Mieruko-chan

見える子ちゃん ‧ Movie ‧ 2025
Mieruko-chan poster
7.5
Your Rating: 0/10
Ratings: 7.5/10 from 125 users
# of Watchers: 477
Reviews: 1 user
Ranked #18688
Popularity #14914
Watchers 125

One day, Miko, a high school student, suddenly begins to be able to see spirits. Surrounded by extremely dangerous spirits, Miko's survival strategy is to pretend not to see them. Even when her best friend Hana is possessed by a spirit, or when her classmate Yuria is about to find out that she can see, Miko just ignores it with all her might. However, when subsitute teacher Tono comes to replace their homeroom teacher who is on maternity leave, Hana begins to act strangely and eventually collapses, possibly due to the influence of Tono, who is possessed by some strange spirit. In order to save Hana, Miko, together with Yuria and Akio, investigates the mystery surrounding Tono and discovers a shocking truth. Will Miko be able to save her best friend and make it to the school festival safely? Miko, who has always pretended not to see, finally faces a terror that she cannot ignore! (Source: Japanese = movie-mierukochan.jp || Translation = kisskh) ~~ Adapted from the manga series "Mieruko-chan" (見える子ちゃん) by Izumi Tomoki (泉朝樹). Edit Translation

  • English
  • Русский
  • Français
  • हिन्दी
  • Country: Japan
  • Type: Movie
  • Release Date: Jun 6, 2025
  • Duration: 1 hr. 38 min.
  • Score: 7.5 (scored by 125 users)
  • Ranked: #18688
  • Popularity: #14914
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Cast & Credits

Photos

Mieruko-chan Japanese Movie photo
Mieruko-chan Japanese Movie photo
Mieruko-chan Japanese Movie photo
Mieruko-chan Japanese Movie photo
Mieruko-chan Japanese Movie photo
Mieruko-chan Japanese Movie photo

Reviews

Completed
barely here
0 people found this review helpful
Nov 5, 2025
Completed 2
Overall 3.0
Story 1.0
Acting/Cast 2.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 1.0

Drop the film, read the manga

As a reader and fan of the manga, this live-action is yet another failure as an adaptation to the silver screen, as most manga live-action adaptations are.

There are two things worth praising in this film, the first are the looks of Hara Nanoka because she has the looks that might remind the original protagonist and that's it, she kinda looks like Miko, but she can not act like her, it is frustrating. The same can be said about every other character that is both in the manga and in this film, sure they have glimpses suggesting they were inspired by the original, but they are far from it. The second thing is this film's original character, it was not an ideal presentation, but they went for something new, not the romantic pair that usually happens most of the time and doesn't suit the original work at all.

What else is there to talk about? The story? What story? It has terrible pacing, a patchwork team of small stories stitched together trying to create an idea, but instead of aiming to create a peak for the story we have several small mounds that makes the storytelling bumpy, draggy, lazy and boring. The film is 97 minutes long, but it feels like watching a 27 hours documentary of paint drying.

Besides the new character, the film also had some creative freedom to expand some things the original doesn't bother much with, like Miko and Hana's classmates, 30 students and there are some faces that appear more than others, so you could say that some 10 girls there are side characters, when in the original their schoolmates are barely shown. I also disliked their take on Zen and his arc in the manga is way more interesting and dark; Hana feels like a generic bubbly girl - which is a bit ironic considering how she also is a "generic bubbly girl" in the manga, but she has her own characteristics that weren't shown properly or just hinted as easter eggs, like her lambda rabbit keychain on her bag -; Yuria feels like she is 75% adapted and 25% original character (I went with 50/50 at first, but by the end of the film she clarifies a few things that makes her seem more like the original from the manga); another good adaptation was Miko's dad, but her mum and her brother didn't feel like the real deal, she is way less compassionate as for her brother they have a great sibling relationship, which didn't translate well to the cameras and; Miko, why did they have to ruin the whole shrine moments and create their own thing? It is appalling.

GHOSTS! Did you think I would forget it, my dear manga reader? Did you see the pretension on those movie makers when they have shown their "ghosts?" Pathetic, isn't it? If you only watched the movie and you liked it, the ghosts in the manga are SO MUCH BETTER, here they are mostly generic, pathetic little ghosts that you would see in low budget films. The original? We have all kinds of terror, the best part? Unlike Miko in the films, the original one keeps a straight face 99% of the time, as if the spirits aren't even there, only to break down crying afterwards to show that she is also scared to death of them.

Anyway, skip this, read the manga, even if you dislike the fan service the manga was known in the start, don't worry because the author drops it fairly quickly and we are back to just scary, terrorizing ghosts and a girl just trying to live her "ordinary" life.

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Details

  • Title: Mieruko-chan
  • Type: Movie
  • Format: Feature Film
  • Country: Japan
  • Release Date: Jun 6, 2025
  • Duration: 1 hr. 38 min.
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Statistics

  • Score: 7.5 (scored by 125 users)
  • Ranked: #18688
  • Popularity: #14914
  • Watchers: 477

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