31 December 2013

Gyo: Tokyo Fish Attack (Japan, 2012)

The friends Kaori, Erika and Aki are on a vacation to celebrate their upcoming graduation, when suddenly an infestation of mysterious walking fish forces them to reevaluate everything they care about in order to stay alive.

Yes. You read that correct. It's fish, that walks on land, and not just small fishes, giant sharks and squids all rampage through the streets of Tokyo. Some scenes are so nasty that you can almost smell the rotting fish as armies of sea creatures crawl up on land. It goes from nasty to just bloody disgusting, actually. Based on a manga by Junji Ito (Uzumaki), Gyo is another one of his twisted creations that will gross you out and make you wonder how he sleeps at night. Some will probably watch it and deem it too weird, but that's just because it is.


Genre: Action/Animation/Horror

28 December 2013

Killer Toon (South Korea, 2013)

Popular horror web-comic artist Ji Yoon finds life imitating her own work when her publisher turns up dead in a way, precisely mirrors the images in her latest comic.

Killer Toon is an entertaining and creative thriller, and in some ways has a lot of fun with its genre. Because even though it's comics that is the main suspect, it manages to be quite serious and really draws you in to its web of mysteries. Both competent and daring, Killer Toon is yet another great thriller from South Korea.

Genre: Horror/Thriller

26 December 2013

Eko Eko Azarak: Wizard of Darkness (Japan, 1995)

Misa Kuroi is an adorable high-school girl who arrives at her new school when it is falling under an evil supernatural force. Trying to figure out who's behind the supernatural attack, Misa also has to deal with assumptions by her fellow classmates that believe she is the one behind it all. Misa and twelve other students are kept late after school hours one day to retake an exam. Then, after sunset, the entire school is deserted, and the students find themselves trapped inside and their teacher no where to be found. One by one, the thirteen students are picked up and disposed of in horrific and graphic fashion. It is now up to Misa to try and save them all.

Wizard of Darkness isn't exactly A+ material, but it's an enjoyable, low-budget teen-horror flick with school students who's experimenting with black magic and satanic rituals. Good stuff. 


Genre: Horror

23 December 2013

The Brain Man (Japan, 2013)

In a small town in Japan, a series of seemingly random explosion cases occur. Ichiro Suzuki knowns as "Brain Man" is fingered as an accomplice. He has outstanding memory and high intelligence, but doesn't seem to have human emotions. Neurosurgeon Mariko, who has her own personal trauma, believes that human nature is fundamentally good and tries to save criminals. She then becomes interested in Brain Man and works to uncover the truth.

The Brain Man is, hands down, one of the best thrillers in a long time. The suspense and the psychological games are all there, and it doesn't waste any time on unnecessary characters. It's exciting from the first frame to the last, and will without a doubt gain your full attention. Other directors should take note, this is how you make a compelling, nail-bitingly tight murder mystery.



Genre: Mystery/Thriller

20 December 2013

Reincarnation (Japan, 2005)

35 years ago, a college professor named Norihasa Omori visits a local hotel and films himself killing 11 of the hotel guests, employees and his own children as a part of his wish to understand reincarnation. Then, he commits suicide. Since then, the footage of the murders disappears. In the present day, horror movie director, Matsumura, decides to make a film about the massacre. As the date of the shoot draws near, Nagisa Sugiura, the actress who is set to star as Professor Omori's daughter Chisato, is haunted by the ghosts of the victims. She begins to hallucinate as she is plagued by nightmares of the killings.
Reincarnation (a.k.a. Rinne) starts good, gets better and then ends on a weaker note, but it's still an okay horror story. Also, the majority of viewers seems to love it. If you like the sound of ghosts, creepy dolls and serial killers, Reincarnation should be a pleasant surprise. 

Genre: Horror

17 December 2013

Gemini (Japan, 1999)

Yukio is living a charmed life: he is a respected young doctor with a successful practice and a beautiful wife. His only problem is that his wife is suffering from amnesia, and her past is unknown. Things begin to fall apart, however, when both his parents die suddenly, killed by a mysterious stranger with Yukio's face. Only when Yukio confronts this stranger will the mystery of his identity, and his wife's past, be revealed. 

Directed by Shinya Tsukamoto, Gemini (a.k.a. Soseiji) has that strange presence to it that he's so good at expressing in his films. It's sinister, genre-bending and at first you really don't know what to believe about what's going on. It could all be just a figure of your mind, or something much worse. Tsukamoto captures all these questions and presents them in an astonishing way, with great cinematography and screenplay.


Genre: Drama/Horror

15 December 2013

The Doll Master (South Korea, 2004)


5 young people, a quiet doll maker in a wheelchair and her dedicated helper, a chained old man in the basement and a mysterious young girl in red... all together in a lonely doll museum in the woods. What starts out as a fun trip to pose for new dolls soon turns into a nightmare that not everyone will survive.

The Doll Master features one of the creepiest things in horror films, scary dolls. While it's not really full of gore, The Doll Master manages to build up a tense and creepy atmosphere, and the great production values and good cast makes it worth a watch. When you're alone. At night.

Genre: Horror


13 December 2013

The Flu (South Korea, 2013)

The worst epidemic ever seen is sweeping through Bundang, the suburb of Seoul. When illegal immigrants enters the country, symptoms are plaguing scores of residents in Bundang. People are helpless against the airborne disease and the number of infected increases quickly, spreading chaos. As the worst-case scenario precaution, the city of half a million people, just 19 kilometers from Seoul, is about to be sealed off. The government orders a complete shutdown.

The Flu has all the right elements of a disaster film, great characters so that we don't just sit and wait for the next action scene, a sense of dread for the unknown virus, and also how it cares for its human characters and not just feels like an excuse to show scenes where thousands of people getting disposed of. Big-budget entertainment. 

Genre: Action/Drama

10 December 2013

Shogun's Sadism (Japan, 1976)

Two stories set in Edo during the Shogun era. During a time when Christians are persecuted vehemently, Iori falls in love with young Christian girl. When she and her family are captured during a raid, his sadistic master takes her as her personal slave to torment him, and tries breaking her spirit by means of torture. After Iori refuses to participate any longer he is exiled, but vows to get her back.

It's ok to feel uneasy while Shogun's Sadism (a.k.a. The Joy of Torture 2: Oxen Split Torturing). It's a graphic and shocking portrayal of how a sadistic shogun treats his prisoners as meat. We're constantly being shown the rape and torture these poor people has to suffer through, and there's no happy endings for anyone it seems. 

Recommended for those who enjoys torture flicks, and not for those who, well, don't want their entire evening ruined.  It may sound like I'm bashing it but I'm really not. The pure simplicity of its content is probably what speaks to me, and there seem to always come times when I'm in the mood for something this crazy.

Genre: Drama/Horror

6 December 2013

Black Rain (Japan, 1989)

Mr and Mrs Shizuma, and their niece Yasuko, make their way through the ruins of Hiroshima, just after the atomic bomb has dropped. Five years later, Yasuko is living with her aunt and uncle, and her senile grandmother, in a village containing many of the bomb survivors. Yasuko does not appear to be affected by the bomb, but the Shizuma's are worried about her marriage prospects, as she could succumb to radiation sickness at any time.

Black Rain won't cheer anyone up. It won't put a smile on your face or fill you even with a glimpse of hope. The haunting images of Hiroshima after the atomic bomb are horrific, and we are soon left to deal with the agony of the long and painful aftermath. It's a realistic portrayal of what was left of many peoples lives after an atomic bomb.

Grim and effective. Without a doubt one of the best films I've seen dealing with the Hiroshima bomb, and I'm grateful for being able to see director Shohei Imamura (The Eel) tackle this difficult subject. 


Genre: Drama

3 December 2013

Giant God Warrior Appears in Tokyo (Japan, 2013)

Giant God Warrior is a short film by Studio Ghibli, known for such classics as Spirited Away (2001) and Princess Mononoke (1997). Here, they bring out the God Warrior from their animated masterpiece Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1984), one of several god warriors who destroyed the world. This short film can easily be found online, and it doesn't really matter if it lacks subtitles. It's a true testament of how miniature sets and handmade props can outshine digital special effects and computer graphics. I would be so glad if the whole film industry would start using these techniques and practical effects, because it's so much more fun to watch. 

It clocks in at about ten minutes, but it's ten minutes of beautiful destruction and chaos, ten minutes of how Tokyo is reduced to ash.  

21 November 2013

Evil Dead Trap (Japan, 1988)

Nami hosts a late night home video program. She receives a tape which appears to be a real snuff film. She and her crew investigate the location where she meets a man looking for his brother who warns her to stay away. As she gets closer to the truth, she and her friends are subjected to a brutal nightmare.

If you've seen a lot of gory and bloody slasher flicks, then Evil Dead Trap will not be the one that finally makes you puke, but it's a decent entry in the world of horror. B-horror, anyway. Some brutal scenes and a couple of nasty special effects makes it definitely worth your while. 

Genre: Horror

16 November 2013

Gamera 2: Attack of Legion (Japan, 1996)

A year has passed since the battle between Gamera and the Gyaos, and Japan has struggled to rebuild its cities in the meantime. Suddenly, a series of bizarre incidents reveal a new threat to the land of the rising sun. On a moonlit stroll, science instructor Midori Honami watches as a huge meteor plunges into the mountain snow. The next night, two security guards are horrified as they see large insect-like creatures stealing glass bottles from a nearby warehouse. Soon after, the entire city of Sapporo is covered with strange plants and the link between these events soon becomes clear.

Attack of Legion is the second entry in Gamera's great reboot series, and it delivers spectacular action scenes with amazing miniature sets that gets completely demolished by giant monsters. It's almost like you want to cheer whenever an apartment complex or a skyscraper gets ripped apart because it looks so fantastic when all that concrete explode and crashes into other houses. It's a must-watch for every giant monster fan, and everyone who finds the thought of Tokyo being smashed to bits appealing. A kaiju masterpiece and by far one of the films in the genre.


Genre: Action/Drama/Fantasy

10 November 2013

Secret Sunshine (South Korea, 2007)

Lee Shin-ae and her only child move to the small town of Miryang. Her husband has recently died and she has decided to start life anew back in the hometown of her deceased husband. While entering Miryang, Shin-ae's car breaks down along a highway and she is able to get the local mechanic in Miryang named Kim Jong-chan to help her. Although they come from different social backgrounds, the pair hits it off and seems to find comfort in each other's presence.

Secret Sunshine is a tough film, with many devastating blows that hits Lee Shin-ae, who is played by the always enjoyable Jeon Do-yeon (The Housemaid), who became the first Korean actor to win an acting award at Cannes. Her co-actor Song Kang-ho, who we all know from films such as Thirst (2009) and The Host (2006), also does a great job of portraying a man who wishes to win Shin-ae's heart even though they don't connect at all.

26 September 2013

Montage (South Korea, 2013)

A kidnapper disappeared 15 years ago without a trace. Five days before the case's statute of limitations expires, someone anonymously leaves a flower at the crime scene. A few days later, another kidnapping takes place using the same method on a similar target. Three people team up to solve the case before it's too late: the grandfather, who lost his granddaughter right in front of him, the mother, who has been searching for the person who abducted her daughter 15 years ago, and the detective with a guilty conscience, who puts everything into this long-unsolved case.

While not being very original, Montage still makes for a thrilling experience. Unlike most thrillers, Montage has a severe lack of violence but makes up for this in captivating entertainment, and it's good to see a kidnapping drama that don't have all the melodrama that other films have. 

Genre: Thriller

4 September 2013

Love and Honor (Japan, 2006)

Shinnojo, a low level samurai, lives with his pretty, dutiful and loyal wife Kayo. He has come to find his position in a castle as a food-taster for a feudal lord to be boring and pointless, and talks about opening a kendo school. Before he can act on his dream he becomes ill with a fever after tasting some sashimi made from shell fish, but an investigation reveals that the poisoning was not due to a human conspiracy, but a poor choice of food out of season. After three days he awakes but finds that the toxin from the food has blinded him.  

Love and Honor is the last entry in the samurai-trilogy that includes The Twilight Samurai and The Hidden Blade. They're all stand-alone movies, but shares the same goal: telling a great story set in Japan's samurai period, but without having it revolve around fighting. If you're only going to see a few samurai movies in your life, these three movies should be top priority.  Highly recommended.


Genre: Drama/Romance

3 September 2013

As Tears Go By (Hong Kong, 1988)

A low-level triad "big brother" has a hot-tempered "little brother" who can't keep out of trouble, and consequently is in constant need of being bailed out by his protector. The "big brother" is super cool, but lacks the ambition to rise in the ranks of the triad societies - and once he meets his cousin from Kowloon and falls in love with her, he even thinks about leaving "the life".

As Tears Go By was the directorial debut of Wong kar-Wai (2046) and shows his first use his trademark color palette. It also starred a very young Andy Lau (Infernal Affairs), who did a great job portraying a small time gangster.

Genre: Crime/Drama/Romance

1 September 2013

For Love's Sake (Japan, 2012)

Troubled high school student Makoto arrives in Tokyo to exact revenge from a past incident. He then falls in love at first sight with Ai, a daughter raised in a wholesome family. Around Makoto and Ai are Iwashimizu , who has feelings for Ai, and Gamuko , a gang member who eyes Makoto. Also Gamuko's leader, Yuki have eyes for Makoto too. Who will get him in the end?

Director Takashi Miike (Audition) is back with another wacky project that's like his very own Crows Zero, if everyone would start singing before every fight. It somehow feels so natural that it's made by him, it features some beautiful and very theatrical set pieces, and Miike plays around a lot with the presentation.

Genre: Musical/Romance

Farewell My Concubine (China, 1993)

In 1924 Beijing, the youthful Douzi and Shitou are brought together under the thumb of the strict master of a small acting troupe. It quickly becomes apparent that these are the most talented of the master's pupils, and he pushes them harder than his other students. Thirteen years later, their suffering has paid off. Douzi, now going by the name of Chen Dieyi, and Shitou, called Duan Xiaolou, are major opera stars, and their production, "Farewell My Concubine" is nationally known. The two are inseparable, until the woman Juxian comes between them.

Farewell My Concubine is an epic drama that spans 53 years, telling a story about two men who vows to stay together forever, and at the same time their home country is in turmoil. It's nearly three hours long, but that's what it took to tell a story of this magnitude and do it justice. 

Genre: Drama

31 August 2013

The Berlin File (South Korea, 2013)

JUNG Jin-soo, a South Korean intelligence agent, comes across an unidentifiable operative, a 'ghost,' while surveilling a North Korean weapons deal in Berlin. The mystery figure is a North Korean secret agent, PYO Jong-seong, whose information cannot be found on any intelligence database. Jung quickly goes after Pyo to unveil his identity and gets himself embroiled in a vast international conspiracy. In the meanwhile, another North Korean operative, DONG Myung-soo, is dispatched to Berlin with a secret agenda to purge Pyo and take control of the North Korean embassy. Dong sets a trap to frame Pyo's wife, RYUN Jung-hee, for treason and tightens the noose around Pyo's neck. 

The Berlin File feels like a modern Bond movie done by asians. It packs some serious firepower, contains a lot of well-directed fighting scenes and is all about agents versus agents. Nothing new really, but nothing bad either. Also features some of South Korea's best actors.


Genre: Action/Thriller

27 August 2013

Days of Being Wild (Hong Kong, 1990)

Set in 1960, the film centres on the young, boyishly handsome Yuddy, who learns from the drunken ex-prostitute who raised him that she is not his real mother. Hoping to hold onto him, she refuses to divulge the name of his real birth mother. The revelation shakes Yuddy to his very core, unleashing a cascade of conflicting emotions. Two women have the bad luck to fall for Yuddy. One is a quiet lass named Su Lizhen who works at a sports arena, while the other is a glitzy showgirl named Mimi. Perhaps due to his unresolved Oedipal issues, he passively lets the two compete for him, unable or unwilling to make a choice. 

Days of Being Wild is one of the earliest movies made by the universally praised director Wong Kar-wai, and even here we get to see his own characteristic film style that becomes more prominent in his later work. 

Genre: Drama/Romance

26 August 2013

Once Upon a Time in China (Hong Kong, 1991)

Set in late 19th century Canton this martial arts film depicts the stance taken by the legendary martial arts hero Wong Fei-Hung (1847-1924) against foreign forces' (English, French and American) plundering of China. When Aunt Yee arrives back from America totally westernised, Wong Fei-Hung assumes the role of her protector. This proves to be difficult when his martial arts school and local militia become involved in fierce battles with foreign and local government. As violence escalates even Aunt Yee has to question her new western ideals, but is it possible to fight guns with Kung Fu?

Once Upon a Time in China is a showcase of brilliant kung fu and slapstick brawls. Jet Li plays the hero, but the real protagonist is the advanced martial art that's being unleashed on all the thugs and turns them into stew. A very entertaining fighting movie.

Genre: Action/Adventure/Drama  

Made in Hong Kong (Hong Kong, 1997)

Autumn Moon, a low-rent triad living in Hong Kong, struggles to find meaning in his hopelessly violent existence.

Made in Hong Kong is a stylish crime drama that almost has the feel of a Wong Kar-wai (Chungking Express) film, and that's a fantastic achievement. It earned a ton of awards and prizes upon its release, and rightfully so, because it's a well-crafted and convincing story that takes a handful of turns.



Genre: Crime/Drama/Romance

18 August 2013

Green Fish (South Korea, 1997)

Having just been discharged from the military, Mak-dong is on the train home when he finds himself in possession of a pink scarf. From the beginning, Mak-dong is entangled in a relationship that becomes his undoing. Home, Ilsan, is not the same for Mak-dong anymore. The fields and rice paddies have gone, replaced by high rise apartments, and the family has moved on while he has been away. All of his siblings except an invalid brother have left home, struggling to make a living. Mak-dong dreams of a time when the whole family can live together again.

Green Fish is a story about a man who makes the wrong decisions in life. It's a well acted drama with Han Suk-kyu (The Scarlett Letter, The Berlin File) in the lead role, and he plays his part really, really good. Check it out if you want a moody and great film.

Genre: Drama 

17 August 2013

Linda Linda Linda (Japan, 2005)

Linda Linda Linda tells the story of a group of four high school girls who decide to put together a band for Hiiragi-sai, their school cultural festival. Three days before they are to play the festival, the guitarist and singer quit the band. The remaining members, Kei, Kyoko, and Nozomi must figure out what to do or risk cancelling. They decide to perform covers of The Blue Hearts songs, but all agree that they need to find a new member to be the singer. They ask the first girl that walks by - Son, a Korean foreign exchange student.

Linda Linda Linda is a sweet coming-of-age tale that you might think doesn't have much of a plot, but it has a cult following and is recognized as one of the more popular Japanese drama's in recent years. A likeable cast, good direction and enough side stories to keep things interesting makes the film an enjoyable watch.

Genre: Drama/Music 

16 August 2013

The Foul king (South Korea, 2000)

Dae-Ho is an unproductive bank clerk who is late to work every morning and the object of his manager's frustrations. He was a fan of TV wrestling as a child, but can't get out of a headlock. He finds a local wrestling trainer and through a series of events eventually starts to train. He is slowly transformed as he begins his second job as the cheating villain wrestler known as the Foul King. He starts to stand up for himself in odd ways that are not really in his own best interest. Events get out of hand as conflicting influences come together.

The Foul King brings two massive names together: director Kim Ji-woon (I Saw the Devil, A Bittersweet Life) and actor Song Kang-ho (Thirst). It's quirky and a lot of fun, Kang-ho is such an amusing actor and really can save any scene that he's in. 

Genre: Comedy/Sport

13 August 2013

After Life (Japan, 1998)

After people die, they spend a week with counselors, also dead, who help them pick one memory, the only memory they can take to eternity. They describe the memory to the staff who work with a crew to film it and screen it at week's end. 22 dead arrive that week, assigned to three counselors and a trainee. One old man cannot find a memory, so he watches videotapes of his life. Others pick their memory quickly, and the film crew gets right to work.

After Life is directed by one of Japan's best directors, Hirokazu Kore-eda, who gave us great films like Nobody Knows (2004) and Still Walking (2008). After Life is his brilliant view of life after death, and the complications that follows. It's like a personal investment in people's lives, and not just actors as Kore-eda wanted genuine emotions and real stories so we see many people that talks about real experiences. The film was planned a decade before being made and was directly inspired by Kore-eda's childhood memories of his grandfather's dementia, which made him aware of just how important memories are to our identity. 


Genre: Drama. 1h 58min.

12 August 2013

Moonlight Whispers (Japan, 1999)

An offbeat study of the adult games that men and women play filtered through the actions of two seemingly innocent Japanese school kids, Satsuki and Takuya, two 17-year-olds who first meet practising kendo but later fall head over heels in love. They then discover the ways they can most exuberantly express their love for one another, no matter how perverse.

Moonlight Whispers (a.k.a. Sasayaki) portrays a twisted relationship that only becomes more disturbing as time goes on. A teenage romance gone perverse and deranged, but also a romance that feeds off the students own bizarre desires.

Genre: Drama/Romance

Karas (Japan, 2005)

Karas tells the story of Otoha, a former yakuza, living in a fictional version of ShinjukuTokyo populated by humans and yōkai (Japanese spirits). He is one of the titular karas, humans appointed as superpowered agents of the land. Able to transform into a car, an aircraft, and an armored crusader; the skilled swordsman is to stop his corrupt predecessor, Eko, from taking over Tokyo. Supporting characters such as Eko's former henchman, Nue; the yōkai; and Homura, the karas of another city, help Otoha in his quest

Karas was originally released as six episodes, and was later compiled into two feature length films. They featured extremely fast paced action, some incredible enemy design and gorgeous animations techniques that made viewers drool. It's a little light on the story, but that's okay, with visuals like these you can forgive a lot of things.
Genre: Action