Maboroshi Movie Review Rating:
Star Cast: Junya Enoki, Reina Ueda, Misaki Kuno, Koji Seto, and Kento Hayashi.
Director: Mari Okada
Maboroshi Movie Review ( Photo Credit – Netflix Anime / YouTube )
What’s Good: The quality of the animation is quite impressive and proves that Mappa is just working at the peak of its abilities.
What’s Bad: The story never manages to set up characters and stakes in the proper way. Thus, when the climax arrives, it feels hollow.
Loo Break: The second act is a perfect loo break as the plot meanders between different characters and struggles to get to the point.
Watch or Not?: Watch only if you’re a Mappa fan.
Language: Japanese (with English subtitles).
Available On: Netflix
Runtime: 112 Minutes.
User Rating:
It is without question that Mappa is the most famous and most important studio in the anime medium, thanks to their many popular adaptations of famous manga,...
Star Cast: Junya Enoki, Reina Ueda, Misaki Kuno, Koji Seto, and Kento Hayashi.
Director: Mari Okada
Maboroshi Movie Review ( Photo Credit – Netflix Anime / YouTube )
What’s Good: The quality of the animation is quite impressive and proves that Mappa is just working at the peak of its abilities.
What’s Bad: The story never manages to set up characters and stakes in the proper way. Thus, when the climax arrives, it feels hollow.
Loo Break: The second act is a perfect loo break as the plot meanders between different characters and struggles to get to the point.
Watch or Not?: Watch only if you’re a Mappa fan.
Language: Japanese (with English subtitles).
Available On: Netflix
Runtime: 112 Minutes.
User Rating:
It is without question that Mappa is the most famous and most important studio in the anime medium, thanks to their many popular adaptations of famous manga,...
- 1/21/2024
- by Nelson Acosta
- KoiMoi
Hiroshi Tamaki is another actor that has recently turned director, as in the case of Kengo Kora. His own short has boxing as its main premise, but essentially deals with the concept of the self through a rather philosophical approach.
Count 100 is screening at Short Shorts Film Festival and Asia
Kago is a professional boxer that made it to the top, becoming the Japanese lightweight champion two years ago. Shortly after, however, he was defeated, and he never managed to bounce back from the loss. Currently he can barely box, while his girlfriend, who followed him to the city they live now to support his boxing career, is completely fed up with him. Beaten both metaphorically and literally, Kago receives a leaflet by a stranger on the street and decides to check it out, only to find himself facing a creature that soon assumes his own appearance, and promises to make his life better,...
Count 100 is screening at Short Shorts Film Festival and Asia
Kago is a professional boxer that made it to the top, becoming the Japanese lightweight champion two years ago. Shortly after, however, he was defeated, and he never managed to bounce back from the loss. Currently he can barely box, while his girlfriend, who followed him to the city they live now to support his boxing career, is completely fed up with him. Beaten both metaphorically and literally, Kago receives a leaflet by a stranger on the street and decides to check it out, only to find himself facing a creature that soon assumes his own appearance, and promises to make his life better,...
- 6/17/2023
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
With many narratives becoming more or less predictable due to the plethora of stereotypes and clichés attached to them, the tendency to mend their formula or connect them with other concepts is certainly understandable. Since the idea of the love story itself can be altered in any direction and has proven its flexibility in that context time and time again, readers and movie audiences alike have seen (or read) their fair share of these new kinds. In that context, “Parasite in Love”, the new film by Japanese director Kensaku Kakimoto, definitely fits this description as it combines elements of love drama with a comment on social anxieties and even a hint of post-apocalyptic drama. In interviews, the director goes one step further explaining his choice of characters in “Parasite in Love” with the lack of diversity in the society of his home country, with “the opinions of the majority” being...
- 5/29/2022
- by Rouven Linnarz
- AsianMoviePulse
The film is part of a very successful franchise that includes an ongoing manga (from 2004), a TV series, and three movies that follow the series’ story, although one does not have to be a follower of the franchise in order to watch this movie.
The story, surprisingly, does not revolve around Ushijima, but around Jun Ogawa, the leader of a group that organizes party events. In Tokyo, however, this means that he is a man with thousands of contacts in his three cell phones, who promotes a boy band whose members draw girls in the events, and the girls, in turn, draw more men. Jun is very ambitious and his next show, which is the largest he has ever organized, is to be the turning point of his career. However, he has two major problems to solve: He needs to find a lot of money very soon,...
The story, surprisingly, does not revolve around Ushijima, but around Jun Ogawa, the leader of a group that organizes party events. In Tokyo, however, this means that he is a man with thousands of contacts in his three cell phones, who promotes a boy band whose members draw girls in the events, and the girls, in turn, draw more men. Jun is very ambitious and his next show, which is the largest he has ever organized, is to be the turning point of his career. However, he has two major problems to solve: He needs to find a lot of money very soon,...
- 8/6/2021
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
Based on Keigo Higashino’s 2012 novel of the same name, “The Miracles of the Namiya General Store” is the first of two adaptations of Higashino’s book, the second being Han Jie’s “Namiya” starring Jackie Chan. Hiroki’s cinematic take on this intricately woven tale is presented wonderfully thanks to some strong performances and a carefully structured narrative.
The Miracles of the Namiya General Store is screening at Japan Society
For many years, Yuuji Namiya (Toshiyuki Nishida) answered letters from strangers asking for advice and left his responses in the milk box outside his general store. Now, in 2012, Atsuya (Ryosuke Yamada), Shota (Nijiro Murakami), and Kohei (Kanichiro Sato), take refuge in the abandoned shop while on the run from the law. The arrival of a letter in the dead of night prompts the trio into leaving, yet they’re unable to get away from the run-down shop. By deciding to respond to the letter,...
The Miracles of the Namiya General Store is screening at Japan Society
For many years, Yuuji Namiya (Toshiyuki Nishida) answered letters from strangers asking for advice and left his responses in the milk box outside his general store. Now, in 2012, Atsuya (Ryosuke Yamada), Shota (Nijiro Murakami), and Kohei (Kanichiro Sato), take refuge in the abandoned shop while on the run from the law. The arrival of a letter in the dead of night prompts the trio into leaving, yet they’re unable to get away from the run-down shop. By deciding to respond to the letter,...
- 2/11/2021
- by Tom Wilmot
- AsianMoviePulse
To western eyes, there is a dichotomy in Japanese cuisine of the finest, natural, raw ingredients cooked to a slow process weighed against the overly colourful, artificial world of processed and convenience food, although all are usually delicious. And this dichotomy is worked into the story of Shogo Kusano’s manga adaptation “Bitter Sweet”.
Bitter Sweet is Screening at Five Flavours Asian Film Festival
Maki (Haruna Kawaguchi) is an advertising exec with a vegetable phobia. Unlucky in love and work, she binges on supplements and alcohol to get her through the day. After another drunken night in a bar, she has a chance encounter with Nagisa (Kento Hayashi), a mild-mannered high school art teacher, vegetarian and homosexual. With Maki passed out, he offers to take her home and cook a delicious, healthy breakfast. Somewhat confused as to how she has awoken, Maki takes a shine to Nagisa, and with her lease about to expire,...
Bitter Sweet is Screening at Five Flavours Asian Film Festival
Maki (Haruna Kawaguchi) is an advertising exec with a vegetable phobia. Unlucky in love and work, she binges on supplements and alcohol to get her through the day. After another drunken night in a bar, she has a chance encounter with Nagisa (Kento Hayashi), a mild-mannered high school art teacher, vegetarian and homosexual. With Maki passed out, he offers to take her home and cook a delicious, healthy breakfast. Somewhat confused as to how she has awoken, Maki takes a shine to Nagisa, and with her lease about to expire,...
- 12/6/2020
- by Andrew Thayne
- AsianMoviePulse
dTv, Japan’s biggest streaming service released a preview for “Terraformars:A New Hope” series, a three-episode prequel of Takashi Miike’s adaptation, that will premiere on April 24, with the actual film scheduled for April 29.
The prequel will center on the research institute responsible for screening candidates for the Mars mission. The candidates will cheat and betray each other in a mental battle to be chosen as part of the crew, and it will reveal why the 15 crew members in the film were the ones chosen.
Hideaki Ito, Emi Takei, Mariko Shinoda, Rina Ota, Rinko Kikuchi, and Masaya Kato are reprising their roles from the film. Kiyohiko Shibukawa, Kōji Matoba, Ken Aoki, Takahiro Kuroishi, Kento Hayashi, Tetsuya Sugaya, Takemi Fujii, and Saki Takaoka are playing other characters who are unique to the prequel.
Takashi Miike supervises the production, with Yoshitaka Yamaguchi directing. Yamaguchi has worked before with Miike as assistant...
The prequel will center on the research institute responsible for screening candidates for the Mars mission. The candidates will cheat and betray each other in a mental battle to be chosen as part of the crew, and it will reveal why the 15 crew members in the film were the ones chosen.
Hideaki Ito, Emi Takei, Mariko Shinoda, Rina Ota, Rinko Kikuchi, and Masaya Kato are reprising their roles from the film. Kiyohiko Shibukawa, Kōji Matoba, Ken Aoki, Takahiro Kuroishi, Kento Hayashi, Tetsuya Sugaya, Takemi Fujii, and Saki Takaoka are playing other characters who are unique to the prequel.
Takashi Miike supervises the production, with Yoshitaka Yamaguchi directing. Yamaguchi has worked before with Miike as assistant...
- 4/10/2016
- by Panos Kotzathanasis
- AsianMoviePulse
Stars: Takayuki Yamada, Howard Harris, Fumi Nikaidô, Shôta Sometani, Hideaki Itô, Ruth Sundell, Mitsuru Fukikoshi, Rio Kanno, Yukito Nishii, Ken’ichi Takitô, Daniel Genalo, Noriko Nakagoshi, Erina Mizuno, Fujiko Kojima, Kento Hayashi | Written and Directed by Takashi Miike
I learnt from watching Audition that you never take Takashi Miike movies at face value, he won’t let you. That movie was my introduction into the twisted world of the director, and this is the reason he has quickly become one of my favourites. From horror to gangsters, historical and even school movies like Crows Zero he shows a flexibility and an ability to bring fun to his work, while also masterfully handling the extremes. Lesson of Evil is a movie that risks coming across as boring especially in the first half when it is setting the scene for the violence to come. Whether you find it dull or the characters interest you,...
I learnt from watching Audition that you never take Takashi Miike movies at face value, he won’t let you. That movie was my introduction into the twisted world of the director, and this is the reason he has quickly become one of my favourites. From horror to gangsters, historical and even school movies like Crows Zero he shows a flexibility and an ability to bring fun to his work, while also masterfully handling the extremes. Lesson of Evil is a movie that risks coming across as boring especially in the first half when it is setting the scene for the violence to come. Whether you find it dull or the characters interest you,...
- 9/30/2014
- by Paul Metcalf
- Nerdly
I can’t watch scenes involving any sort of eye trauma. Try as I might, I always squirm, turn away and/or close my eyes. Just thinking about having something long and sharp shoved violently into my ocular cavities is enough to give me nightmares for the next several thousand years. If, like me, you have trouble consuming this sort of material, then the blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment in the latest trailer for Masatoshi Yamaguchi’s “Ushijima the Loan Shark” might be a little shocking. I just wanted to give you the heads up. A synopsis will help ease you into the madness: Mirai Suzuki (Yuko Oshima) becomes responsible for her mother’s debt which is owed to loan shark Kaoru Ushijima (Takayuki Yamada). To begin paying off her mother’s debt, Mirai begins working at a dating cafe. Meanwhile, Jun (Kento Hayashi) is the ambitious and greedy company president for an event group.
- 7/29/2012
- by Todd Rigney
- Beyond Hollywood
Holy shit. The teaser trailer for Japanese director Takashi Miike’s upcoming high school massacre flick “Lesson of the Evil” is pretty effective. Granted, it doesn’t show you much — this is a teaser, after all — but what it offers is definitely memorable. Hideaki Ito stars as a mentally unstable teacher who gives his students an impromptu education in fear. I can’t wait to see how this one goes over in the States. Specifically, here’s what the flick is about: High school teacher Seiji Hasumi (Hideaki Ito) is the most popular teacher at his school with an attractive smile. Yet, Seiji Hasumi is a psychopath. To solve some of his school’s problems, like bullying, and to protect himself, Seiji begins to kill his students one by one. “Lesson of Evil” also stars Fumi Nikaido, Shota Sometani, Kento Hayashi, and Takayuki Yamada, opens in Japanese theaters later this year.
- 7/20/2012
- by Todd Rigney
- Beyond Hollywood
Japanese master director Takashi Miike, helmer of such past horrors as 'Audition' (Aka 'Odishon') and 'One Missed Call' (Aka 'Chakushin ari'), returns to the genre with his new murderous feature 'Lesson of the Evil' (Aka 'Aku no kyoten'). A new shocking trailer from the non-subtitled flick has reared its head which you can head below to check out. Based on the novel of the same name by Japanese author Yusuke Kishi the flick centers on a teacher named Seiji Hasumi, played by Hideaki Ito, who's mental condition leads him to murder his students one by one. Takayuki Yamada, Jab, Shota Sometani, Fumi Nikaido and Kento Hayashi all star. Check out the new trailer and full plot info below....
- 7/19/2012
- Horror Asylum
The official site for the upcoming live-action adaptation of Ushijima the Loan Shark has been updated with a YouTube embed of its new full trailer.
Like the 2010 TBS drama, the movie stars Takayuki Yamada as a ruthless loan shark with “Cow Cow Finance”. Kento Hayashi plays Jun, who uses an illegal loan from Cow Cow to fund an event he’s planning, but then decides to stiff Ushijima. When Ushijima shuts Jun down, he begins plotting his revenge.
Meanwhile, a young woman named Miko (Yuko Oshima of AKB48) has to resort to working at a paid date cafe to pay off her mother’s gambling debts.
“Ushijima the Loan Shark” will get its world premiere at Japan Society on July 25, 2012 as part of Japan Cuts and will be released by Stardust Pictures in Japan on August 25.
Like the 2010 TBS drama, the movie stars Takayuki Yamada as a ruthless loan shark with “Cow Cow Finance”. Kento Hayashi plays Jun, who uses an illegal loan from Cow Cow to fund an event he’s planning, but then decides to stiff Ushijima. When Ushijima shuts Jun down, he begins plotting his revenge.
Meanwhile, a young woman named Miko (Yuko Oshima of AKB48) has to resort to working at a paid date cafe to pay off her mother’s gambling debts.
“Ushijima the Loan Shark” will get its world premiere at Japan Society on July 25, 2012 as part of Japan Cuts and will be released by Stardust Pictures in Japan on August 25.
- 6/27/2012
- Nippon Cinema
Today more cast members were announced for Takashi Miike’s upcoming psychological thriller, Aku no Kyoten (Lesson of the Evil).
Most notably, Fumi Nikaido and Shota Sometani will once again appear together as students after co-starring in Shion Sono’s Himizu last year. The pair took home Marcello Mastroianni Awards for Best New Actor and Actress at the 68th Venice International Film Festival back in September for their respective performances.
Other cast additions include fellow Venice veterans Kento Hayashi and Takayuki Yamada.
“Aku no Kyoten” will star Hideaki Ito, who typically plays heroic characters, as an evil teacher named Seiji Hasumi who murders his students to make his life easier.
The roles of the four new cast additions have also all been revealed. Nikaido will play Reika Katagiri, a student who quickly becomes suspicious of Hasumi. Sometani will play Keisuke Hayami, who Reika suspects of being the ringleader of the cheaters in school.
Most notably, Fumi Nikaido and Shota Sometani will once again appear together as students after co-starring in Shion Sono’s Himizu last year. The pair took home Marcello Mastroianni Awards for Best New Actor and Actress at the 68th Venice International Film Festival back in September for their respective performances.
Other cast additions include fellow Venice veterans Kento Hayashi and Takayuki Yamada.
“Aku no Kyoten” will star Hideaki Ito, who typically plays heroic characters, as an evil teacher named Seiji Hasumi who murders his students to make his life easier.
The roles of the four new cast additions have also all been revealed. Nikaido will play Reika Katagiri, a student who quickly becomes suspicious of Hasumi. Sometani will play Keisuke Hayami, who Reika suspects of being the ringleader of the cheaters in school.
- 5/10/2012
- Nippon Cinema
What happens when teenage gangsters in Japan finally decide to grow up? They become ordinary working-class stiffs with angry kids of their own. Below you’ll find the new trailer for director Kazuyoshi Kumakiri’s upcoming drama “Blazing Famiglia”, a film that takes the teenage gangster genre and attempts to give it a fresh new coat of paint. I think the idea of a former gangster having to deal with hit punk-ass son is interesting, particularly since Kumakiri and company and providing plenty of action-packed tomfoolery. Here’s a synopsis, courtesy of Wildgrounds: Blazing Famiglia is the story of a former bike gang leader, now middle-aged with a rebellious kid, who reunites with his old friends only to rediscover the thrills of his youth. “Blazing Famiglia” stars Yoshimi Tokui, Kento Hayashi, and Sadao Abe. Look for the film to arrive in Japanese theaters on September 8th, 2012. The trailer resides below...
- 5/6/2012
- by Todd Rigney
- Beyond Hollywood
I almost passed this one over, simply because I haven’t heard of the manga or the television program. I’m seriously glad I changed my mind. The teaser trailer for director Masatoshi Yamaguchi’s feature-length crime drama “Ushijima: The Loan Shark” looks pretty interesting. Call me crazy — and I’m sure that you will — but I’m getting a weird Miike vibe from this one. Not his good stuff, mind you, but the V-cinema crap that nobody ever talks about. Then again, I might just be tired. Here’s what the film is all about: Mirai Suzuki (Yuko Oshima) becomes responsible for her mother’s debt, which is owed to loan shark Kaoru Ushijima (Takayuki Yamada). To begin paying off her mother’s debt, Mirai begins working at a dating cafe. Meanwhile, Jun (Kento Hayashi) is the ambitious and greedy company president for an event group. To borrow money,...
- 4/20/2012
- by Todd Rigney
- Beyond Hollywood
The Japanese film website Cinema Today has uploaded the new trailer for Kazuyoshi Kumakiri’s Blazing Famiglia to their YouTube channel.
The film is a live-action adaptation of Hiroshi Tanaka’s manga series “Bakugyaku Kazoku” (1999-2004). The series followed up Tanaka’s Badboys manga (1988-1996), which centered around biker gangs in Hiroshima and was made into a movie in 2011. Bakugyaku Kazoku is set in the Kanto region and features different themes than its predecessor with much older characters.
In the movie, comedian Yoshimi Tokui stars as Tetsu Hino, former leader of Kanto’s number one biker gang. Nowadays, he’s a middle-aged construction worker with a rebellious son named Shuhei (Kento Hayashi) who doesn’t respect him.
One day, Tetsu is reunited with his old friends in the wake of an assault. Faced with his past and experiencing strong emotions, Tetsu rediscovers the passion he had in his younger days.
The film is a live-action adaptation of Hiroshi Tanaka’s manga series “Bakugyaku Kazoku” (1999-2004). The series followed up Tanaka’s Badboys manga (1988-1996), which centered around biker gangs in Hiroshima and was made into a movie in 2011. Bakugyaku Kazoku is set in the Kanto region and features different themes than its predecessor with much older characters.
In the movie, comedian Yoshimi Tokui stars as Tetsu Hino, former leader of Kanto’s number one biker gang. Nowadays, he’s a middle-aged construction worker with a rebellious son named Shuhei (Kento Hayashi) who doesn’t respect him.
One day, Tetsu is reunited with his old friends in the wake of an assault. Faced with his past and experiencing strong emotions, Tetsu rediscovers the passion he had in his younger days.
- 4/20/2012
- Nippon Cinema
A few days ago, a teaser trailer for Masatoshi Yamaguchi’s Ushijima the Loan Shark was uploaded to YouTube and embedded on the movie’s official website.
Based on a manga by Shohei Manabe, the movie brings back the primary cast and crew from the 2010 TV drama adaptation along with a few new additions.
Takayuki Yamada stars as a loan shark named Ushijima who charges predatory interest rates and hounds anyone unfortunate enough to owe money to his black market group, Kaukau Finance. Yuko Oshima of the pop idol group AKB48 plays Mirai, a woman who was forced to borrow money to pay off her mother’s massive gambling debts. Now faced with a mounting debt of her own to Ushijima, Mirai is forced to take a job at a “dating cafe” and starts to consider selling her body as a quick way to earn cash. Meanwhile, a good-looking dancer...
Based on a manga by Shohei Manabe, the movie brings back the primary cast and crew from the 2010 TV drama adaptation along with a few new additions.
Takayuki Yamada stars as a loan shark named Ushijima who charges predatory interest rates and hounds anyone unfortunate enough to owe money to his black market group, Kaukau Finance. Yuko Oshima of the pop idol group AKB48 plays Mirai, a woman who was forced to borrow money to pay off her mother’s massive gambling debts. Now faced with a mounting debt of her own to Ushijima, Mirai is forced to take a job at a “dating cafe” and starts to consider selling her body as a quick way to earn cash. Meanwhile, a good-looking dancer...
- 3/12/2012
- Nippon Cinema
Kento Hayashi and Mirei Kiritani to star in the live-action adaptation of “Arakawa Under the Bridge”
Kento Hayashi and Mirei Kiritani have been announced as the two leads in Ken Iizuka’s upcoming comedy Arakawa Under the Bridge, a live-action adaptation of Hikaru Nakamura’s gag manga of the same name. The film will be preceded by a television series featuring the same cast.
Hayashi will play Sou “Riku” Ichinomiya, the son of a wealthy family who prides himself on standing on his own two feet, never allowing himself to become indebted to anyone. Kiritani will play Nino, a beautiful, yet bizarre girl who lives under a bridge and claims to be from the planet Venus. When Nino saves Riku’s life, he feels compelled to repay the debt by any means necessary. Uninterested in a quick pay-off, Nino instead requests that he love her and live with her under the bridge. Now in debt to Nino for his very life, including all future accomplishments, Riku is forced to comply.
Hayashi will play Sou “Riku” Ichinomiya, the son of a wealthy family who prides himself on standing on his own two feet, never allowing himself to become indebted to anyone. Kiritani will play Nino, a beautiful, yet bizarre girl who lives under a bridge and claims to be from the planet Venus. When Nino saves Riku’s life, he feels compelled to repay the debt by any means necessary. Uninterested in a quick pay-off, Nino instead requests that he love her and live with her under the bridge. Now in debt to Nino for his very life, including all future accomplishments, Riku is forced to comply.
- 4/16/2011
- Nippon Cinema
[Parade screens at Japan Society in NYC Tonight, July 9th at 9pm and July 10 at noon. Isao Yukisada will introduce and give a Q&A at both screenings, and on July 10 he will be joined by actor Tatsuya Fujiwara. Click here for more info and tickets! Our thanks to Christopher Bourne for the review.]
Isao Yukisada's unsettling new film Parade at first plays like a sitcom about a bunch of roommates crammed into a tiny apartment, but eventually takes a much darker turn.
The action mostly revolves around that apartment, illegally shared by a group of people who represent a cross-section of Japanese youth. The owner of the apartment is Naoki (Tatsuya Fujiwara), a straight-laced teetotaler who works at a film distribution company, and who by all appearances is the most stable of the inhabitants. Less so is the unemployed Kotomi (Shihori Kanjiya), who spends most of her time waiting by the phone for a call from her distant actor lover, obsessively watching the soap opera he stars in. Aimless college student Ryosuke (Keisuke Koide) pursues a doomed relationship with his best friend's girlfriend, while Mirai (Karina), an illustrator with a seemingly permanent chip on her shoulder, spends her nights hanging out in gay bars,...
Isao Yukisada's unsettling new film Parade at first plays like a sitcom about a bunch of roommates crammed into a tiny apartment, but eventually takes a much darker turn.
The action mostly revolves around that apartment, illegally shared by a group of people who represent a cross-section of Japanese youth. The owner of the apartment is Naoki (Tatsuya Fujiwara), a straight-laced teetotaler who works at a film distribution company, and who by all appearances is the most stable of the inhabitants. Less so is the unemployed Kotomi (Shihori Kanjiya), who spends most of her time waiting by the phone for a call from her distant actor lover, obsessively watching the soap opera he stars in. Aimless college student Ryosuke (Keisuke Koide) pursues a doomed relationship with his best friend's girlfriend, while Mirai (Karina), an illustrator with a seemingly permanent chip on her shoulder, spends her nights hanging out in gay bars,...
- 7/9/2010
- Screen Anarchy
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