Um vírus mortal transforma pessoas em demônios. Somente um cientista e seu amigo, um dos poucos humanos que resistiu a infecção, podem acabar com a infecção e evitar que mais pessoas se cont... Ler tudoUm vírus mortal transforma pessoas em demônios. Somente um cientista e seu amigo, um dos poucos humanos que resistiu a infecção, podem acabar com a infecção e evitar que mais pessoas se contaminem.Um vírus mortal transforma pessoas em demônios. Somente um cientista e seu amigo, um dos poucos humanos que resistiu a infecção, podem acabar com a infecção e evitar que mais pessoas se contaminem.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (narração)
- Mary
- (English version)
- (narração)
- Mikawa
- (English version)
- (narração)
- Boss
- (English version)
- (narração)
- Mary
- (as Tomoko Furakawa)
- Kamagaya
- (narração)
- Tabe
- (narração)
- Sayaka
- (English version)
- (narração)
- Komada
- (English version)
- (narração)
- Koshigaya
- (English version)
- (narração)
- (as Matt Miller)
- Sayaka
- (narração)
- Subordinate
- (narração)
- Lieutenant
- (narração)
- Police Officer
- (narração)
- Office Worker
- (narração)
- (as Mizue Otsuka)
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (narração)
- (as Andy Philpot)
- Bokudoh
- (English version)
- (narração)
- Komada
- (narração)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
The storyline in "Baio Hantâ" (aka "Bio Hunter") was quite good. It is a storyline for a mature audience, given the horror elements and the whole concept of the plot. So I think writers Fujihiko Hosono, Yoshiaki Kawajiri and Naoko Takahashi put together something quite good back then.
Visually then "Baio Hantâ" is adequately holding up still today, though I wasn't overly keen on the way that the faces were drawn in general. But that was a minor detail really. The art style was good and the animation was good.
I sat through an English dubbed version, both back in the late 1990s and again here in 2023. I am not overly keen on dubbing, as I prefer the original language to whatever I am watching. But the voice acting in the dubbing was adequate here, which counted for something.
"Baio Hantâ" is definitely well-worth checking out if you enjoy horror-laced entertainment.
My rating of "Baio Hantâ" lands on a six out of ten stars.
Overall i say 7 out of 10 for this kind of anime
'Maestro, Yûzô Satô's exhilaratingly blood-spattered anime classic 'Bio Hunter' abounds excitingly with doomy, Neo-noir shadowed terrors! Satô creates a fascinatingly lurid realm of eerie, meta-mythical madness, an apocalyptic nightmare of preternaturally psychotronic Psi-Warfare!
Of course, the other half of the equation is the writing, Kawajiri Yoshiaki's adaptation of Hosono Fujihiko's manga. Here, too, however, I find the picture to be a great success, for the tale on hand is highly engaging, absorbing, and satisfying, if also plainly disturbing. Even over the abbreviated runtime of sixty minutes a gratifying amount of careful minutiae was poured into the narrative and scene writing to round out a story of horror, science fiction, and fantasy: demonic possession in the form of a virus, monstrous transformations, easy infection and corruption in halls of power, and loose, covert organizations that fight the terrors of the night. Albeit in a different manner, there's really just as much detail in the writing as there is in the animation; just as much to the point, diminutive though the length may be, the plot is complete and compelling. One does wish, perhaps, that the feature were longer, expanded upon so as to provide more thrills, even more action and horror, and more of the ghastly creature designs that make this the minor gem it is - but even at that the sum total is marvelously, darkly fun and invigorating, exactly what we want out of such genre fare. 'Bio hunter' is succinct and concise, and there's a wisdom in that, too.
For the nature of the material and the sheer intensity of the violence this won't be for everyone, but anyone with an appreciation for horror is sure to have a blast. It's wild, outright grotesque, and borderline exploitative, but also superbly animated and written, and all around fantastic. It's not anything one needs to go out of their way to see, but if this is the type of movie that's up your alley and you do have an opportunity to watch, at only one hour long 'Bio hunter' is well worth checking out.
Two molecular biologists, Komada and Koshigaya have day jobs lecturing at a university, but on the side they're self-proclaimed bio-hunters who track-down, or receive call-outs to those who are infected by the unusual demon virus that transforms humans into hungry demons with special powers. Soon they find themselves dealing with a mysterious lady, who somehow shares a connection with a mighty strong demon terrorising the night streets of a Tokyo ripping open young women to devour their livers.
The fascinating facet here, is that Komada happens to be half-human, half-demon, as he was infected by the demon virus. However his human qualities are able to control the hunger of his demon side, not without some growing pains, but in spite of it, this ability can help him sense out demons which makes it easy for the duo to do their jobs. It gave the character another dimension to work off, especially his inner battle over his responsibility to this infliction and desire to live a normal life. The final image, after the insane encounter with the chief demon, tentacles and all. Had him walking away from possible happiness painting the heartache, but also the fear of what he is, hanging over his head. His needs, while there, aren't important, as the dedication to his work is his safeguard. And the otherworldly experience brought upon by the final demon encounter heightened those senses to shut himself away.
I really enjoyed the interesting combination, and character shades between Komada and Koshigaya, as I found it to overshadow everything else. Yep, even the nasty demons and their messy aftermath. This included the strong opening and closing sequences. Whenever the demons are on the screen, the way the virus attacks the human genetic code causing the infected to morph, or grow monstrous deformities with a life of its own had me thinking of a few of Rob Bottin's practical effects from The Thing. It's just uncanny. Well, excluding Komada's demon transformation, which is a neat looking design. The music score hits all the right notes, at times, quite haunting and the animation looks good. I just wish it was longer.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesBased on a one-shot manga by Fujihiko Hosono.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe US credits call the original manga a comic book.
- Citações
Komada: Want Ketchup?
Koshigaya: Very funny. It's not me eating the food, it's that damn thing inside me.
Komada: An unusual consumption of protein and iron. Classic symptoms of a person who's been infected.
Koshigaya: Don't look at me like that. I'm not a guinea pig.
Komada: Can't help it. You are now a vital scientific specimen. That virus has found a home inside of you.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosIn the US DVD, the credits scroll over a freeze frame of the demon jumping into the city.
- ConexõesFeatured in Anime Abandon: Bio Hunter (2017)