VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,4/10
3289
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un uomo si sveglia e si ritrova rinchiuso in un angusto labirinto di corridoi di cemento, in cui riesce a malapena a muoversi.Un uomo si sveglia e si ritrova rinchiuso in un angusto labirinto di corridoi di cemento, in cui riesce a malapena a muoversi.Un uomo si sveglia e si ritrova rinchiuso in un angusto labirinto di corridoi di cemento, in cui riesce a malapena a muoversi.
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Recensioni in evidenza
Coming close to completing my collection of all the Shinya Tsukamoto movies, and this one is pretty hard to explain. A man wakes up in somekind of a concrete space, hardly able to move, and notices he has an injury which is bleeding. It's very dark, and you only see his face for quite a while and hear him think to himself about what is going on. He begins to crawl through tunnels, or maybe a maze, and comes across a woman also trapped and bleeding. Different visions occurs, like a force knocking on a huge door which he can't seem to reach, and multilated bodies floating on the surface of a source of water in this space. They begin a conversation about life, dreams, death, and what is happening to each other, and how to escape. He wonders if the world is at war and they are prisoners, or some pervert has locked them away for whatever reason, or is it really a very nasty nightmare or are they in hell. That's pretty much what is going on, at least for what you can see, because the movie is pretty dark until the last 10 minutes or so. Although the movie is only around 49 minutes long, that is plenty long enough for this type of ambiguous narrative. Being a huge fan of Tsukamoto, this movie to me is like a terrible nightmare, and that may be what it is, you have to judge that because the movie doesn't help you along much at all. But what there is that is so Tsukamoto, is the superior use of music and sound effects, along with some disturbing visuals. Interesting movie to say the least, and a must-have of course for Tsukamoto fans.
A surreal, grotesque trip, mixing elements of Saw and Cube together. The movie got some good ideas but even the short running time of 50 minutes felt too long for me. Not much is happening, you just get some scenes of torture and gore (some well shot and made). Not bad, but nothing really good. I do not know if Haze is meant to be an allegory or for whatever theology or philosophy the story/movie stands, but to be honest, I don't care. Only recommended to hardcore fans of the two mentioned movies that need something new on the plate. Trippy it is yes, good, not so much.
Haze - Long Version
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
Haze - Long Version
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
Haze - Long Version
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
Haze - Long Version
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
Haze - Long Version
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
Haze - Long Version
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
Haze - Long Version
An experimental J-horror experience with a claustrophobic atmosphere and tension filled storytelling. But it never had a satisfying ending or revealing the mystery.
I went in with high expectations, and ended up feeling dizzy
A fair warning to everyone, the camera shaking (intended I suppose) is so bad about 70% of the time that it was unwatchable for me.
I never had to stop watching anything or stop playing a game because of that, but here it's insane.
I had to look away half of the time and still felt very dizzy at the end.
So, maybe there's an average movie under the shaking (I didn't see anything special) but not worth watching at all, unless you like that kind of stuff.
I never had to stop watching anything or stop playing a game because of that, but here it's insane.
I had to look away half of the time and still felt very dizzy at the end.
So, maybe there's an average movie under the shaking (I didn't see anything special) but not worth watching at all, unless you like that kind of stuff.
One of the very few films that captures that feeling of a bizarre nightmare perfectly. Screw all the clichés and jump scares from most horror movies, this is real horror.
One of the biggest things that makes this so horrifying is the sets, because 95% of this film takes place in a concrete maze (which are actually painted wooden sets) with barely enough room to move. It's so claustrophobic that I actually felt extremely uncomfortable watching it. One scene in particular has our lead character's teeth against a metal pipe, with no room for him to pull his mouth off, leaving him to shimmy left and right as his teeth grind on the metal. It's horrific and unlike anything I have seen in a horror film. It's essentially Cube or Saw with less of a focus on body count and gore (Not to say that this doesn't have some blood and gore.)
I also have major respect for Tsukamoto for keeping his films at a length that he feels is necessary for telling the story. This one is about 50 minutes long, and it feels just right. His films seem to be quite often below the 1 hour 30 minutes mark.
This thing is short, horrifying, and thought provoking all in one. We seriously need more horror movies like this, because this truly encapsulates what true terror really is.
One of the biggest things that makes this so horrifying is the sets, because 95% of this film takes place in a concrete maze (which are actually painted wooden sets) with barely enough room to move. It's so claustrophobic that I actually felt extremely uncomfortable watching it. One scene in particular has our lead character's teeth against a metal pipe, with no room for him to pull his mouth off, leaving him to shimmy left and right as his teeth grind on the metal. It's horrific and unlike anything I have seen in a horror film. It's essentially Cube or Saw with less of a focus on body count and gore (Not to say that this doesn't have some blood and gore.)
I also have major respect for Tsukamoto for keeping his films at a length that he feels is necessary for telling the story. This one is about 50 minutes long, and it feels just right. His films seem to be quite often below the 1 hour 30 minutes mark.
This thing is short, horrifying, and thought provoking all in one. We seriously need more horror movies like this, because this truly encapsulates what true terror really is.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn his interview at Locarno Festival, the director said he found the initial idea watching Charles Bronson's claustrophobic tunnel scene in The Great Escape.
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By what name was Haze - Il Muro (2005) officially released in Canada in English?
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