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Farmer selling watermelons: The girls were... eaten. 
Farmer selling watermelons: They were eaten!... Delicious.

Oshare: Fanta, you're fantasizing!

Oshare: The girls will wake up... when they are hungry.

Farmer selling watermelons: Do you like watermelons? 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: No! I like bananas! 
Farmer selling watermelons: Bananas?

Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Ah! Bananas! Bananas everywhere! 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas!

Suîto: You're so cool, Kung Fu. 
Kunfû: I'm sorry, Sweet.

from ‘HOUSE’ (1977) Starring Kimiko Ikegami (A Chaos of Flowers), Miki Jinbo (The Possessed), Mieko Satô, Eriko Tanaka, Masayo Miyako, and Kumiko Ohba (Bashment). Story by Chigumi Obayashi (The Visitor in the Eye). Screenplay by Chiho Katsura (The Deserted City). Directed by Nobuhiko Obayashi (Turning Point).


House (Japanese: ハウス, Hepburn: Hausu) is a 1977 Japanese comedy horror film directed and produced by Nobuhiko Obayashi. The film stars mostly amateur actors with only Kimiko Ikegami and Yōko Minamida having any notable previous acting experience. The film is about a schoolgirl traveling with her six classmates to her ailing aunt's country home, where they come face to face with supernatural events as the girls are, one by one, devoured by the home.

The film company Toho approached Obayashi with the suggestion to make a film like Jaws. Influenced by ideas from his daughter Chigumi, Obayashi developed ideas for a script that was written by Chiho Katsura. After the script was green-lit, the film was put on hold for two years as no director at Toho wanted to direct it. Obayashi promoted the film during this time period until the studio allowed him to direct it himself. The film was a box office hit in Japan but received negative reviews from critics. Housereceived a wide release in 2009 and 2010 in North America, where it received more favorable reviews.

Following the success of the American film Jaws, a proposition came from the  Toho film studio for Nobuhiko Obayashi to develop a similar script. To find inspiration for the story, Obayashi discussed ideas with his pre-teen daughter Chigumi Obayashi. Nobuhiko sought her ideas, believing that adults "only think about things they understand ... everything stays on that boring human level" while "children can come up with things that can't be explained". Several of Chigumi's ideas were included in House such as a reflection in a mirror attacking the viewer, a watermelon being pulled out of a well appearing like a human head, and a house that eats girls. Other themes Chigumi suggested drew upon her own childhood fears. These fears included a pile of futons falling on her that felt like a monster attacking her, a large loud clock at her grandparents home, and getting her fingers caught in between her piano keys. Nobuhiko shared these story ideas with screenwriter Chiho Katsura. These ideas reminded Katsura of a short story by Walter de la Mare about an old woman who is visited by her granddaughters who then puts them in a trunk.

Obayashi incorporated themes of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into the script. Obayashi was born in Hiroshima and lost all his childhood friends from these bombings. Obayashi applied these themes with the plot element of a woman's ghost waiting for her lover's return from World War II. The woman's bitterness about the war turns her into an evil spirit that devours the girls who were unaffected by the bombings. Obayashi and Katsura had worked previously on a script titled Hanagatami before being assigned to House, which made the screenwriting process easy for both of them. Obayashi titled the script House as he felt that a foreign title for a Japanese film would be "taboo”.

Source: Wikipedia
Farmer selling watermelons: The girls were... eaten. 
Farmer selling watermelons: They were eaten!... Delicious.

Oshare: Fanta, you're fantasizing!

Oshare: The girls will wake up... when they are hungry.

Farmer selling watermelons: Do you like watermelons? 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: No! I like bananas! 
Farmer selling watermelons: Bananas?

Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Ah! Bananas! Bananas everywhere! 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas!

Suîto: You're so cool, Kung Fu. 
Kunfû: I'm sorry, Sweet.

from ‘HOUSE’ (1977) Starring Kimiko Ikegami (A Chaos of Flowers), Miki Jinbo (The Possessed), Mieko Satô, Eriko Tanaka, Masayo Miyako, and Kumiko Ohba (Bashment). Story by Chigumi Obayashi (The Visitor in the Eye). Screenplay by Chiho Katsura (The Deserted City). Directed by Nobuhiko Obayashi (Turning Point).


House (Japanese: ハウス, Hepburn: Hausu) is a 1977 Japanese comedy horror film directed and produced by Nobuhiko Obayashi. The film stars mostly amateur actors with only Kimiko Ikegami and Yōko Minamida having any notable previous acting experience. The film is about a schoolgirl traveling with her six classmates to her ailing aunt's country home, where they come face to face with supernatural events as the girls are, one by one, devoured by the home.

The film company Toho approached Obayashi with the suggestion to make a film like Jaws. Influenced by ideas from his daughter Chigumi, Obayashi developed ideas for a script that was written by Chiho Katsura. After the script was green-lit, the film was put on hold for two years as no director at Toho wanted to direct it. Obayashi promoted the film during this time period until the studio allowed him to direct it himself. The film was a box office hit in Japan but received negative reviews from critics. Housereceived a wide release in 2009 and 2010 in North America, where it received more favorable reviews.

Following the success of the American film Jaws, a proposition came from the  Toho film studio for Nobuhiko Obayashi to develop a similar script. To find inspiration for the story, Obayashi discussed ideas with his pre-teen daughter Chigumi Obayashi. Nobuhiko sought her ideas, believing that adults "only think about things they understand ... everything stays on that boring human level" while "children can come up with things that can't be explained". Several of Chigumi's ideas were included in House such as a reflection in a mirror attacking the viewer, a watermelon being pulled out of a well appearing like a human head, and a house that eats girls. Other themes Chigumi suggested drew upon her own childhood fears. These fears included a pile of futons falling on her that felt like a monster attacking her, a large loud clock at her grandparents home, and getting her fingers caught in between her piano keys. Nobuhiko shared these story ideas with screenwriter Chiho Katsura. These ideas reminded Katsura of a short story by Walter de la Mare about an old woman who is visited by her granddaughters who then puts them in a trunk.

Obayashi incorporated themes of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into the script. Obayashi was born in Hiroshima and lost all his childhood friends from these bombings. Obayashi applied these themes with the plot element of a woman's ghost waiting for her lover's return from World War II. The woman's bitterness about the war turns her into an evil spirit that devours the girls who were unaffected by the bombings. Obayashi and Katsura had worked previously on a script titled Hanagatami before being assigned to House, which made the screenwriting process easy for both of them. Obayashi titled the script House as he felt that a foreign title for a Japanese film would be "taboo”.

Source: Wikipedia
Farmer selling watermelons: The girls were... eaten. 
Farmer selling watermelons: They were eaten!... Delicious.

Oshare: Fanta, you're fantasizing!

Oshare: The girls will wake up... when they are hungry.

Farmer selling watermelons: Do you like watermelons? 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: No! I like bananas! 
Farmer selling watermelons: Bananas?

Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Ah! Bananas! Bananas everywhere! 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas!

Suîto: You're so cool, Kung Fu. 
Kunfû: I'm sorry, Sweet.

from ‘HOUSE’ (1977) Starring Kimiko Ikegami (A Chaos of Flowers), Miki Jinbo (The Possessed), Mieko Satô, Eriko Tanaka, Masayo Miyako, and Kumiko Ohba (Bashment). Story by Chigumi Obayashi (The Visitor in the Eye). Screenplay by Chiho Katsura (The Deserted City). Directed by Nobuhiko Obayashi (Turning Point).


House (Japanese: ハウス, Hepburn: Hausu) is a 1977 Japanese comedy horror film directed and produced by Nobuhiko Obayashi. The film stars mostly amateur actors with only Kimiko Ikegami and Yōko Minamida having any notable previous acting experience. The film is about a schoolgirl traveling with her six classmates to her ailing aunt's country home, where they come face to face with supernatural events as the girls are, one by one, devoured by the home.

The film company Toho approached Obayashi with the suggestion to make a film like Jaws. Influenced by ideas from his daughter Chigumi, Obayashi developed ideas for a script that was written by Chiho Katsura. After the script was green-lit, the film was put on hold for two years as no director at Toho wanted to direct it. Obayashi promoted the film during this time period until the studio allowed him to direct it himself. The film was a box office hit in Japan but received negative reviews from critics. Housereceived a wide release in 2009 and 2010 in North America, where it received more favorable reviews.

Following the success of the American film Jaws, a proposition came from the  Toho film studio for Nobuhiko Obayashi to develop a similar script. To find inspiration for the story, Obayashi discussed ideas with his pre-teen daughter Chigumi Obayashi. Nobuhiko sought her ideas, believing that adults "only think about things they understand ... everything stays on that boring human level" while "children can come up with things that can't be explained". Several of Chigumi's ideas were included in House such as a reflection in a mirror attacking the viewer, a watermelon being pulled out of a well appearing like a human head, and a house that eats girls. Other themes Chigumi suggested drew upon her own childhood fears. These fears included a pile of futons falling on her that felt like a monster attacking her, a large loud clock at her grandparents home, and getting her fingers caught in between her piano keys. Nobuhiko shared these story ideas with screenwriter Chiho Katsura. These ideas reminded Katsura of a short story by Walter de la Mare about an old woman who is visited by her granddaughters who then puts them in a trunk.

Obayashi incorporated themes of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into the script. Obayashi was born in Hiroshima and lost all his childhood friends from these bombings. Obayashi applied these themes with the plot element of a woman's ghost waiting for her lover's return from World War II. The woman's bitterness about the war turns her into an evil spirit that devours the girls who were unaffected by the bombings. Obayashi and Katsura had worked previously on a script titled Hanagatami before being assigned to House, which made the screenwriting process easy for both of them. Obayashi titled the script House as he felt that a foreign title for a Japanese film would be "taboo”.

Source: Wikipedia
Farmer selling watermelons: The girls were... eaten. 
Farmer selling watermelons: They were eaten!... Delicious.

Oshare: Fanta, you're fantasizing!

Oshare: The girls will wake up... when they are hungry.

Farmer selling watermelons: Do you like watermelons? 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: No! I like bananas! 
Farmer selling watermelons: Bananas?

Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Ah! Bananas! Bananas everywhere! 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas!

Suîto: You're so cool, Kung Fu. 
Kunfû: I'm sorry, Sweet.

from ‘HOUSE’ (1977) Starring Kimiko Ikegami (A Chaos of Flowers), Miki Jinbo (The Possessed), Mieko Satô, Eriko Tanaka, Masayo Miyako, and Kumiko Ohba (Bashment). Story by Chigumi Obayashi (The Visitor in the Eye). Screenplay by Chiho Katsura (The Deserted City). Directed by Nobuhiko Obayashi (Turning Point).


House (Japanese: ハウス, Hepburn: Hausu) is a 1977 Japanese comedy horror film directed and produced by Nobuhiko Obayashi. The film stars mostly amateur actors with only Kimiko Ikegami and Yōko Minamida having any notable previous acting experience. The film is about a schoolgirl traveling with her six classmates to her ailing aunt's country home, where they come face to face with supernatural events as the girls are, one by one, devoured by the home.

The film company Toho approached Obayashi with the suggestion to make a film like Jaws. Influenced by ideas from his daughter Chigumi, Obayashi developed ideas for a script that was written by Chiho Katsura. After the script was green-lit, the film was put on hold for two years as no director at Toho wanted to direct it. Obayashi promoted the film during this time period until the studio allowed him to direct it himself. The film was a box office hit in Japan but received negative reviews from critics. Housereceived a wide release in 2009 and 2010 in North America, where it received more favorable reviews.

Following the success of the American film Jaws, a proposition came from the  Toho film studio for Nobuhiko Obayashi to develop a similar script. To find inspiration for the story, Obayashi discussed ideas with his pre-teen daughter Chigumi Obayashi. Nobuhiko sought her ideas, believing that adults "only think about things they understand ... everything stays on that boring human level" while "children can come up with things that can't be explained". Several of Chigumi's ideas were included in House such as a reflection in a mirror attacking the viewer, a watermelon being pulled out of a well appearing like a human head, and a house that eats girls. Other themes Chigumi suggested drew upon her own childhood fears. These fears included a pile of futons falling on her that felt like a monster attacking her, a large loud clock at her grandparents home, and getting her fingers caught in between her piano keys. Nobuhiko shared these story ideas with screenwriter Chiho Katsura. These ideas reminded Katsura of a short story by Walter de la Mare about an old woman who is visited by her granddaughters who then puts them in a trunk.

Obayashi incorporated themes of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into the script. Obayashi was born in Hiroshima and lost all his childhood friends from these bombings. Obayashi applied these themes with the plot element of a woman's ghost waiting for her lover's return from World War II. The woman's bitterness about the war turns her into an evil spirit that devours the girls who were unaffected by the bombings. Obayashi and Katsura had worked previously on a script titled Hanagatami before being assigned to House, which made the screenwriting process easy for both of them. Obayashi titled the script House as he felt that a foreign title for a Japanese film would be "taboo”.

Source: Wikipedia
Farmer selling watermelons: The girls were... eaten. 
Farmer selling watermelons: They were eaten!... Delicious.

Oshare: Fanta, you're fantasizing!

Oshare: The girls will wake up... when they are hungry.

Farmer selling watermelons: Do you like watermelons? 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: No! I like bananas! 
Farmer selling watermelons: Bananas?

Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Ah! Bananas! Bananas everywhere! 
Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas!

Suîto: You're so cool, Kung Fu. 
Kunfû: I'm sorry, Sweet.

from ‘HOUSE’ (1977) Starring Kimiko Ikegami (A Chaos of Flowers), Miki Jinbo (The Possessed), Mieko Satô, Eriko Tanaka, Masayo Miyako, and Kumiko Ohba (Bashment). Story by Chigumi Obayashi (The Visitor in the Eye). Screenplay by Chiho Katsura (The Deserted City). Directed by Nobuhiko Obayashi (Turning Point).


House (Japanese: ハウス, Hepburn: Hausu) is a 1977 Japanese comedy horror film directed and produced by Nobuhiko Obayashi. The film stars mostly amateur actors with only Kimiko Ikegami and Yōko Minamida having any notable previous acting experience. The film is about a schoolgirl traveling with her six classmates to her ailing aunt's country home, where they come face to face with supernatural events as the girls are, one by one, devoured by the home.

The film company Toho approached Obayashi with the suggestion to make a film like Jaws. Influenced by ideas from his daughter Chigumi, Obayashi developed ideas for a script that was written by Chiho Katsura. After the script was green-lit, the film was put on hold for two years as no director at Toho wanted to direct it. Obayashi promoted the film during this time period until the studio allowed him to direct it himself. The film was a box office hit in Japan but received negative reviews from critics. Housereceived a wide release in 2009 and 2010 in North America, where it received more favorable reviews.

Following the success of the American film Jaws, a proposition came from the  Toho film studio for Nobuhiko Obayashi to develop a similar script. To find inspiration for the story, Obayashi discussed ideas with his pre-teen daughter Chigumi Obayashi. Nobuhiko sought her ideas, believing that adults "only think about things they understand ... everything stays on that boring human level" while "children can come up with things that can't be explained". Several of Chigumi's ideas were included in House such as a reflection in a mirror attacking the viewer, a watermelon being pulled out of a well appearing like a human head, and a house that eats girls. Other themes Chigumi suggested drew upon her own childhood fears. These fears included a pile of futons falling on her that felt like a monster attacking her, a large loud clock at her grandparents home, and getting her fingers caught in between her piano keys. Nobuhiko shared these story ideas with screenwriter Chiho Katsura. These ideas reminded Katsura of a short story by Walter de la Mare about an old woman who is visited by her granddaughters who then puts them in a trunk.

Obayashi incorporated themes of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into the script. Obayashi was born in Hiroshima and lost all his childhood friends from these bombings. Obayashi applied these themes with the plot element of a woman's ghost waiting for her lover's return from World War II. The woman's bitterness about the war turns her into an evil spirit that devours the girls who were unaffected by the bombings. Obayashi and Katsura had worked previously on a script titled Hanagatami before being assigned to House, which made the screenwriting process easy for both of them. Obayashi titled the script House as he felt that a foreign title for a Japanese film would be "taboo”.

Source: Wikipedia
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HOUSE Painting

Philip Leister

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 48 W x 72 H x 1.5 D in

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About The Artwork

Farmer selling watermelons: The girls were... eaten. Farmer selling watermelons: They were eaten!... Delicious. Oshare: Fanta, you're fantasizing! Oshare: The girls will wake up... when they are hungry. Farmer selling watermelons: Do you like watermelons? Keisuke Tougou-sensei: No! I like bananas! Farmer selling watermelons: Bananas? Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Ah! Bananas! Bananas everywhere! Keisuke Tougou-sensei: Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Bananas! Suîto: You're so cool, Kung Fu. Kunfû: I'm sorry, Sweet. from ‘HOUSE’ (1977) Starring Kimiko Ikegami (A Chaos of Flowers), Miki Jinbo (The Possessed), Mieko Satô, Eriko Tanaka, Masayo Miyako, and Kumiko Ohba (Bashment). Story by Chigumi Obayashi (The Visitor in the Eye). Screenplay by Chiho Katsura (The Deserted City). Directed by Nobuhiko Obayashi (Turning Point). House (Japanese: ハウス, Hepburn: Hausu) is a 1977 Japanese comedy horror film directed and produced by Nobuhiko Obayashi. The film stars mostly amateur actors with only Kimiko Ikegami and Yōko Minamida having any notable previous acting experience. The film is about a schoolgirl traveling with her six classmates to her ailing aunt's country home, where they come face to face with supernatural events as the girls are, one by one, devoured by the home. The film company Toho approached Obayashi with the suggestion to make a film like Jaws. Influenced by ideas from his daughter Chigumi, Obayashi developed ideas for a script that was written by Chiho Katsura. After the script was green-lit, the film was put on hold for two years as no director at Toho wanted to direct it. Obayashi promoted the film during this time period until the studio allowed him to direct it himself. The film was a box office hit in Japan but received negative reviews from critics. Housereceived a wide release in 2009 and 2010 in North America, where it received more favorable reviews. Following the success of the American film Jaws, a proposition came from the Toho film studio for Nobuhiko Obayashi to develop a similar script. To find inspiration for the story, Obayashi discussed ideas with his pre-teen daughter Chigumi Obayashi. Nobuhiko sought her ideas, believing that adults "only think about things they understand ... everything stays on that boring human level" while "children can come up with things that can't be explained". Several of Chigumi's ideas were included in House such as a reflection in a mirror attacking the viewer, a watermelon being pulled out of a well appearing like a human head, and a house that eats girls. Other themes Chigumi suggested drew upon her own childhood fears. These fears included a pile of futons falling on her that felt like a monster attacking her, a large loud clock at her grandparents home, and getting her fingers caught in between her piano keys. Nobuhiko shared these story ideas with screenwriter Chiho Katsura. These ideas reminded Katsura of a short story by Walter de la Mare about an old woman who is visited by her granddaughters who then puts them in a trunk. Obayashi incorporated themes of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into the script. Obayashi was born in Hiroshima and lost all his childhood friends from these bombings. Obayashi applied these themes with the plot element of a woman's ghost waiting for her lover's return from World War II. The woman's bitterness about the war turns her into an evil spirit that devours the girls who were unaffected by the bombings. Obayashi and Katsura had worked previously on a script titled Hanagatami before being assigned to House, which made the screenwriting process easy for both of them. Obayashi titled the script House as he felt that a foreign title for a Japanese film would be "taboo”. Source: Wikipedia

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:48 W x 72 H x 1.5 D in

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I’m (I am?) a self-taught artist, originally from the north suburbs of Chicago (also known as John Hughes' America). Born in 1984, I started painting in 2017 and began to take it somewhat seriously in 2019. I currently reside in rural Montana and live a secluded life with my three dogs - Pebbles (a.k.a. Jaws, Brandy, Fang), Bam Bam (a.k.a. Scrat, Dinki-Di, Trash Panda, Dug), and Mystique (a.k.a. Lady), and five cats - Burglekutt (a.k.a. Ghostmouse Makah), Vohnkar! (a.k.a. Storm Shadow, Grogu), Falkor (a.k.a. Moro, The Mummy's Kryptonite, Wendigo, BFC), Nibbler (a.k.a. Cobblepot), and Meegosh (a.k.a. Lenny). Part of the preface to the 'Complete Works of Emily Dickinson helps sum me up as a person and an artist: "The verses of Emily Dickinson belong emphatically to what Emerson long since called ‘the Poetry of the Portfolio,’ something produced absolutely without the thought of publication, and solely by way of expression of the writer's own mind. Such verse must inevitably forfeit whatever advantage lies in the discipline of public criticism and the enforced conformity to accepted ways. On the other hand, it may often gain something through the habit of freedom and unconventional utterance of daring thoughts. In the case of the present author, there was no choice in the matter; she must write thus, or not at all. A recluse by temperament and habit, literally spending years without settling her foot beyond the doorstep, and many more years during which her walks were strictly limited to her father's grounds, she habitually concealed her mind, like her person, from all but a few friends; and it was with great difficulty that she was persuaded to print during her lifetime, three or four poems. Yet she wrote verses in great abundance; and though brought curiosity indifferent to all conventional rules, had yet a rigorous literary standard of her own, and often altered a word many times to suit an ear which had its own tenacious fastidiousness." -Thomas Wentworth Higginson "Not bad... you say this is your first lesson?" "Yes, but my father was an *art collector*, so…"

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