Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen Hinako was a child she was separated from Fumiya and Sayori as she moved to Tokyo. Now she has returned to Shikoku, but it turns out that Sayori drowned. When Hinako starts seeing Sayor... Tout lireWhen Hinako was a child she was separated from Fumiya and Sayori as she moved to Tokyo. Now she has returned to Shikoku, but it turns out that Sayori drowned. When Hinako starts seeing Sayori in her dreams, she seeks help from Fumiya.When Hinako was a child she was separated from Fumiya and Sayori as she moved to Tokyo. Now she has returned to Shikoku, but it turns out that Sayori drowned. When Hinako starts seeing Sayori in her dreams, she seeks help from Fumiya.
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A spooky little movie that moves along at a good pace. Fine performances, not the most chilling thing ever, but eerie and enjoyable. A heavy reliance on hand-held shots makes everything seem very immediate. Oh, and the title is an interesting play on words.
The opening scene, like the premise, seems primed to set the stage for the horror story to come. And so it does, most certainly - but with soft pacing and a soft tone, it takes a long while for that story to especially develop, let alone the sinister vibes we anticipate. Even with little tidbits along the way, it's not until we've reached the halfway mark that it begins to feel that the plot is moving, and longer still before the film begins to unlock its potency. Tales in all genres can make such pacing work for them; though it does ultimately succeed, this has a more difficult time. In struggling to meaningfully progress and foster atmosphere under such circumstances, it's not that 'Shikoku' is bad, but the impact that the saga should have is unquestionably diminished. I don't specifically fault filmmaker Nagasaki Shunichi, let alone the writers, but whatever else is true here, it was a stylistic approach that didn't fully pan out.
Be that as it may, Bando Masako penned a fine story of folklore and the supernatural, with tragedy, grief, and personal drama intermingling with bigger dark ideas in keeping with the expected horror; I'd be keen on reading the novel. While screenwriters Manda Kunimi and Sendo Takenori share some blame for the tone and pacing, they also allow the narrative to build slowly such that when at last the mood turns more distinctly dreary, the wait proves to be worth it. We're fairly deep in the back end before the intended ambience truly manifests, but it does nonetheless, bolstered with Kadokura Sotoshi's flavorful music, deliberate, eerie lighting and nighttime shoots, and excellent production design and art direction. It may not achieve its utmost potential, yet the picture is definitely creepy and a little unsettling: less visceral and striking, perhaps, and more quietly gnawing, which can be just as effective if not more so when exercised carefully. And so it is here. I maintain that the pacing and tone are troubled in being so muted, and still Nagasaki discovers the understated power of 'Shikoku' right when it matters most.
In a similar fashion the acting is notably subdued, but as all elements come together in the last act the nuance in the performances brings out the emotional depth that allows the feature to resonate. Nagasaki continues to have a hard time realizing the story as it should ideally be, Sinoda Noboru's cinematography is very pointedly no help at select junctures, and even seemingly modest production values are an obstacle at times, but I think Tsutsui Michitaka, Kuriyama Chiaki, and Natsukawa Yui demonstrate appreciable acting all the same through these conditions. I actually do quite like this flick, and all the right components are in place for a viewing experience that's gently dreadful in the best of ways. That goal is met in my opinion, but it's just unfortunate that the tenor is so low-key as to stifle the complete scope of what the concept could have achieved. When all is said and done this is not a title that demands to be seen, and even if you're a big fan of someone involved it isn't a critical recommendation. Nonetheless I'm glad I took the time to watch, and even if not perfectly satisfying, those who are receptive to the more dramatic and hushed side of the genre may do well to check out 'Shikoku.'
Be that as it may, Bando Masako penned a fine story of folklore and the supernatural, with tragedy, grief, and personal drama intermingling with bigger dark ideas in keeping with the expected horror; I'd be keen on reading the novel. While screenwriters Manda Kunimi and Sendo Takenori share some blame for the tone and pacing, they also allow the narrative to build slowly such that when at last the mood turns more distinctly dreary, the wait proves to be worth it. We're fairly deep in the back end before the intended ambience truly manifests, but it does nonetheless, bolstered with Kadokura Sotoshi's flavorful music, deliberate, eerie lighting and nighttime shoots, and excellent production design and art direction. It may not achieve its utmost potential, yet the picture is definitely creepy and a little unsettling: less visceral and striking, perhaps, and more quietly gnawing, which can be just as effective if not more so when exercised carefully. And so it is here. I maintain that the pacing and tone are troubled in being so muted, and still Nagasaki discovers the understated power of 'Shikoku' right when it matters most.
In a similar fashion the acting is notably subdued, but as all elements come together in the last act the nuance in the performances brings out the emotional depth that allows the feature to resonate. Nagasaki continues to have a hard time realizing the story as it should ideally be, Sinoda Noboru's cinematography is very pointedly no help at select junctures, and even seemingly modest production values are an obstacle at times, but I think Tsutsui Michitaka, Kuriyama Chiaki, and Natsukawa Yui demonstrate appreciable acting all the same through these conditions. I actually do quite like this flick, and all the right components are in place for a viewing experience that's gently dreadful in the best of ways. That goal is met in my opinion, but it's just unfortunate that the tenor is so low-key as to stifle the complete scope of what the concept could have achieved. When all is said and done this is not a title that demands to be seen, and even if you're a big fan of someone involved it isn't a critical recommendation. Nonetheless I'm glad I took the time to watch, and even if not perfectly satisfying, those who are receptive to the more dramatic and hushed side of the genre may do well to check out 'Shikoku.'
Teenage girl Hinako returns to her home village on the Japanese island of Shikoku (which she left for Tokyo with her parents when she was a little girl) for the first time. Back then, a girl named Sayori and a boy named Fumiya were her best friends. Now Hinako meets Fumiya again, but Sayori died when she was 16. Hinako soon discovers that strange things are going on. Sayori's mother, a priestess, wants to bring her daughter back from the dead. 88 temples circle the fog-shrouded island as a seal to protect its inhabitants from the dead. But by traversing the temples in reverse order for every year of a deceased person's life, the seals can be undone and the dead person will come back to life. And Sayori's mother is about to travel the temples for the 16th time...
Shikoku is the smallest of the four big Japanese islands (the others are Honshû, Kyûshû, and Hokkaidô). Written in Kanji, "Shikoku" means "island of the four lands", but the title of this film changes the first Kanji - you still read it "Shikoku", but now it means "island of the dead". This island is still a remote place far away from the great Japanese cities, there are large, fog-shrouded forests and mountains and it makes a great setting for an eerie ghost story. The film was released together with Hideo Nakata's "The Ring 2" and produced by the same company, Asmik-Ace Entertainment. Beautifully filmed and filled with atmosphere and some very spooky moments, this is a highly recommended modern "shinrei-mono" (ghost story).
Shikoku is the smallest of the four big Japanese islands (the others are Honshû, Kyûshû, and Hokkaidô). Written in Kanji, "Shikoku" means "island of the four lands", but the title of this film changes the first Kanji - you still read it "Shikoku", but now it means "island of the dead". This island is still a remote place far away from the great Japanese cities, there are large, fog-shrouded forests and mountains and it makes a great setting for an eerie ghost story. The film was released together with Hideo Nakata's "The Ring 2" and produced by the same company, Asmik-Ace Entertainment. Beautifully filmed and filled with atmosphere and some very spooky moments, this is a highly recommended modern "shinrei-mono" (ghost story).
There are many Ring knocks off around and I bet there are even more in Asia I bet. But I got along to watching this flick without knowing nothing about it but I feared what it might be. So I put it on and from the opening I knew this film was different. It was more than a horror movie, it's more a classic ghost story and drama about 3 people. It's a weird mix because a lot of the film is about faith and the question of "when you die do your feelings die too?" So through out the film, it plays out more standard, there are no BOO scares, and limited killing. This isn't about a killing ghost it's about a ghost that still wants to live and a mother who won't let go. You can't help but to be dragged into the film and care about the characters because you understand them and why they are they way they are. Warning: If you one those moderen Hollywood horror movie fans than this movie isn't for you. But if you want something new than watch this film.
At first this is fantastic, we have had a glimpse of some children on the Japanese island of Shikoku. There is something strange going on and there are some magical colours and mist rather eerie coming and going and a folk festival. Time passes and Hinako , living in Tokyo returns to her childhood home to meet her two friends. But things go wrong when she wants to see them and then she thinks she has seen a ghost, as have we. For about the first hour it is fine but it becomes rather slow and we are waiting for some action. When we get romance it was rather a surprise and then things get rather silly and it is something like a children's story.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe title is a play on words. In Japanese, depending on which kanji is used, "shikoku" can mean "four countries" (which is the name of the island where the movie is set) or it can mean "land of the dead."
- ConnexionsFeatured in Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror (2021)
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes
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- 1.85 : 1
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