A mysterious old woman appears before Setsu, who has recently lost her only child in a tragic accident. She says she can bring Setsu's son, Daio back to life. After agreeing to this sinister... Read allA mysterious old woman appears before Setsu, who has recently lost her only child in a tragic accident. She says she can bring Setsu's son, Daio back to life. After agreeing to this sinister proposal, Daio returns to his mother, but to Setsu's horror, he is half decomposed and in... Read allA mysterious old woman appears before Setsu, who has recently lost her only child in a tragic accident. She says she can bring Setsu's son, Daio back to life. After agreeing to this sinister proposal, Daio returns to his mother, but to Setsu's horror, he is half decomposed and inhuman. To make him human again, he needs fresh human organs. Setsu does everything she can... Read all
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Featured reviews
It have nothing to save, all is bad, the actors and the acting is comical, the make up sucks, the plot is totally predictable...nothing can be saved.
At least, the suffering ends after only 45 minutes, and seems that the director and the rest of the crew don't take the movie seriously.
I read somewhere that this movie is the first part of a hexalogy based in Hideshi Hino's tales...i hope the rest of the movies will be better...because if the are worst than this, this will be without a doubt the worst saga of horror films.
The root story is quite good as grief turns to bloody madness, though the scene writing is a mixed bag as the wry dark humor sometimes just comes off as immature and ill-considered, and a lot of dialogue is altogether clunky and bad. Asato's direction is not so sure-footed here, and between that and the material, the acting is often too over the top for its own good as everyone seemed unsure of what tone to strike, or where on the spectrum their contribution should fall. The cast sure does try, though, especially Yamamoto Mirai. Some of the practical effects look pretty decent - namely scattered instances of blood or gore - but the more extraordinary an effect tries to be, or needs to be, the worse it looks, and this includes composite shots and rear projection. The fundamental image is so bare-faced and glaring to be all but painful on the eyes (especial bad news for some character designs and backgrounds that are abjectly cartoonish) and the audio is imbalanced, troubling the original music which in and of itself is pretty good.
There are fine ideas in this flick, and I can imagine easily enough how it might have looked if Asato and all others involved had all due opportunity to spread their wings and make 'The boy from hell' the best blast of horror storytelling that it could be. Unfortunately that's not what happened, and this more closely represents the purposefully schlocky, low-grade, transparently false nonsense that might air on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming block as adult-oriented mimicry of live-action children's fare from the 60s or 70s. It doesn't look good, and with the apparent limitations on the production, it wears on one's patience quite quickly. I don't think the sum total is altogether rotten, but very simply, this is not a picture you need to spend any time with. There are better things to watch, and whatever you might want out of this, you can find it elsewhere.
It's a little gory and it's got a bit of body horror, but it never commits enough to be too horrific. I guess it also deals with a family tragedy that plays out like the one seen near the start of 2018's Hereditary. I've got you, Ari Aster, taking ideas from then-14-year-old obscure Japanese horror movies that aren't short films but aren't long enough to be features exactly! You will pay for your crimes (jokes, no one has a patent on people's heads getting knocked off while sticking them out of moving vehicles).
The Boy from Hell is bizarre but it is about a boy who dies and then goes to hell and then he kind of comes back so I got what I was after, based on that title. It's low-grade in a sort of charming way, and has some dark fun for just under an hour and then ends. Maybe they were going for something a bit deeper and it didn't register, but that's okay. I kind of liked what I thought this was. What my sleepy, still-recovering-from-a-mild-cold body/mind thought it was.
It's makes even less sense than it sounds like believe it or not, but by gawd is it entertaining. The charmingly cheap green screen effects are immediately striking. Then there's the surprisingly graphic deaths of children. Not since Beware! Children At Play have I seen so many gory child deaths depicted in such an unflinching manner. Then, there's the centerpiece of the movie - a jaw-dropping dream(?) sequence where the titular Boy from Hell goes "home" and wreaks even greater havoc. This sequence then returns later on for an even stranger climax.
This is the first film I've seen from Hideshi Hino's Theater of Horror series. Every other movie in this series sounds interesting to say the least (one of them is called Lizard Baby, another is about zombie dolls) so best believe I'll be giving them a watch.
Details
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color