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Michel 2022-03-21 09:03:06
hallucinations in "x sanji"
A half-amnesiac youth wandering the coast, Mamiya, hypnotizes a series of people he contacts, including middle-aged male teachers, female general practitioners, psychoanalysts, and the police themselves. Every hypnotized person kills himself, or someone else. The way to die is to draw an x...
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Jerad 2022-03-22 09:02:44
Comparison of "Kiya" and "Seven Deadly Sins" and "Zodiac"
Before watching "キュア", Kurosawa Kiyoshi's work had only seen "The Day of the Perfect Plesiosaur". Although I was convinced by the lighting and scheduling in the first half, I was a little disappointed by the sudden turn of the plot in the second half. Therefore, it can be said that "Kia" is my...

Kiyoshi Kurosawa
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Jacklyn 2022-03-25 09:01:19
Three-star or five-star; these horror films made by the Japanese at the turn of the century are all strongly anti-social. They do not rely on the scary means of jumpscare in Europe and the United States. The resentment towards each other among members of society and the distrust of creators for all relationships, be they work, friends or relatives, have become vulnerable in the new century. Like the "Curse Letter" popular in Japan at the time, the unprovoked spread of "evil" was a common theme of these films.
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Deron 2022-03-20 09:02:42
Kiyoshi Kurosawa is good at using scene narratives, which has nothing to do with his love of playing and scheduling. There are several scenes in the movie that have profound psychological implications, such as an unbalanced home, a room in a prison room, an old building in a wasteland, and a character's The spirit degenerates with the scene. Due to the exquisite details, the psychological scars that Japanese horror films bring to the audience are beyond the reach of stick films. The rumbling of lighters, running water, and washing machines all give people an indelible sense of fear.