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IMDbPro

Kamisama no Iutoori

Título original: Kamisama no iu tôri
  • 2014
  • TV-MA
  • 1 h 57 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Takashi Miike, Nao Ômori, Ryûnosuke Kamiki, Lily Franky, Atsuko Maeda, Shôta Sometani, Sôta Fukushi, Ryôsuke Yamamoto, Hirona Yamazaki, Mio Yûki, Minori Hagiwara, Nana Komatsu, and Nijirô Murakami in Kamisama no Iutoori (2014)
Assistir a Trailer [English SUB]
Reproduzir trailer1:34
1 vídeo
25 fotos
Supernatural HorrorAdventureHorrorSci-FiThriller

Um grupo de estudantes do ensino médio é obrigado a brincar de morte sem saber quem, por que ou como.Um grupo de estudantes do ensino médio é obrigado a brincar de morte sem saber quem, por que ou como.Um grupo de estudantes do ensino médio é obrigado a brincar de morte sem saber quem, por que ou como.

  • Direção
    • Takashi Miike
  • Roteiristas
    • Muneyuki Kaneshiro
    • Akeji Fujimura
    • Hiroyuki Yatsu
  • Artistas
    • Sôta Fukushi
    • Hirona Yamazaki
    • Ryûnosuke Kamiki
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,3/10
    9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Takashi Miike
    • Roteiristas
      • Muneyuki Kaneshiro
      • Akeji Fujimura
      • Hiroyuki Yatsu
    • Artistas
      • Sôta Fukushi
      • Hirona Yamazaki
      • Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • 49Avaliações de usuários
    • 33Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer [English SUB]
    Trailer 1:34
    Trailer [English SUB]

    Fotos24

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    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
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    + 19
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal53

    Editar
    Sôta Fukushi
    Sôta Fukushi
    • Shun Takahata
    Hirona Yamazaki
    • Ichika Akimoto
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • Amaya Takeru
    Shôta Sometani
    Shôta Sometani
    • Satake
    Mio Yûki
    Mio Yûki
    • Shoko Takase
    Jingi Irie
    • Oku Eiji
    Ryôsuke Yamamoto
    • Mikinori Taira
    Minori Hagiwara
    Minori Hagiwara
    • Yumi Taoka
    Sasuke Ohtsuru
    • Sanada Yukio
    Naoto Takahashi
    • Maeda Kotaro
    Dôri Sakurada
    Dôri Sakurada
    • Class 2-B President
    Daisuke Kikuta
    • Morikawa (Student Council President)
    Nijirô Murakami
    Nijirô Murakami
    • Yoshikawa Haruhiko
    Tommy's Masa
    • Daruma
    • (narração)
    Atsuko Maeda
    Atsuko Maeda
    • Beckoning Cat
    • (narração)
    Katsuhiro Higo
    • Kokeshi Taro
    • (narração)
    Ryûhei Ueshima
    • Kokeshi Kenichi
    • (narração)
    Jimon Terakado
    • Kokeshi Oni
    • (narração)
    • Direção
      • Takashi Miike
    • Roteiristas
      • Muneyuki Kaneshiro
      • Akeji Fujimura
      • Hiroyuki Yatsu
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários49

    6,39K
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    8Quinoa1984

    an entertaining return to form for Miike, though on a scale it's only kinda WTF-crazy-pants

    It had been a few years since I had seen a new Takashi Miike movie before somehow stumbling upon the trailer for As the Gods Will, which had such delightful and self-consciously silly visuals like a floating head (or a Doramus or whatever it's called) making teenagers heads explode - the blood is actually red marbles though so it's alright - or a talking Polar bear crushing other teens into mulch for being caught as liars. Seeing this was a very good reminder about how much fun Miike can have when he has some characters that he likes - and others he knows he can kill in some creative and occasionally gruesome ways - but it's also about translating a Manga to screen in a way that is... I won't say more "kid" friendly, but certainly more accessible than the transgressive and really bonkers Ichi the Killer, also based on a Manga. But as with most things, with Miike there is a curve.

    So many of his films are bizarre WTF-fests that something like As the Gods Will gets kind of close to the top... ten perhaps, maybe not five, but that's saying just how insane he's taken the visuals and surrealism and fantasy in his past work - also see The Happiness of the Katakuris, Gozu or The Great Yokhai War for more examples, or any given Dead or Alive movie, mostly the first one - and how he could give less than a damn about good taste or morality, at least in the sense of offending imprudent tastes. With this, the parallels one might think to Battle Royale are apparent up front, with high schoolers being slaughtered left and right (though in this case one by one by a giant floating talking head that will only stop if, according to him/it, someone presses the big red button on the opposite side of its face), but there's also here a much cheerier version of Saw, where there are many "games" to play, but it's not like these students have been picked out for being bad or need to be taught lessons.

    Matter of fact, its not totally clear why there are these objects like a giant cat that will kill the students in the gym it's at because, uh, there are mice costumes that need to be put on(!) or the Polar Bear or other floating dolls that sing songs and make one guess who is singing and so on. I think this is perhaps due to being a *very* Japanese movie (I haven't read the Manga, but also this movie is hard to track down in the US, it's only available as an import and even rarer to get to play on an American DVD player), and that there is not much at all explained in the way of why there are these... giant floating cubes ala the movie Arrival floating above major cities. Are there terrorist attacks? Nope, says a guy who looks like a Japanese Wario from the NES games; these are aliens... or are they?

    Why are they coming to Earth to make teenagers play these life/death games? What do these "Gods" want from us? But on the other hand, hey, who cares? Miike gets us invested enough in the small handful of characters that seem to be liking, Shun being the main character who has lived a "boring" life before and is now having to think on his wits every moment of these games, so that we are focused on their will-they-won't-theys as they face off against these bizarro elements. The characters, including the punk Amayo who seems like he's ego-maniacal from minute one, are types, but the writers and Miike know how to make them into human beings that we can get behind in all of his, and as bat**** everything gets, we have them as an anchor, at least of a sort. So while there certainly could be just a little, even a small scene, where things could be explained (a friend I watched this with said more might come in a sequel, and good luck with all of that I say), and a small side character that is on the outside world, a shut-in, watching all of what's happening on TV could've had a little more going on with him, what the filmmaker does with these five acts (and it's really five, not three) is remarkable.

    This is tenacious, entertaining cinema that will certainly delight those who are more accustomed to the... idiosyncrasies of Japanese genre cinema (bordering, or just, exploitation filmmaking, though Miike is a cut above, say, the guys who do like Tokyo Gore Police or the Machine Girl or schlock like that, he really cares about his shots and he has had for a long time a great sense of comic timing). There's even an element of, in short, if this were a Japanese anime/animated film, we probably might not think twice about 75% of what goes on here. That it's in live action makes it all the more purely Gonzo, and all the more of a fun time for it, albeit with a sad ending.
    8zuhairvazir

    Musical Chairs

    The synopsis to this toy store killing machine immediately brings an earlier Japanese film to mind, the ruthless and fumingly shocking 'Battle Royale, 2000' from auteur Kinji Fukasaku (Tora! Tora! Tora!, 1970). However Miike's film-cunning and dice rolls are perhaps simply far more simple than the keen viewer would like to imagine. Simple thus unworried, assured, extremely dark-humored, filled with rapid-fire philosophy and at least six blood banks blown to pieces.

    Take the sound editing for instance. We know what has happened despite the event not being shown and instead replaced by an elementary sound or a children's song. 'As the Gods Will' is a director's nightmare, a feat only someTHING like Miike can execute.

    Splattered with a plethora of psyched out colours and one of the few films where the CGI works like the crown wheel of the Oyster Perpetual, Miike's direction feels more confident as his obsession with Manga and Nao Ômori (Ichi the Killer, 2001) grows into a playful bear, the size of two Transformers, when they're not vehicles.

    This film is filled with surreal images and evidently decapitated mannequins with floored extras mixed in with the lot. It is 'Maze Runner' meets 'The Running Man' inside Miike's Daedalian head. Perhaps that is an overstatement, probably I'm still thinking; 'but seriously, what's the deal here?'. However it may be, Miike has paid homage to ancient Japanese films of gore... I mean yore. Well not really, this seems more like the stop motion films from the Golden Age of Japanese cinema and director Ishiro Honda - but 'As the Gods Will' is sort of an antithesis to those films in terms of its antagonist's characterization and build up.

    The director's films are far from subtle, including this baby cannibal elephant; however this time there is a certain calm undercurrent to the approach and style of the hypermanic Takashi Miike.

    A strangely entertaining film that must be watched to further strengthen faith in the art of cinema.

    Absolutely unbelievable.
    6firedace

    Takashi Miike is an artist

    At core, Takashi Miike's As The Gods Will may seem like another Battle Royale rip-off as we've seen oh so many times before but I don't exactly believe that to be the case.

    The cinematography on one hand was gripping, the color scheme meshed so amazingly. This was a rather pretty movie to look at all things considered.

    The acting was a bit weak from some of the minor characters but the actors for the main characters was great.

    Now as for the movie itself, it was fun which really is all I demand of a movie. To be entertaining. I don't even think the premise was bad.

    The concept of the gods playing games with humans in order to test their skills is something that has been around since ancient Greece, but this did it exceptionally well as it never felt too forced. If it had gone to great lengths trying to explain everything it would've ruined the feel of the movie.

    It's a ride from the start to the ending, never once did I feel bored during it and there were several moments where it was actually suspenseful.

    I know some film snobs might overlook this movie as not being good enough due to it being a bit silly, but I think they are missing out on a brilliant experience.

    I recommend this movie if you just want to sit back and enjoy a suspenseful ride with charm, creepiness and gore.
    7lathe-of-heaven

    Stunning, twisty-turny, and NOT what you expect. The 'WTF did I just watch' guy totally misses the point... Rewatchability: Very High Blu-ray: excellent A:10 V:10

    WOW! This is NOT my normal fare, let me tell you. Normally I would cross to the other side of the 'street' rather than watch many of Takashi Miike's films. BUT... I had indeed kind of braced myself for a bit of a cartoony gore-fest, although that is NOT my first choice in films. But, this premise was SO damn WAAAAAAAAY OUT there, that I just had to check it out.

    Man, I truly do not know where to start... I am still kind of reeling a bit from the film, which I JUST finished. Well, firstly, it was not really that realistically gory or graphic; it mostly had a more cartoon-like vibe to it. And, regardless of the director's NOTORIOUS proclivity for extreme, sadistic violence (thus my normal avoidance of his films) this one honestly came off as not really that explicit or 'Real'. Other films of his where he has actual PEOPLE doing horrific, REALISTIC things to other people, I wouldn't come within 100 miles of, but based upon the extremely Fantastical premise, I figured that this would not likely be another one of his super heavy-handed Sadist- fests, and it truly wasn't.

    YES, the basic premise of what these 'Gods' are doing to these students is of course in principle quite terrible. But, that really wasn't the point of the film; the primary focus was NOT just a big set-piece for a bunch of gory deaths, although those do happen, but for most part, with a couple of exceptions (where I did FF a bit) they were not graphic or overly explicit.

    At the end, without giving anything away, you are left with a feeling that there are more layers to this than seems evident on the surface. As a matter of fact, the last minute or two actually left me kind of puzzled because I didn't quite understand what exactly happened (so I will be frigg'n LIVING on discussion boards until I find that out!) One underlying level of the film is fairly apparent concerning the one fellow learning to appreciate the life that he has (sort of a Psychedelic, Acid-induced 'IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE' by way of Takashi Miike) But, even beyond that there are other things touched upon and quite unexpectedly thought-provoking.

    So, I can fully understand how some here (3/5?) who are likely VERY hard core Miike fans, would be BITTERLY disappointed that this is NOT one of his usual more horrific and sadistic films, and probably just find this one totally Stupid. Understandable... BUT... for me, NOT a usual fan of Miike, heh... what I would call by comparison a 'Normal' person (using the term VERY loosely) I think the movie if you give it some thought, actually is more intriguing and entertaining and surprisingly thought-provoking than what might appear at first glance.

    So, I would say that if you are a hard core Miike fan and you really LIKE his usual hard core stuff, than this film will probably leave you flatter than Chaz Bono. BUT... If you like your Horror films REALLY Imaginative, and you aren't just looking for a bunch of torture-porn sadism, and if you can be patient and give the movie some thought, I think that many people will definitely come away from seeing this with several different feelings and levels that the movie touches in you that you would not expect...
    5ofumalow

    Meh

    I frequently like Miike's films, and had missed this one--I only found out about it because of the accusations that it had somehow been ripped off by "squid Game," not that I've seen that series either--so I decided to give it a look. It's certainly well-crafted, but this is a case where his liveliness and skill as a director can't do much with material that is inherently silly and repetitious. It starts to wear out patience even in the first setpiece, and every successive one is the same thing: Another "god" in cutesy CGI critter form killing off teens in a "game" with arbitrary rules just cuz...well, because apparently gods don't have anything better to do.

    The characters are too one-dimensional (and mostly too shortlived) to care about, the manga-based action too absurd to work up any real suspense, the action too absurd to be exciting. I admit I didn't make it to the end; there was absolutely nothing of value beyond the slick production values to hold attention. I'm giving it a 5 because it's the sort of "extreme" Japanese cinema some people like (which usually involves comely schoolgirls being slaughtered in "gory" yet patently unrealistic, CGI-heavy ways), but if you want anything more than that pretty dumb level of empty, colorful stimulus, it's one of Miike's least interesting projects. Of course, he makes so many, it hardly affects his batting average.

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    • Curiosidades
      The video game Shun plays near the beginning is Biohazard 6 (Resident Evil 6).

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    • How long is As the Gods Will?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 15 de novembro de 2014 (Japão)
    • País de origem
      • Japão
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Idioma
      • Japonês
    • Também conhecido como
      • As the Gods Will
    • Empresas de produção
      • Oriental Light and Magic (OLM)
      • Toho Pictures
      • Toho
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    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 1.938.654
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 57 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Atmos
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Takashi Miike, Nao Ômori, Ryûnosuke Kamiki, Lily Franky, Atsuko Maeda, Shôta Sometani, Sôta Fukushi, Ryôsuke Yamamoto, Hirona Yamazaki, Mio Yûki, Minori Hagiwara, Nana Komatsu, and Nijirô Murakami in Kamisama no Iutoori (2014)
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