Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA filmmaker and crew slowly go insane after being continually haunted by the ghost of a dead actress.A filmmaker and crew slowly go insane after being continually haunted by the ghost of a dead actress.A filmmaker and crew slowly go insane after being continually haunted by the ghost of a dead actress.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Taka Higuchi
- Masaru Hayama
- (as Takanori Kikuchi)
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10Bacio83
For his first ever debut this film has some riveting and chilling moments. In the best horror film fashion the pit of your stomach tightens every moment during this film. The ending is superb. The makers of Blaire Witch obviously watched this film it's ending wasn't an end but a beginning of the end. A great movie and only a piece of Japan's great as far as scare factor a perfect score it makes you think and scared out of your mind.
After watching this film last night on Sundance, I realized that much of Nakata's style was first done in this film. Here we have many of the same elements of the RINGU series, especially the idea of the media being the source of the supernatural. Instead of the cursed videotape, we instead having a haunted studio and strange images appearing on film. In fact, the strange images appearing on film brings immediately the cursed videotape in RINGU to mind. The only thing missing was the obsession to water that runs through Nakata's later films. The final scenes are quite chilling, with a bit of a nod to Murnau, what with the door opening by itself ands the ghost entering the room, reminds me immediatly of
NOSFERATU. A chilling movie that will make think twice about going up to a catwalk.
NOSFERATU. A chilling movie that will make think twice about going up to a catwalk.
A worth-while watch for an introduction to the origins of modern J-Horror. As a Freshman directorial effort some aspects show through as "need improvement,"; continuity of story, backstory development, score, lighting - however, the concept of this film became the backbone of J-Horror and the foreshadowing of many of what we now call cliches in Asian Horror. That being said, by today's standards not a "scary" film nor one that will be memorable for younger audiences.
This film is great at putting ideas into the viewer's subconscious. The whole simple idea of the story is great, by having the characters shoot a film such that the viewer almost feels like they are separated from the characters and in tune with the supernatural. Since you are watching people making a movie investigating another movie, it brings you into the action, as if the same things could happen to you. The blandness of some scenes on the surface is really fun when contrasted against the supernatural events that happen later. An example is a line where the director tells the actress not to "look down" when saying her lines, when she really shouldn't be "looking up" later when she encounters the ghost. One of the most interesting things about this movie is that you wouldn't even think this was a ghost story in some scenes until you realize the context it is in. Definitely this is one of the best ghost detective stories, it has an almost meditative nature and makes the movie more scary. The over the shoulder scenes of the ghost are very scary, partly because the movie often shows people filming from the opposite angle, so you are actually watching them film, scenes in which you could become the ghost. By concentrating on the existence of the ghost, the whole movie becomes more scary.
This Japanese horror film, originally called 'Joyû-rei' and was one of the first films directed by Hideo Nakata of 'Ringu' or 'The Ring' fame, has its fair share of truly creepy and unsettling moments. However, the ending was way too rushed and unfulfilling for this film to merit a higher ranking, in my opinion.
Having said that, I still believe that this spooky Japanese film ought to have more recognition not only for historical reasons because of the similarities to 'Ringu' and as the director Hideo Nakata's first real film but also because it gets some things better than modern horror films.
Having said that, I still believe that this spooky Japanese film ought to have more recognition not only for historical reasons because of the similarities to 'Ringu' and as the director Hideo Nakata's first real film but also because it gets some things better than modern horror films.
Le saviez-vous
- ConnexionsFeatured in Hideo Nakata: Ghosts, Rings and Water (2016)
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 15min(75 min)
- Couleur
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