees blossom, people have parties. They sit under the trees with food and beverages. 'Oh, how beautiful.' That's all nonsense...before that the trees were feared." In Under the Blossoming Cherry Trees, we are treated to one of Masahiro Shinoda's most terrifyingly beautiful works. Based on a shorty story by Ango Sakaguchi, the film tells the tale of a poor Mountain Man who kills his seven wives (six to be precise; he leaves one alive to be a servant) to please an alluring woman he has captured. As the film progresses, the Mountain Man goes to unimaginable lengths to please his New Wife, who is never satisfied. Directed by Masahiro Shinoda, based onthe novel by Ango Sakaguchi.
- A brutal mountain man is a footpad on the road, killing his victims to robber their possessions. When he stumbles upon a beautiful woman from the city, he kills her husband and servant and brings her to his house on the mountain to be his wife. When the woman sees his other wives, he asks him to kill all of them except a crippled one to be her servant. The man tries to please his new wife, but she is never satisfied. She asks him to go to the city and then she decides to collect heads of people. Her husband begins a crime spree and is know as "The Cutthroat". Some time later, he decides to return to his mountain house and his wife says that she will go with him. He decides to take a different way under the blossoming cherry tree where something happens.—Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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By what name was Under the Blossoming Cherry Trees (1975) officially released in India in English?
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