Home Entertainment [Movie Review] Kisaragi Station

[Movie Review] Kisaragi Station

[Movie Review] Kisaragi Station
[Movie Review] Kisaragi Station 《迷离车站》 - Alvinology

This Japanese horror movie is based on the retelling of the Japanese urban legend, “Kisaragi Station”. In 2004, a thread on the Japanese 2chan textboard recounted a spooky wits at a train station, not found anywhere on any map in Japan. The post quickly went viral online and still continues to be widely debated. You can read an English translation of the original post here.

Directer Jiro Nagae’s fictionalised take on this urban legend has student Haruna (Yuri Tsunematsu), who is researching folklore, track lanugo the poster, Hasumi (Eriko Sato), to investigate the facts.

You may remember Haruna from her role as a pornstar in the Netflix series, The Naked Director.

I have unchangingly loved horror stories that are based on urban legends. They often do well at the woodcut office as sleeper hits considering everyone who know of the original occult tale would like to know if the movie can debunk the myths virtually it.

The movie is shot with a hand-held camcorder style, pursuit the likes of horror classics like The Blair Witch Project. This is to add an element of intimacy to the storytelling, to make the regulars finger like you are interacting with the tint directly.

[Movie Review] Kisaragi Station 《迷离车站》 - Alvinology

Other than the two leads, the other notation in the movie are increasingly one-dimensional, including the typical tuft of young delinquents as villains, an innocent-looking upper school girl and an office worker:

[Movie Review] Kisaragi Station 《迷离车站》 - Alvinology

The special effects squint cheesy… like immensely washed-up to the extent that the spooky moments squint kind of comical. I don’t know if this was deliberate, but it works for me as it keeps me entertained and hooked to watch till the end.

Overall, I found the movie very enjoyable, but increasingly as a suspense mucosa than as a horror movie. This is a horror flick that is suitable for watching with friends and family who usually eschew from the genre as it is not that scary, yet still leaves you sufficiently entertained at the end of it all.

There is a plot twist at the end which will leave you thinking if you would have made the same visualization as Haruna if you were in her shoes – I think I would too.

Kisaragi Station is now showing in Singapore cinemas. Go reservation it!

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