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Completed
3-Iron
0 people found this review helpful
Apr 19, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0

A Quiet Story With Subtlely That Makes It Work

Core Feeling: quiet, sensual, intimate

Standout: the silent, unconventional connection between the leads

What Worked: the subtle storytelling and emotional atmosphere

What Didn't: not very memorable in specific details

One Honest Thought: I don't remember everything but I remember how I felt— and that feeling stayed with me.

Emotional Impact: 8/10

Finished: 8/19/21
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Completed
Blades of the Guardians
4 people found this review helpful
by Onuta Lore Scrolls Award1
Apr 19, 2026
Completed 4
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Why Chinese Wuxia Outclasses Modern Action Films

Western action often asks, “How can we keep you excited?” Chinese wuxia often asks, “How can movement itself carry meaning?”

Watching Blades of the Guardians is not just another wuxia film, it feels like a full-scale revival of martial arts cinema at its highest level. Exceptional fight choreography that Western films will never match: long, fluid sword fights with real weight and timing, emphasis on physical skill, rhythm, and spatial clarity. Large-scale battles (desert ambushes, duels in storms) feel organic, not like CGI-heavy spectacle. Here, every hit is readable and meaningful, almost like dance choreography with lethal consequences. The desert combat feels grounded and creates a level of tension many Hollywood blockbusters no longer achieve; you can feel the danger instead of just seeing effects. The film’s landscapes, deserts, ancient cities, war-torn borders are not just backgrounds; they function like characters. Sandstorms become battle arenas. Fire and dust shape the rhythm of combat. The cinematography leans into mythic, almost legendary imagery, which paradoxically feels like art rather than violence for the sake of it.
Blades of the Guardians offers visible technique and training, clear fight geography, real impact in every strike, emotion tied directly to combat, and a respect for martial arts as an art form, not just spectacle. It feels “more real,” “more intense,” and even “more cinematic” than most Hollywood action films today. It leans fully into what wuxia does best: honour, betrayal, survival across impossible landscapes, and combat that feels like storytelling itself. It is not just an action movie, it is a reminder that cinema action can still be handcrafted, elegant, and emotionally charged at the same time. If Western action represents controlled spectacle, Blades of the Guardians represents chaotic poetry with blades.
I loved it because the wuxia approach stays intimate even when the scale is large. It feels like watching internal codes of life and death being tested in real time. In contrast with the peak of modern Western action design, fast, engineered, and globally oriented, Blades of the Guardians represents a more traditional, almost philosophical approach to action, where movement itself carries meaning beyond plot function. That is why they feel so different to watch, and I loved it. One is built like a high-speed machine; the other feels more like a crafted ritual.
The Chinese wuxia approach won me over because it treats action as expression rather than logistics. In wuxia, and in Blades of the Guardians, a fight is not just a way to move the plot forward, it is the emotional and narrative moment. You feel character, history, and philosophy inside the choreography itself. The pacing is slower, but that slowdown is intentional: it allows tension, body language, and spatial awareness to become part of the storytelling. Instead of cutting away from complexity, it leans into it. The rhythm is carefully balanced, with moments of wit and humour that lighten the intensity without breaking immersion.
There is also a stronger sense of visual clarity and craftsmanship. The choreography is designed so you can actually read what is happening: footwork, distance, weapon control, rhythm. That creates a different kind of engagement. You are not just reacting to explosions or edits; you are following a physical conversation between characters.
Western blockbusters often build tension through external stakes: preventing a global disaster, stopping a bomb, outrunning time. It’s exciting, but it’s structural. Chinese martial arts cinema often builds tension through internal codes, honour, loyalty, betrayal, destiny, sacrifice. That makes even smaller moments feel heavy, because the conflict is not just physical but moral and personal.
There is also a philosophical layer that I find richer. Wuxia traditions often come from ideas about discipline, balance, fate, and the meaning of violence itself. The action is not just spectacle; it is connected to identity and worldview. That gives the film a kind of depth that feels less common in many Western action franchises, which are often more focused on momentum and entertainment efficiency, and for which is the reason I don’t go to the cinema anymore. Blades of the Guardians has artistic depth, visual readability, emotional weight inside action, and choreography as storytelling. I highly enjoyed it.

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Completed
Kokuho
3 people found this review helpful
by Ackery Flower Award1
Apr 18, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 10
Rewatch Value 8.0

AN ODE TO KABUKI THEATRE

I will say that I expected something completely different. A story about two rivals that compete with each other. Something darker, more brutal and tense. However, in the end this was a tale about brotherhood, wrong -and right- decisions, art, love, passion, loneliness and ambition. It was a masterpiece with painfully beautiful music and splendid costumes. An ode to Kabuki theatre; and it was beautiful for what it is.

The last scene is simply perfect and reminded me of the reason why I love cinema so much.
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Completed
As Long as We Both Shall Live
1 people found this review helpful
Apr 18, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

A Dream That Finds a Home

I rewatched As Long as We Both Shall Live today because I needed something soft. Not something intense or emotionally draining, just something calm that lets you settle into it without resistance.

And this really is that kind of film.

It doesn’t feel like a story that unfolds in big moments. It feels more like a quiet shift. Like stepping out of a long stretch of cold into a space that isn’t warm yet, but no longer hurts to exist in.

Miyo lives in that kind of emotional winter at the beginning. Not loud, not dramatic, just constant. The kind that slowly shapes how you see yourself. So when she’s sent into this arranged marriage, it doesn’t feel like anything is about to change. Just another place to endure.

What I liked is that the movie doesn’t rush to prove otherwise.

Kiyoka isn’t written as a sudden contrast. He’s not warmth all at once. He’s just steady; controlled, distant, but consistent in a way that slowly starts to matter. Their relationship doesn’t build through dramatic turning points, but through small, almost quiet shifts. A sense of safety that grows without needing to be announced.

The fantasy aspect stays mostly in the background, but it adds an interesting layer, especially with Miyo’s ability, the Dreamweaver power. At first, she’s treated as if she has none, which is why she’s dismissed so easily. But her ability is actually one of the rarest. It works through dreams, memory, and the subconscious, something you don’t see on the surface, but that quietly shapes everything underneath. And that fits her character in a way that feels intentional. Miyo has always been someone whose world exists internally, suppressed, unheard, unseen. So when that ability begins to surface, it doesn’t feel like a dramatic reveal. It feels like something that was always there finally being allowed to exist. Not loud, not overwhelming, just present.

Visually, the movie leans into that same softness. Muted tones, gentle lighting, and a kind of stillness that carries through almost every scene. It captures its atmosphere really well without trying too hard to impress. It just lets the mood settle.

The performances follow that same approach. Nothing feels exaggerated. Miyo’s fragility stays grounded, and Kiyoka’s restraint never feels empty. Both actors keep everything contained in a way that actually works for the story, making their dynamic feel natural.

If there’s a weakness, it’s in how much the film holds back. You can feel there’s more beneath the surface, more to the world, the politics, even the Dreamweaver concept, but two hours isn’t enough to fully explore it. What should feel layered instead comes across as lightly sketched, with key elements introduced but never given the space to truly develop.

This is where the film loses some of its potential. The emotional core is strong, but the surrounding world feels underbuilt in comparison. It’s the kind of story that hints at complexity without fully committing to it, which makes parts of it feel smaller than they could have been. It’s easy to imagine this working far better as a 10-episode series, where both the characters and the world have room to breathe. As it stands, the film captures the feeling of the story, but not its full depth.

Despite its limitations, I’d still rate it a strong 8.5, rounded up to a generous 9, not for a groundbreaking plot or narrative complexity, but because of how much I enjoyed it. And maybe it doesn’t hurt that I have a soft spot for silver-haired generals; though this time, even that blends seamlessly into the film’s calm, restrained tone.

A gentle, atmospheric movie carried by strong performances and beautiful cinematography. While the story feels larger than its runtime allows, it delivers a calm, quietly comforting experience. Even if fantasy isn’t your genre, its atmosphere alone is enough to draw you in.

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Completed
Ichi the Killer
0 people found this review helpful
by tr3n
Apr 18, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 7.0
Story 5.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 1.0

Completely over the top

very disgusting movie. the acting was very good though, especially from ichi's character. i'm still so confused on what his deal was... surprisingly still a decent movie despite the excessive amount of gore and absolutely terrible cgi/sfx LMFAOOO they did the best they could for that time though i guess.
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Completed
Kokuho
1 people found this review helpful
Apr 18, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Goosebumps Every Time Kabuki is Played

The story is quite straightforward, with a constantly evolving plot. It depicts the main characters' sacrifices and efforts to achieve their dreams, while selfishness takes over.

Yoshizawa Ryo and Ryusei Yokohama portray their characters masterfully. Each of their kabuki roles evokes a sense of pain and heaviness, befitting the kabuki theme they portray. The audience is drawn into and immersed in their roles.

The music in this film is sumptuous and dramatic, but it's a bit of a shame that many plot points could have been explained further, particularly regarding Akiko's fate, the fate of Shunsuke child, and so on. It's certainly not entirely plot sensitive, considering the film's length.

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Completed
From Me to You
2 people found this review helpful
Apr 18, 2026
Completed 1
Overall 9.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

still the best version

This one has a special place in my heart. I remember watching it before even knowing it was based on an anime/manga, and I’ve always preferred this version. Its beautiful cinematography, quiet pacing, scenery, and the natural chemistry between the cast especially Haruma and Mikako bring it to life. The soundtrack and visual direction also creates a soft, thoughtful aesthetic that lingers with you. Even with newer adaptations, this one still stands above the rest.
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Completed
The Handmaiden
0 people found this review helpful
Apr 18, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 9.0

Not Your Usual Tragic Lesbian Period Piece

The Handmaiden is based on Fingersmith (2002) by British lesbian author Sarah Waters.

The Handmaiden (2016) moves the story to 1930s Japanese-occupied Korea and then just starts pulling the rug out from under you every twenty minutes.

A pickpocket named Sook-hee (working under the alias Tamako) is recruited by a swindler known as Count Fujiwara. His plan is for Sook-hee to become the handmaiden to Lady Hideko, a wealthy and secluded Japanese heiress living with her domineering uncle, Kouzuki (in a beautifully gothic mansion, I must say). Sook-hee is tasked with convincing Hideko to marry the Count, after which they intend to commit her to an asylum and steal her inheritance.

What I love is how it takes the whole doomed, repressed lesbian period drama expectation and just refuses to sit in that box. The longing is there, the tension is there, but it doesn’t wallow in suffering. It’s messy, funny, horny, and, crucially, it lets its women be active participants in their own story instead of just tragic figures trapped in it.

And yeah, the sex scenes. People always circle those, and yes, they should've had a sapphic intimacy coordinator. But at the same time, the characters’ only frame of reference is those pornographic books, so it kind of makes sense? Regardless, even when parts of the love scenes feel inauthentic, the connection between the leads is incredibly intimate and powerful. The sex scenes do NEED to be there, they’re kind of the point. Not in a cheap way, but in a “this is what reclaiming your own body actually looks like” way. It’s deeply moving because it’s the only time these women are allowed to be fully real and liberated.

The acting overall is pretty much pitch perfect, especially the two leads. They start with this ice princess / nurturing maid dynamic that slowly evolves into something much more intimate as the layers they’re hiding are revealed, both emotionally and physically. And honestly, that dynamic has clearly had a huge impact. You can see versions of it everywhere now, across sapphic series, manga and manhwa.

Also, the movie is just outrageously good-looking. Chung Chung-hoon shoots this like every frame is trying to seduce you personally. The house alone deserves its own credit, all sharp edges and hidden spaces, like it’s constantly watching the characters right back. Besides being a thriller, erotic, and a bit of a heist movie, I mainly see it as a gothic romance. In fact, I’d go as far as to say it might be the greatest gothic romance film ever made.

There are some things here and there I wish were done differently (less time spent on the men in the last part, for one), and a few moments I could’ve done without, but it doesn’t really take away from the overall experience. The final reveal is one of the best feelings I’ve ever had watching a movie. And that library scene is just incredibly moving.

It’s vicious, beautiful, horny, scary, romantic, playful, a little bit feral (in the best way). And underneath all the twists and schemes, there’s something incredibly satisfying about a story where women who desire each other don’t get reduced to a cautionary tale.

It has resonated deeply with many Korean women for its sharp, satirical dismantling of colonial and patriarchal structures. It’s a film that understands that the most dangerous thing in a man’s world is two women who love each other.

Genuinely one of those films that makes you want to immediately rewatch it just to see how it pulled everything off. It’s now regarded as one of the best films ever made, and that honestly makes me very happy.

4.5/5

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Completed
One Cut of the Dead
0 people found this review helpful
Apr 17, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 5.5
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 4.0
Music 1.5
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

It´s not really a zombie movie

It’s a movie about the making of a zombie movie. At no point are there actual zombies. The first part is promising but then it makes a complete shift. It has some funny points but the execution is lacking and it becomes drawn out with the way that you watch the movie that was made, go back in time and then watch be made with what went wrong behind the scenes. It would have been better had I known this from the start. If you’re looking for an actual zombie movie this isn’t it in my opinion.
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Apr 17, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0

Not watching this a second time ! Trauma !!

This movie is just another JTrauma, and recently, Korea dropped its remake, However, if you're looking for a viewing experience that will profoundly traumatize you, I highly recommend the original Japanese version. I won’t give away any plot details, but I must emphasize just how powerful and moving this adaptation is. It’s a cinematic experience that left me deeply affected, so much so that I don’t think I could ever bring myself to watch it again. Although it’s an incredible and emotionally charged, it’s one that lingers long after the credits roll. You should definitely watch it, though, because it’s truly a beautiful piece of art that deserves to be seen.

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Completed
Shoplifters
0 people found this review helpful
Apr 17, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers

Does blood relation make you actually a family?

Shoplifters is one of those movies that deserve a spot on every must-watch movie list; it's a great example of how Japan is the pioneer of cinematic storytelling. This movie took me through so many emotions and really defined the meaning of family.

The film addresses many societal issues, but it presents them in such a way that they exist in a grey area. It’s difficult to label the characters’ actions as entirely wrong, yet they can’t be deemed right either. For instance, when they decide to keep the little girl It’s saying it’s not a kidnapping if you don’t ask for a ransom. It’s similar logic to how Osamu justifies stealing to Shota, telling him it’s OK if it’s not someone else’s property and that items in a store don’t belong to anyone yet.

Though the characters in the movie are not blood-related and each one has their own backstory of hiding, lying, damaged and frightened, they create a warm, cozy family, making the best of things from day to day. The dynamic between them is so warm and beautiful that it makes you wonder if you could choose your family, could you actually be happy? Does blood relation make you actually a family? This is exactly the theme in this movie. As a viewers, we witness their crimes but also see the genuine love they share as a family, which makes it challenging to condemn them. Perhaps, this is what the movie wants us to notice: that sometimes certain things are very much a grey area and it is difficult to differentiate the right from wrong!

Also, the movie dives deep into a part of society we don’t see often: the marginalized community, the poor who don’t have enough money to even eat, yet they have still have so much warmth and love for each other.

"Shoplifter" is a delicate work painted with so many details, moments, smiles, and is deeply intelligent.In term of acting, the actors did a phenomenal job in portraying these characters, giving them so much depth in their humanistic storytelling, and I have strong admiration towards Sakura Ando; she delivered such a strong performance in this role, with so much depth and layers. This is one of those movies that you will never see and nobody would be able to recreate. The last few minutes of the movie still haunt me; it left me with a profound sense of loss as if I myself lost a family I found.

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Drawing Closer
0 people found this review helpful
Apr 17, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 8.5
This review may contain spoilers

Another JTrauma

There is a specific category of Japanese anime and movies that are called Jtrauma, because of how traumatic they are. They often have really touching relationships and romantic love stories that make you giggle and blush, and then when you least expect it, they are going to hit you with one of the characters dying. It's gonna come in such an unexpected way that it’s gonna hurt like a punch in the stomach. And this movie belongs right to that category.

So this is my warning in case you don't want to cry, but if you are crazy just like many of us, this was a great movie. The story is so sad but a great experience. Dayum, I thought I got used to these Jtrauma after watching so many movies like this, but it seems like I still have not built enough tolerance 'cause I was sobbing the whole time.

Another aspect I enjoyed was the cinematography and the use of light. The contrast between the couple and the world outside was fascinating. The room seemed much darker, almost foreshadowing the tragic ending, while the light coming from outside was soft, bright, and full of hope. This contrast intensified the emotional impact of the story. I did find it a bit annoying how high the brightness was compared to the darkness, as I had to constantly adjust the brightness on my screen. Still, it was a clever choice to emphasize the difference between life and death.

Definetly a great movie and worth watching.

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Completed
I Give My First Love to You
0 people found this review helpful
Apr 17, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 9.5
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 10

A lot of tears

You are going to cry; this movie is so sad! If you don't enjoy dramatic films, you might want to avoid it. However, it is truly excellent. This typical Japanese movie features a cute love story with a sad ending, and it’s really nice. As much as it is sad, it is also very funny. I would say this was a great watch;I cried a lot, but I laughed a lot too. Overall, this was definitely a nice one
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Completed
Almost Love
0 people found this review helpful
Apr 17, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0

A very realistic tale of why it’s an almost love

I loved everything about the storytelling.

It was engaging, honest, raw, and they kept everything real especially Xu Ruohan’s delivery of a bright, young girl having experiencing her first love. Dare I say, she really excels in her ability to keep things natural.


The title pretty much sums it all, but I was grateful that the movie allowed us to throughly see how things went wrong. The misgivings, resentments, unsatisfied dreams, tired heart who’s always hoping, reaching… everything about this is just so human. Very relatable, sometimes hits close to home.



I have a personal beef with the ML. I just hope we do not meet someone like him who had no backbone, makes you wonder if he truly loved the FL. Li Wenhan, on the other hand, is so amazing in his delivery. Both him and Ruohan managed to convince the audience that they truly like each other.

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Completed
Fly High
0 people found this review helpful
by Asraa
Apr 17, 2026
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 7.5
Persons who are sick and tired of everything in this world, each of them seeks solace through the other, except the antagonist who is you should not have it because I don't have it, money is also the recurring theme, how it changes them and affects them, along with self respect and dignity. Characters find their own selves in other person's presence and it is about confronting themselves and the choices they make.

Fl is anhedonic due to trauma, Ml has sacrificial love as he sees himself and her as the same person, He wants her happiness and nothing else in the world.

Poignant film about limerance, editing in the first half is perfect, fl is not unnecessarily sexualised, slice of life but not feel good in the general sense as in you see characters be sad and then they get a happy ending and the audience also becomes sad and then happy with the characters, this does not happen.

This film does not try and force to elicit emotions from its viewers

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