Articles tagged with: supernatural
MOVIES, action, animation, anime, comedy, educational, horror, romantic, supernatural »
Wow. Our queue’s been filling up faster than ever before, but there’s a lot of really cool stuff to be seen. I’m going to do my best to knock a bunch of these out over the next few weeks, continuing the capsule format. Hopefully we’ll cover a lot more ground this way. This week I have School Rumble Season 2 – Part 1, Ghost Hunt Part 1, Shuffle! vol 6, and the whole season of xxxHolic. Coming up we’ll have reviews of Ouran Host Club part 1, the Negima Special, …
Asian, Japan, MOVIES, anime, candy, drama, manga, supernatural, thriller »
Director: Shusuke Kaneko
Starring: Tatsuya Fujiwara, Kenichi Matsuyama, Erika Toda
Genre: Manga
I’ve officially had to watch this film twice past my patience limit just because I couldn’t get on the review quick enough before I forgot it all. So here it is, just in time for Halloween cosplay ideas, and so I won’t have to watch it again. —Kris
Death Note: The Last Name starts off running, with an admirably quick and tidy recap, hinging on your ability to ignore the odd usage of Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Dani California …
Asian, Japan, MOVIES, action, cult cinema, horror, splatter, supernatural »
Director: Shinya Tsukamoto
Starring: Hitomi, Ryuhei Matsuda, Shinya Tsukamoto, Yoshio Harada, Ren Osugi
Genre: Japan, Horror, Supernatural, Splatter
Note: This was originally going to be an “in-brief” review, but it soon ballooned out of control. It’s not as polished as I would like, but it is what it is. Enjoy.
Taking cues from Nightmare on Elm Street, The Cell, detective thrillers, and possibly the ending to Hellraiser II: Bloodlines, Shinya Tsukamoto’s Nightmare Detective depicts a modern day Tokyo plagued by a sleep-invading serial killer. Targeting those with a hankering for self-destruction, the killer …
Asian, Japan, anime, manga, supernatural »
Episodes: 1-26
Genre: comedy, vampire, supernatural, romantic
Release Date: March 18, 2008
So I’m not an Anime enthusiast; even the occasional Anime series makes me cringe (do they have to squeal and flap their arms all the time?), but if you are making an attempt because, like me, your betrothed is up to his eyeballs in coursework and DVD screeners, or just because you’re curious, then I hope to be some help. And, as you can see, I’d be a hard-sell.
Moon Phase (Tsukuyomi) describes the backstory of each character eloquently and with …
Asian, Japan, animation, anime, drama, manga, news, supernatural »
NOTE: This is my introduction to Mushi-Shi. Anything below was gleaned from vol 6. Hopefully I will get to watch more!
In hidden rural pockets all across historical Japan, supernatural beings called “mushi” roam, ravaging villages and village folk. Because humans become immersed in routine and tangible expectations, sometimes the mushi invade invisibly, inadvertently (due to reckless human error or ignorance), and the only way to tame them is through a Mushi master, vigilantly trained in creature classification and warding. In Mushi-Shi, the master …
Asian, Japan, animation, anime, manga »
In 2005 the Anime world saw something akin to America’s own Grindhouse double feature. The Clamp Double Feature was a “co-op” production of two back-to-back theatrical films from the works of all-girl doujinshi group turned superstar-manga-team, Clamp. These two flicks take place in vastly different worlds, each providing a substantial stand-alone entertainment, but feature enough interplay of narrative and thematic elements that the two films demand to be watched in conjunction more than once.
Now, before watching these two films I was not familiar with the Tsubasa or xxxHolic universes, save …
Asian, He-Said She-Said, Korea, MOVIES, MUST SEES, action, comedy, cult cinema, curious, indie, splatter »
HE SAID:
Nympho teacher
cyborg schoolgirl hooker
penis gun
gay gangster
tiger man
crippled hands
tiger eat da penis…twice
Love makes you do crazy things.
Never Belongs to Me is quite possibly the weirdest film I will see this year. Far from the pretentious weird of last year’s Another Hole in the Head pick, Id, Never Belongs to Me is more the fun and random weird, the likes popularized by such late night fare as Aqua Teen Hunger Force (incidentally, Kris just got me Season 5 for my birthday. Rock on). In fact, watching the film I thought to …
Japan, MUSINGS, videogames »
I don’t usually do videogame reviews, but Persona 3 has prompted me to do so. Simply put, Persona 3 rocks. I’ve now lost three weekends to the game, and the outlooks for forthcoming weekends are looking similar for the foreseeable future. This hasn’t happened in years. It’s easily the best, quirkiest, most interesting, and most fun RPG I’ve played in years. If I’ve got your attention, read on for a quick and dirty review.
If ever there was a mashup game, Persona 3 is it. It’s one part RPG, one part …
Asian, Japan, MOVIES, action, horror, thriller »
When I was young we spent a few years in Texas. Apart from the impressive array of bugs, including cockroaches and scorpions, we were also pestered by a fair number of snakes. On one or two occasions we actually had a snake end up in the house, but the encounter I remember most clearly was a time when my father was doing some yard work in front of the house and a snake came up to visit. Just as quickly as my sister and I voiced an according alert, my …
Asian, BEST OF LISTS, Japan, MOVIES, MUST SEES, action, animation, anime, cult cinema, documentary, fantasy, manga, sci fi »
I’ve been meaning to write this for quite some time, but it took an article from Twitch (and my being way too busy to see any new films this week) to spur me to actually put this list down on paper.
Now, whatever your opinions are on anime, there’s no doubt you harbor a few reservations toward it. Even if you like anime, you have to worry about the “animation is for children” stigma from the uninitiated, or the dreaded badge of the Otaku from those who potentially are (Rachel Bigler …
Asian, Japan, MOVIES, MUSINGS, animation, anime, cult cinema, drama, electronica, fantasy »
Paprika
Note: If you’re already a fan of anime and familiar with Satoshi Kon, skip to the third paragraph.
HE SAID
Truth be told, anime is no different than any other storytelling medium. The rabid otaku would like you to believe otherwise, but really, it’s just like everything else. There’s a vast wasteland of uninspired, tedious dreck, above which rises a small mountain of notable works. The majority of the forget-ables are children’s shows, much like what plays on the Cartoon Network or Saturday morning; endless serialized battles, or tales of consumerist …
America, MOVIES, SF Bay Area, drama, indie, sci fi, science »
If a friend you’ve known for 10 years suddenly made plans to leave town without saying goodbye, wouldn’t you be a little alarmed? If he was leaving a new promotion, a budding relationship, a slew of colleagues and comrades, wouldn’t you be a teensy bit suspicious? What if he told you he was 14,000 years old? Well, The Man from Earth is a tale about such a man who appears to be about 35 when he’s actually 14,000. On the eve of his departure, huddled around …
MOVIES »
A landmark film in every respect, Jigoku (Hell, aka: The Sinners of Hell), directed by the “father of Japanese horror,” Nobuo Nakagawa (Duel at Lightning Pass), is rife with Faustian allegory, religious symbolism, theological meditations, and brilliantly innovative special effects. The film has since been remade twice, by Tatsumi Kumashiro (The Inferno) and cult favorite Teruo Ishii (Japanese Hell) respectively, and inspired such American films as The Cell and What Dreams May Come. But after forty years, it is still Nakagawa’s original that stands head and shoulders above the rest
The …
Asian, Japan, MOVIES, action, fantasy, supernatural »
With director Takashi Miike, you’re never quite sure what you’re going to get. Whether stoic dramas (Sabu), gonzo comedies (Zebraman), gross-out masterpieces (Ichi the Killer) or radical takes on tried and true genres (Gozu), you can be sure you’re in for something you’ve never seen before. This film has been described as a live action Miyazaki tale, and while it certainly has a lot in common with Spirited Away, it’s definitely more Miike than Miyazaki. In fact, this cinematic tale of fantastical goblins and heroic tweens is actually a …
MOVIES, drama, supernatural, thriller »
There are quite a few Russian fairy tales that may even instill fear in the hearts of adults as they portend the forces of good and evil in, let’s just say less than subtle descriptions. Swooping spectres and witches flying around in Williams Sonoma-ware (Babayaga in her mortar-and-pestle mobile), children and the elderly bound and chained up for decades, and grossly misshapen scenery all add up to a stunningly spooky time. What’s really interesting is that beyond the supernatural exaggerations exists an impass from various other European mythology. Sometimes morality …
Asian, Japan, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, MOVIES, MUST SEES, comedy, cult cinema, curious, drama, horror, thriller »
Let me remind you that Yakusho Koji (Tampopo, Charisma, Memoirs of a Geisha) is much more than a pair of walking cheekbones with a ‘fro. He possesses the ability to simultaneously emote strength and warmth, intelligence and naïveté, charming fragility with weight-of-the-world endurance. This is why he’s perfect in the role of Michio Hayasaki, a hard-ass robotics engineer who, shortly after discovering doppelgängers or exact metaphysical xeroxes exist, is visited by his own. A scientist relies on strict order and facts, so of course Hayasaki is disturbed …
Asian, Japan, anime, drama, manga, sci fi »
Perpetually oscillating between the disturbing, mysterious, perverted, horrific, explosive, meditative, surreal, hilarious, and introspective, Gantz is one of the most entertaining, and frankly, best animes I’ve seen in recent years.
Asian, Japan, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, MOVIES, MUST SEES, cult cinema, curious, drama, supernatural, thriller »
Restore the rules of the world… Freedom’s just another disease… A truly healthy human longs to obey… These [magic] mushrooms are delicious!
CAN’T SEE THE FOREST FOR THE TREES? Kiyoshi Kurosawa became one of my favorite filmmakers rather quickly, although it has been a bumpy ride. I was enthralled by Cure, regrettably rushed through Kairo (aka: Pulse or Circuit), gleefully devoured Doppelgänger and Bright Future. Admittedly, I had to view the former in installments, periodically accessing the “rewind button of the mind” to comb through the surreal scenes …
