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
'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.
One of these scientists, Komada, is infected with the virus, but something in his immune system prevents it from fully taking control of him. He can transform into a beastly creature at will, but it's easy to see that he's loosing the battle for his soul, and it's up to him and his partner Koshigaya to try to find a cure. Along the way, they meet a beautiful young woman who is being chased by some political/mafioso types because her uncle is a famed psychic with a unique knowledge of the murders plaguing Tokyo.
Based on the comic book by Fujihiko Hosono and written by Yoshiaki Kawajiri (Ninja Scroll, Wicked City), "Biohunter" contains the usual elements of Kawajiri's past work including Asian spirituality and stylish writing. There is plenty of sex (the film opens with a graphic sex scene where a woman suddenly contracts the Demon Virus and attacks her lover) and nudity, and the violence is well up there, even though strangely enough "Biohunter" is restrained in this particular aspect.
The main problem with "Biohunter" is that it's just too short, coming in at barely 58 minutes in running time. So much happens during this picture that a lot is left unexplained to the viewer, which may be an even greater turn-off to those not accustomed to Japanese animation. It sort of gets to a point where things are happening, you don't know why, and you're just going along with the movie. I was seriously disappointed with this film's length, even though there is a lot working in its favor (mainly the big names behind the production), and the animation is fantastic.
But "Biohunter" is squarely reserved for die hard Anime' addicts. And as the ending shows, more is on the way, though I have not heard a peep about a "Biohunter 2" or "Biohunter: The Series."
6/10
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)