AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
6,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaEx-detective Takakura and wife Yasuko face danger as their sinister neighbor Nishino is linked to disappearances and manipulates Yasuko. Themes of trust, trauma, and hidden darkness unfold i... Ler tudoEx-detective Takakura and wife Yasuko face danger as their sinister neighbor Nishino is linked to disappearances and manipulates Yasuko. Themes of trust, trauma, and hidden darkness unfold in this psychological thriller of suburban menace.Ex-detective Takakura and wife Yasuko face danger as their sinister neighbor Nishino is linked to disappearances and manipulates Yasuko. Themes of trust, trauma, and hidden darkness unfold in this psychological thriller of suburban menace.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 3 vitórias e 1 indicação no total
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
The cinematography is stellar and the music effective. Hidetoshi Nishijima hits the mark, he is to be forgiven. Unfortunately, the movie fails to deliver on the pledge it makes during its slow- burning yet mystically gripping first half.
Instead, it takes an erroneous right turn in Albuquerque and puts out nothing more your bog- standard horrorblah of cheapthrilly, jumpscary plothole extravaganza we've come to expect from the likes of all the Paranormal Activities out there.
Worth a watch? If there's nothing else on, go for it. Until then, reserve your nail-biting for something a little more composed and well-nourished; the atmospheric horror-noir 'Cure' by the very same Kiyoshi Kurosawa comes to mind.
Instead, it takes an erroneous right turn in Albuquerque and puts out nothing more your bog- standard horrorblah of cheapthrilly, jumpscary plothole extravaganza we've come to expect from the likes of all the Paranormal Activities out there.
Worth a watch? If there's nothing else on, go for it. Until then, reserve your nail-biting for something a little more composed and well-nourished; the atmospheric horror-noir 'Cure' by the very same Kiyoshi Kurosawa comes to mind.
I had become interested in this movie because of the director and an interest in Asian crime movies. It involves a young former detective with a background in psychoanalysis turned professor helping out with the investigation of an unsolved case of a murdered family. In the meantime a creepy weirdo moves in as his neighbour, who gives odd, contradictory signals, but ends up getting close to the protagonist and his wife in a relatively ordinary neighbourly relationship, while still being weird and regularly thoroughly creepy. It is obvious that the movie is structured towards the revelation of the guy having something to do with the unsolved case, simply by the focus that is put on the interaction between him and the detective and his wife.
So far it's okay, and one would like to watch how it ends, however as perhaps too commonly with thriller-type or crime movies, especially with a hint of horror, the writing has frustrating aspects and is often positively baffling. Problems are artificially introduced, left unresolved and drawn out so that the film will have a full run-time. Characters behave in the most pointless, unintelligent ways, but only at crucial moments. This is typically related to an unparalleled lack of communicative or reasoning ability, coupled with an uncooperative or impatient colleague/super/witness/loved one etc.
More particularly in this case, the detective's wife is first creeped out by and careful about the neighbour, while trying to stay friendly to him, however when the relationship gets only slightly better, it is indicated that she seems somehow positively intrigued by him on a personal level, although there is no lack of creepiness and awkwardness of interaction, aside from a conspicuous absence of the neighbour's supposed wife (supposedly because of a depression), and although the detective is a perfectly good guy and there is no real issue in their relationship (in fact there is not much of any emotion or relationship drama in this movie).
More than that, the detective himself is strangely reluctant and inconsistent at following his "intuition" about the guy and simply ignores and doesn't mention to his wife that the neighbour's supposed "daughter" came to him and said it is not really her father but a complete stranger... Apparently casually dismissing this as merely eccentric behaviour or a joke of the girl, while merely vaguely hinting at it to his wife as something that "creeped him out".
And when the detective turned professor finally points a colleague towards the investigation of the neighbour, and this colleague quite foolishly directly turns up for an interview at his place, and then immediately turns up as a burn victim next to the two other people who died in the fire in the house right next to the detective and the creep, he fails to mention to the superior investigator that he had pointed him towards the creep (and of course has no relation to the other dead family) but instead merely mentions that the neighbour had the TV on while the fire was raging (which is deemed far too indifferent).
When he later mentions it after all, the superior ignores it simply (angrily, for some reason, what else).
In addition to this, a witness of the unsolved case is annoyingly uncooperative and uncommunicative, always running away, and unwilling to simply look at a picture and say if she knows the person. Her avoiding behaviour and inability to even stand (the f-- -) still almost makes one want to smack her as a viewer, however it also shows a communicative inability and overindulgence of those interacting with her.
Unfortunately that is just the beginning of the oddities, after this it becomes almost completely random.
Such issues of lack of intelligence come down to foolish writing and are simply frustrating, decreasing the quality of the movie, which otherwise is competently shot and acted.
So far it's okay, and one would like to watch how it ends, however as perhaps too commonly with thriller-type or crime movies, especially with a hint of horror, the writing has frustrating aspects and is often positively baffling. Problems are artificially introduced, left unresolved and drawn out so that the film will have a full run-time. Characters behave in the most pointless, unintelligent ways, but only at crucial moments. This is typically related to an unparalleled lack of communicative or reasoning ability, coupled with an uncooperative or impatient colleague/super/witness/loved one etc.
More particularly in this case, the detective's wife is first creeped out by and careful about the neighbour, while trying to stay friendly to him, however when the relationship gets only slightly better, it is indicated that she seems somehow positively intrigued by him on a personal level, although there is no lack of creepiness and awkwardness of interaction, aside from a conspicuous absence of the neighbour's supposed wife (supposedly because of a depression), and although the detective is a perfectly good guy and there is no real issue in their relationship (in fact there is not much of any emotion or relationship drama in this movie).
More than that, the detective himself is strangely reluctant and inconsistent at following his "intuition" about the guy and simply ignores and doesn't mention to his wife that the neighbour's supposed "daughter" came to him and said it is not really her father but a complete stranger... Apparently casually dismissing this as merely eccentric behaviour or a joke of the girl, while merely vaguely hinting at it to his wife as something that "creeped him out".
And when the detective turned professor finally points a colleague towards the investigation of the neighbour, and this colleague quite foolishly directly turns up for an interview at his place, and then immediately turns up as a burn victim next to the two other people who died in the fire in the house right next to the detective and the creep, he fails to mention to the superior investigator that he had pointed him towards the creep (and of course has no relation to the other dead family) but instead merely mentions that the neighbour had the TV on while the fire was raging (which is deemed far too indifferent).
When he later mentions it after all, the superior ignores it simply (angrily, for some reason, what else).
In addition to this, a witness of the unsolved case is annoyingly uncooperative and uncommunicative, always running away, and unwilling to simply look at a picture and say if she knows the person. Her avoiding behaviour and inability to even stand (the f-- -) still almost makes one want to smack her as a viewer, however it also shows a communicative inability and overindulgence of those interacting with her.
Unfortunately that is just the beginning of the oddities, after this it becomes almost completely random.
Such issues of lack of intelligence come down to foolish writing and are simply frustrating, decreasing the quality of the movie, which otherwise is competently shot and acted.
I had some hopes and expectations to this movie, despite not knowing about it prior to finding it by sheer chance. I read the synopsis, and it sounded interesting, and thus I had some expectations to it. Plus the fact that Japan usually put some pretty good movies out there.
But "Creepy" (aka "Kurîpî: Itsuwari no rinjin") failed to deliver where it counted. Sure, it started out as a good enough movie and had potential, but then it just faltered, stumbled and never recovered from the blow that it took at the hands of director Kiyoshi Kurosawa. The movie just went downhill so fast that you could hardly blink.
The movie is about a retired police detective who has put the police life behind him and is trying to start over in a new place with his wife. But one day the neighbor's daughter tells him that her father is not actually her father, and a mystery starts to unravel, pulling in the retired detective.
Sure, the storyline had potential, but it just became a farce with the way that the story progressed and with some of the things that took place on the screen.
Actors Hidetoshi Nishijima and Teruyuki Kagawa were actually carrying the movie quite nicely, but ultimately lost the struggling battle against a poorly script. It seemed like the script was a first draft and director Kiyoshi Kurosawa didn't have time to wait for a re-written and more thought-through script and just went with the first draft.
There were so many things throughout the movie that just made little or no sense at all, and is something that you really should witness for yourself. And the plot of the story ended up being more of a laughable joke than a serious movie plot.
And I have seen some fast working drugs in movies and TV series before, but the potency of the drug used in this movie just took first place. It was just hilarious.
As much as I like Japanese movies and Asian cinemas, then it was just impossibly to overlook the flaws of "Creepy" and find something overly entertaining about it. My rating of this movie ends up at a very flat 3 out of 10 stars.
But "Creepy" (aka "Kurîpî: Itsuwari no rinjin") failed to deliver where it counted. Sure, it started out as a good enough movie and had potential, but then it just faltered, stumbled and never recovered from the blow that it took at the hands of director Kiyoshi Kurosawa. The movie just went downhill so fast that you could hardly blink.
The movie is about a retired police detective who has put the police life behind him and is trying to start over in a new place with his wife. But one day the neighbor's daughter tells him that her father is not actually her father, and a mystery starts to unravel, pulling in the retired detective.
Sure, the storyline had potential, but it just became a farce with the way that the story progressed and with some of the things that took place on the screen.
Actors Hidetoshi Nishijima and Teruyuki Kagawa were actually carrying the movie quite nicely, but ultimately lost the struggling battle against a poorly script. It seemed like the script was a first draft and director Kiyoshi Kurosawa didn't have time to wait for a re-written and more thought-through script and just went with the first draft.
There were so many things throughout the movie that just made little or no sense at all, and is something that you really should witness for yourself. And the plot of the story ended up being more of a laughable joke than a serious movie plot.
And I have seen some fast working drugs in movies and TV series before, but the potency of the drug used in this movie just took first place. It was just hilarious.
As much as I like Japanese movies and Asian cinemas, then it was just impossibly to overlook the flaws of "Creepy" and find something overly entertaining about it. My rating of this movie ends up at a very flat 3 out of 10 stars.
This is one of those good, slow-burning mysteries. If you actually feel like a detective and tend to be very judgmental when it comes to mystery movies, maybe skip this one, because it WILL get frustrating. It definitely has its flaws, but this movie is definitely what I would consider a classic mystery, very reminiscent of Hitchcock's work. It will definitely make you feel very confused in some parts, and leave you thinking for quite some time after you watch it.
Overall, a good mystery, very entertaining, and definitely worth watching.
7/10
Good looking movie with an interesting story that unfortunately falls flat because of the totally stupid and irrational behaviour from every single character (main characters, detectives(!) and police) in every single move and decision they make, which is something that drives the movie from beginning to end. One single rational and normal act early in the movie, would've ended it in 10 min.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe serial killer that the main character discusses with his class is Robert Hansen. He would kidnap prostitutes and take them in his plane into the forest where he would hunt them down and kill them. He lived in Alaska.
- ConexõesFeatured in Light in a Dark Corner (2017)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How long is Creepy?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 5.054.326
- Tempo de duração
- 2 h 10 min(130 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente