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Sweet Home

Titolo originale: Sûîto hômu
  • 1989
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 40min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,5/10
1322
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Sweet Home (1989)
Orrore corporeoOrrore

Una troupe televisiva sta realizzando un documentario sul famigerato pittore Mamiya Ichiro. Quando iniziano le riprese nella sua vecchia casa, vengono attaccati dal fantasma della moglie del... Leggi tuttoUna troupe televisiva sta realizzando un documentario sul famigerato pittore Mamiya Ichiro. Quando iniziano le riprese nella sua vecchia casa, vengono attaccati dal fantasma della moglie del pittore.Una troupe televisiva sta realizzando un documentario sul famigerato pittore Mamiya Ichiro. Quando iniziano le riprese nella sua vecchia casa, vengono attaccati dal fantasma della moglie del pittore.

  • Regia
    • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
  • Star
    • Nobuko Miyamoto
    • Shingo Yamashiro
    • Nokko
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,5/10
    1322
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Star
      • Nobuko Miyamoto
      • Shingo Yamashiro
      • Nokko
    • 15Recensioni degli utenti
    • 15Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 2 candidature totali

    Foto47

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    Interpreti principali9

    Modifica
    Nobuko Miyamoto
    Nobuko Miyamoto
    • Akiko Hayakawa
    Shingo Yamashiro
    • Kazuo Hoshino
    Nokko
    • Emi Hoshino
    Fukumi Kuroda
    • Asuka
    Ichirô Furutachi
    • Akira Taguchi
    Tôru Masuoka
    • Young Housekeeper
    Machiko Watanabe
    • Mrs. Mamiya
    Noboru Mitani
    Noboru Mitani
    • Middle-Aged Town Official
    Jûzô Itami
    Jûzô Itami
    • Kenichi Yamamura
    • Regia
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti15

    6,51.3K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    6trentreid-1

    key film in the development of the survival horror genre

    This is a fun movie directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa and produced by Juzo Itami, who also appears in his last acting role as an Early Times whiskey-swilling mysterious good 'ol boy alongside wife and frequent star Nobuko Miyamoto. In the doc Building the Inferno from Criterion's 'Jigoku' disc, Kiyoshi Kurosawa mentions that he tried to get Jigoku's production designer Haruyasu Kurosawa to work on Sweet Home.

    It's a shame that didn't happen, however it still has fx by Dick Smith and Kazuhiro Tsuji. But don't let those names fool you, it is not an art-house film for the international market but an atmospheric pop flick. They manipulate shadows and use practical fx in a manner that suggests an appreciation for Bava, particularly in one sequence involving a medieval poleaxe and a wheelchair.

    The movie was made concurrent to the Famicom game of the same name by Resident Evil/Biohazard game designer Shinji Mikami. This is a key film in the development of the survival horror genre, so why is it only available on unsubbed VHS or crappy DVD-Rs of the old VSoM tape? There were major cuts and reshoots by Itami following the release of Kurosawa's theatrical cut, shaping it into a more commercially viable film. So Toho has that cut locked away, and following Itami's suicide and Kurosawa's relative success as a very different sort of storyteller there is probably little economic motive to release either cut in a restored version.
    7DanTheMan2150AD

    Certified Insane

    You can't talk about Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Sweet Home without mentioning that it would later go on to inspire the Resident Evil series and is primarily the reason we have the survival horror genre as we know it today. It's a film whose reputation proceeds it, partly due to the fact it has had no official release since it was VHS, thus has been confined to relative obscurity and infamy because of this. I did manage to track down a Blu-ray release of this although it's only an upscale from a seemingly forgotten DVD source, but it's better than nothing. I get very strong Hausu vibes from Sweet Home with its female perspective at centre stage, with the maternal strength they possess. Despite being an early Kiyoshi Kurosawa picture, he nails the feel of what I can only describe as a Japanese take on The Evil Dead, even if the pacing is a little wonky. But when coupled with the pretty gruesome effects work, makeup and awesome synth score by Masaya Matsuura, Sweet Home has enough visual madness to cut through the muddy picture quality.
    10hushicho

    Surprisingly Excellent

    After I played the original Famicom game recently, dubbed the 'father of survival horror', and after being suitably impressed by the game itself I began my long and difficult search for this movie title. Although it remains unknown to anyone that I've consulted whether the movie was based on the game or vice-versa, either way both are excellent.

    I was impressed most of all by the consistently-excellent acting of Miyamoto Nobuko, whose appearances in film almost always guarantee at least one enjoyable character. However, all the acting in this was exceptional, especially NOKKO's, whom I had not seen in any film before this one. I am still unsure as to who played Kazuo, the main male lead, but he was of course excellent, although it was of course Akiko (Miyamoto) who demonstrated her personal strength throughout.

    How this film manages to convey a touching message about the bond between a mother and her child in the midst of terror and horrific special effects is beyond me, but it somehow manages to do it quite well, and it also stays very faithful in many ways to the game, which impressed me; it shows how well a story can be translated into both game and movie medium. Especially since this also seems to point out the weakness of similar Hollywood efforts, which almost always are disastrous.

    All in all, this movie was very well-paced, terrifying, and tense, but somehow remained touching as well. The scares weren't too graphic or obvious, but by the time the 'big guns' were pulled out on the effects, you were fully drawn in. A true classic and a great film.
    10I_Ailurophile

    An exhilarating masterpiece of horror

    It's a delightful bit of trivia to learn that 'Sweet home' had a companion release in 1989 in the form of a videogame by Capcom, effectively serving as the origin of the acclaimed 'Resident evil' series. The very premise alone suggests "survival horror," and as the film progresses, one most definitely can see how it became a source of inspiration. More importantly, though - putting aside that kernel of knowledge, from the very beginning this is fantastically captivating, and it only ever gets better.

    I immediately love the great attention obviously given to set design and decoration, costume design and characters' appearances, and instant, gathering uneasy atmosphere. Outstanding use of lighting and shadow, effects, camerawork including unconventional angles and fetching shots, sound design, and set pieces cement that atmosphere even before events truly begin to pick up. The art direction and production design is phenomenal; filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa has clearly assembled a highly experienced, expert crew, and all the effort readily pays off.

    Well-rounded and diverse characters are portrayed a bit ham-handedly in early scenes of exposition, and that slant is echoed in all aspects including composer Masaya Matsuura's score. But initial playfulness shifts deftly as eerie incidents begin to manifest, and the music lends much to the disquieting ambience, building excitement, and acutely jarring moments. Likewise - it would require an overabundance of words to expound on all the ways in which the cast excels, but suffice to say that all involved dexterously keep in step with the shift in tone, and masterfully realize their roles with marvelous range, nuance, and physicality. Every meticulous detail and delicate touch in the film's craft is fully and ably employed in the execution of a feature at once greatly suspenseful, unsettling, and yet most definitely fun.

    Some horror movies take so long to move towards disturbing and frightful imagery that the viewer feels a bit bereft. In that vein, 'Sweet home' takes its time to advance toward concrete dread and terror such that the narrative flow feels perfectly natural. To my pleasure, however, it's so intent on eliciting visceral reaction that the majority of the runtime fulfills our craving for the genre instead of just setting up the course of events. What we get is more fiercely realized exercise of all those elements that had already initially impressed. Visual and practical effects, makeup, lighting, and props are all employed with exquisite results, including considerable blood and gore. Truthfully, the concept and design of most instances of the horror-laden specifics remind of the work of John Carpenter (a tall comparison if ever there were one). Fear is subjective, but scenes are unquestionably chilling, jolting, wonderfully unnerving, and at times genuinely horrifying.

    At that - while the film's focus is certainly on horror, Kurosawa's skill as a writer squarely matches his eye as a director. The screenplay is magnificent in every regard - strong characterizations, dialogue, scenes, and an absolutely solid overall narrative, with turns and surprises that feel as vividly alive as the Mamiya mansion and all within. At its absolute core 'Sweet home' may be a haunted house flick, but it's a grave mistake to dismiss it as just another slice of spooky goings-on in an old home - this is so, so much more than the root premise portends.

    I excitedly sat to watch with marginally high expectations but no meaningful foreknowledge, and I've been totally blown away. This is utterly exceptional. I claim no perfect knowledge, but in my opinion this is one of the very best horror movies I've ever seen, and I'm flabbergasted that from where I stand it seems to be such a comparatively obscure title. In my mind it at least stands toe to toe with the very best horror that the storied US or British film industries have ever had to offer, and I firmly believe it far exceeds most genre pictures one could name.

    I could continue but I'd start repeating myself and exhausting the thesaurus. Kiyoshi Kurosawa has made a riveting, nearly unrivaled treasure of horror. Anyone who enjoys this type of movie needs to watch it immediately. There's little more to be said; this gets my utmost, profound recommendation: 'Sweet home' is a masterpiece.
    8HumanoidOfFlesh

    Gory and stylish haunted house movie.

    A television crew enter the sprawling Mamiya mansion to film the restoration of a fresco painted by the artist who lived there decades before.They discover not one but several frescoes including one that seems to depict the death of a young child in some kind of furnace.That night the temperamental presenter wanders out into the grounds of the house and digs up a coffin containing the charred remains of an infant.It soon becomes apparent that the child's mother,although dead herself has not left the house and is still angered by her loss."Sweet Home" is obviously inspired by Tobe Hooper's "Poltergeist" and Robert Wise's "The Haunting".The special effects made by Dick Smith are spectacular and there is a good amount of grue including dismemberments and melting faces.The action is fast-paced,the script is well-written and the characters are engaging.8 out of 10.A hidden gem.

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    Trama

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    • Quiz
      There used to be a debate about which came first, the game or the movie. Further complicating the debate about which came first: Sweet Home's trailer is both an advertisement from the movie, and a sales pitch for the Famicom game. It includes scenes from both. However, it's since been proven that while both came out in 1989, the movie was released in January of that year, while the game came out in December.
    • Curiosità sui crediti
      After credits go over footage of the mansion it fully and spectacularly collapses in the post-credits scene.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in The J-Horror Virus (2023)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 21 gennaio 1989 (Giappone)
    • Paese di origine
      • Giappone
    • Lingua
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Milyy dom
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Itami Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 40min(100 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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