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The Library
2 people found this review helpful
Jan 3, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Less is so much more

The story for this is rich enough it could easily have been made into a full length film or series.

It would have been less if it had. The acting and directing are exquisite. They convey everything they need to tell this story through a look, or a few words. Together, this richness and brevity make for an emotionally powerful story. There is nothing extraneous to dilute its impact.

Cinematography and music complement it well, making the perfect atmosphere.

Cannot recommend this one highly enough. It is quietly, gently, heartbreakingly beautiful.
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Completed
Ultraman: The Next
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 7.5
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.0

A fine jumping on point for the uninitiated

What I appreciate about Ultraman is that it has so many great jumping-on points for people looking to get into the series; although The Next is one of the weaker starts I've seen, it is a noble attempt to update the formula with a much more adult tone. Particularly considering this was Tsuburaya's big attempt to revitalise the character after the problematic circumstances surrounding the broadcast of Cosmos. It's a more than welcome reimagining.

There's some lovely direction by series veteran Kazuya Konaka, particularly in its Top Gun-inspired opening. Great character work and performances, especially from Tetsuya Bessho and Kenya Ousumi, plus a banging soundtrack from rock artist Tak Matsumoto who provides brilliant updates to the classic themes. I do like Ultraman's new design despite it being a bit out there due to how radically different it is from the original but the updated Bemular is a truly frightening creation and more than worthy of praise.

Where I'm not particularly sold is the rather iffy use of CGI, especially considering how good the model work and suitmation are, and the cheesy dialogue at points that feels like it's trying to appeal to kids despite the tone of the movie is very much skewed towards adults with some pretty horrifying imagery to boot.

Regardless, The Next captures the heart of what makes Ultraman, well, Ultraman. His relentless pursuit of providing hope for humanity in the face of its destruction; while mixing in with the inner turmoil of its host who has more than his fair share of skin in the game. It offers up some extremely entertaining and well-executed monster fights and hits the right stride for those wanting a slightly more mature tone for the series. It's just a shame that the Ultra N Project failed because what we got here is a great basis for a newer take on the character.

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Completed
Superior Ultraman 8 Brothers
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Open your eyes to the unbelievable

The Multiverse of Madness we deserved. The way this movie is so unapologetic in its portrayal of hope out of hopelessness from its cast of characters is simply beautiful, I can't help but love it unconditionally.

On July 17, 1966, best friends Daigo Madoka, Shin Asuka, and Gamu Takayama watch the first broadcast Ultraman television series at Daigo's house. They are inspired to grow up and do great things. 30 years later, the three have forgotten their childhood passion for Ultraman and dreams while continuing their lives as normal civilians. With aliens threatening the utter annihilation of Earth and Daigo experiencing mysterious visions, Ultraman may just provide the key to saving the entirety of mankind.

It does feel odd that despite Ultraman Mebius and Mirai Hibino being the then-current Ultra brother and host on TV at the time, the film instead opts to tell the events from the point of view of Daigo Madoka, the human host for Ultraman Tiga. I'm not complaining mind you. It's great to see what is currently Hiroshi Nagano's final appearance in the franchise and he does so with true style and an unshakeable charm. The first four Ultraman protagonists return in maturer mentor roles yet still get to do the job they started all those years ago, seriously Susumu Kurobe, Kohji Moritsugu, Jiro Dan and Keiji Takamine are all excellent in and out of the suits. It's just a treat for the long-time fans and a beautiful cap-off for the TDG trio.

This was until recently the highest-grossing entry of the entire Ultra franchise, being overtaken by Shin Ultraman very quickly. You can see why this film made the money it did, combining a love for both the Showa and Heisei eras and showcasing the best of both worlds. I have to hand it to director Takeshi Yagi, a Heisei Ultra veteran, for crafting this film in such an exquisite way, the direction, compositing and set pieces are all top-notch and cleanly executed to the highest standards, the CGI work especially which is usually a low point for these productions looks divine. The suitmation work is just consistently beautiful but the final act is where it all comes together seeing all of the Ultra brothers fighting side by side onscreen with some seriously tense emotional stakes just hits the nail on the head.

I take my hat off most of all to writer Keiichi Hasegawa, whose name I'm more than familiar with; penning the likes of GMK, the first two Heisei Gamera films, SSSS.Gridman and numerous episodes of other Ultra shows, including my beloved Tiga. What he has crafted here however is perhaps one of his finest works. The dialogue oozes charm and sophistication in a way that only Tokusatsu can deliver, the right balance of cheesy and serious, hope and cynicism, nostalgic connections and undying charm. There wasn't a moment that went by where I didn't have a smile on my face, it's the type of fan service and nostalgia done right, not for the sake of it being there but for delivering a movie that utilises them to great effect and analyses why we have such affection for them.

The movie deconstructs the character's admiration for the ideal of hope rooted in their consumption of fantasy entertainment. How the nostalgia we have for the content we consume at a younger age has the ability to inspire us and hold us back when we are older. How our perception of the world is warped by the fantasy we desire in the world. The fantasy that we continue to search for in the world to help guide us. Doing so causes one to forget about the lessons of consistency through perseverance as a means of remembrance. Remembering what inspired an individual to develop their current meaningful connections.

The music by Toshihiko Sahashi fits the tone of the movie perfectly. Another veteran of the franchise but not without his other merits, composing for Toei's Kamen Rider series as well as the Gundam franchise. His style of composition is richly symphonic and classical with the occasional use of jazz, it plays off older themes of the series but restrains using them in their entirety outright. Sort of like how Bill Conti composed the music for For Your Eyes Only in a way. The keyboard-heavy symphonic score just fits so well with the sense of hope this movie brings.

42 years' worth of world-building leads to one of the most heartfelt love letters to a series you could ever ask for. Even for a relative Ultra series novice like myself, you can really feel the love and passion for this series throughout the movie, never relenting and never giving up its hope for the future. Old friends and foes get new and fresh redesigns that give the kaiju a huge air of menace, with the old Ultramen having never looked so good.

Overall, Great Decisive Battle! The Super 8 Ultra Brothers is a full love letter to the series that encapsulates what Ultraman represents as a whole. It reinforces the power of faith and dreams in a way that's totally unlike any film I've seen in a while. I love it to pieces.

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Completed
Ultraman Tiga: The Final Odyssey
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.5
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

A perfect extended ending

The Final Odyssey could have very easily screwed up what is already a perfect ending to a series, but this bridge between the outgoing Tiga and incoming Dyna packs the same emotional core and incredible storytelling that made Tiga one of the best Ultra shows, to begin with.

Two years after the events of 'Ultraman Tiga', Daigo is forced to pick up another Dark Spark Lens in an attempt to stop three evils the once, dark Tiga worked with 30 million years ago, to stop destruction in Japan once and for all.

Everything about The Final Odyssey is bigger, badder and sleeker; the elongated runtime and larger budget that is afforded thanks to this being a feature-length movie mean everything is to the highest standard, top-notch in its design and execution. The widescreen presentation allows for an impressive variation of shots and set pieces, director Hirochika Muraishi outdid himself with this. It's gorgeous to look at through and through. The underwater fight between Tiga and Darramb is incredible but only equally matched by the final showdown against Camearra (I'll get to her in a moment) and the suitmation is very clean although I'm not majorly fond of the digital effects used to transform Camearra into darkness at the very end.

Seeing how much our cast has changed since the finale of Tiga, the relationship and impending wedding of Daigo and Rena make for a great personal motivation for the duo. Daigo's hesitation and self-doubt manifest in his desire to save the world one more time with Rena supporting and trusting him nearly every step of the way. Their decision to take up arms again is met with this gorgeous little sequence of minimal dialogue accompanied by an excellent musical score and dynamic camera. The chemistry between Hiroshi Nagano and Takami Yoshimoto is on full display here and you are totally engrossed in their story. The rest of the GUTS squad are all on fine form even if they aren't the starring party this time around but does serve as an equally nice introduction to the eventual successors making a big splash near the end.

With all the strength in its character writing, it's the film's villains that bring a fresh perspective to The Final Odyssey. We've seen Evil Tiga in the TV show and although he was only limited to the second half of a two-parter, Three ultimately evil Ultra's make the impact needed to give the film a world-ending and indeed universe-ending threat. Camearra, Darramb, and Hudra are all equally memorable for a multitude of reasons, but it's with Camearra where the real antagonist lies. Tiga's former lover from a bygone era, all the credit goes to actress Miyoko Yoshimoto for carrying that amount of sass and power into her suit performance as well. Catch me simping for her on an off day.

The excellent musical score from Tiga is carried over and Tatsumi Yano provides some equally beautiful new material as well as some repurposed older material from the show. Opening with Brave Love Tiga was an inspired choice accompanying the montage of notable moments from the TV show before beautifully transitioning into the film. Of course, the use of Take Me Higher is relegated to the end credits but as it always does, it makes an impact.

Overall, Ultraman Tiga: The Final Odyssey is a beautiful epilogue to Tiga as a whole, it sends our beloved characters off with gorgeous style.

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Completed
Shin Ultraman
1 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Arigato, Ultraman

I genuinely couldn't wait for a second longer in viewing this, I've been so excited for its release for so long that when some heroes leaked it to the internet during October I was over the moon, yet equally annoyed due to the fact I was already dedicated to Spooky Season at the time. But finally, my time has come and Shin Ultraman is everything I hoped it would be and more.

As the threat of giant unidentified lifeforms known as "S-Class Species" worsens in Japan and just when the JSDF and SSSP are pushed to the breaking point, a silver giant appears from beyond Earth's atmosphere.

In this house, we do not stand for Shinji Higuchi erasure, dude had just as much input in the creation of this as Hideaki Anno so it feels morally wrong to completely exclude him from any and all credit he deserves. This film is fucking raw and equally gorgeous, with so many shots of note but the scene of "Ultraman" standing amongst the burning ruins of a city goes hard. Also worth noting is that if you only went to see this or Shin Godzilla due to Anno's name, maybe rethink how you are approaching these movies, just saying.

There's a conscious production design decision by the duo to make Shin Ultraman look as if it was in its genesis and absolutely not concerned with reaching the modern "standards" of polished reboot looks is such a refreshing take. Shin Ultraman looks the part of a brilliant piece of tokusatsu media, a fresh reboot for a new generation and a love letter for long-time fans as both Higuchi and Anno are themselves.

Like Shin Godzilla before it, the visual effects are fantastically stylised. There's a clear love for the original designs and a clever little riff on the reuse of the Shin Godzilla CG model if you know your Ultraman. Shirō Sagisu returns as the composer for the second time, beautifully enhancing the original works of Kunio Miyauchi while adding in works left unused from both Shin Godzilla and of course, fucking Evangelion.

There's so much to be said about the overwhelming success of this film, for a time the highest-grossing film of 2022 in Japan alone and currently sitting at the most commercially successful Ultraman film beating out my beloved Superior 8 Ultra Brothers. It stands tall as one of the finest examples of both a reboot and a piece of Ultraman media, although perhaps not as tall as Brave Love Tiga.

The film doesn't really want to spend time with the politics of its predecessor, as Higuchi has stated in interviews "if we just did the same thing, it's kind of pointless". More power to the man, but the film isn't without a small political commentary on the Japanese government and how they would delineate a situation like this.

There's a little commentary on humanity's place in the universe, and whether we've proven ourselves worthy of continuing as a species. This messaging isn't always elegantly executed but, like so much of the film, it's presented with such enthusiastic sincerity that it's hard to resist. The world may sometimes be a terrible, frightening place, but Shin Ultraman argues that a little decency can still go a long way. I fucking love it, roll on Shin Kamen Rider!

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Completed
Shin Kamen Rider
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.5

Pulpy Comic Book fiction done right

While he left our beloved Shinji Higuchi to handle directing duties on Shin Ultraman, Anno focused his efforts on Shin Kamen Rider and it's very much cut from the same cloth as its predecessors. Fast, stylish, cartoony and oh-so-charming, it opens with action and never slows down, not even afraid to fully embrace the camp and horrific qualities of its source material.

I'll admit this is the tokusatsu property I am least familiar with (at the time of writing I've seen ZO, J, Shin Prologue and, more substantially, Den-O and Fuuto PI), but even to a more casual fan of the series, you can easily follow what is ultimately re-imaged episodes of the original show stitched together into a movie. I'm yet to watch the original but the number of side-by-sides I was seeing on Twitter after clips of it were leaked, shows that Anno really does take pride in his childhood influences.

Hyped stylised like the previous Shin movies, there's some very overbearing and pretty redundant CGI in places where practical effects would have been preferable and even cheaper, but it fits the same tone and energy of its predecessors. Anno's direction is great and features the same variety of angles and strange composition choices that make these so visually engaging. The hyper-choreographed fight scenes also help immensely, unafraid to go all the way to 11 with squishy violence.

With regular Anno collaborator Shirō Sagisu committed to Shin Ultraman, in steps Anime composer Taku Iwasaki and boy, does he do a stand-up job. I'm definitely gonna have to get the soundtrack to this the moment it's released, so many styles of music all coming together in a seamless blend of beauty.

While I ultimately feel that Shin Ultraman is the best of these Shin movies so far, Shin Kamen Rider is a very close second. Anno goes hell for leather here, amounting to a beautiful love letter to one of the grandfathers of Tokusatsu, having fun but not poking fun and fully embracing his inhuman worldview he's only ever touched upon in previous movies.

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Completed
Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 5.5
Story 5.0
Acting/Cast 4.5
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 5.0

The original Kamen Rider Shin

What could have been a great deconstruction of the Kamen Rider franchise sadly falters due to its bare-bones plot, wonky writing and unlikable stock character archetypes. It's one of the only Kamen Rider productions to feature direct creative input from the original creator, Shotaro Ishinomori, the film takes a large amount of influence from the original manga run as well as Kamen Rider BLACK's manga.

The film was intended as a treat for more adult fans of Ishinomori's original works by Ishinomori himself but due to his death in 1998, the series planned to continue the story of this prologue never developed leaving Shin in a weird limbo of existence. The problems presented in this film could have easily been ironed out had it been given the chance but the final product is extremely stiff and somewhat bland compared to the likes of ZO which would release the next year.

I'll be honest, I like a lot of this film's production aspects, the music is frankly brilliant and it is that nice transitional period between the synth-heavy 80s and hard rock 90s; the gore and practical effects are simply top-notch with a seriously gnarly transformation sequence almost like it was ripped from a Cronenberg film with a design of the titular character being equally Cronenberg-esque.

Overall, the film is a curious example of when early 90's visceral science fiction met a classic Tokusatsu franchise. Still worth watching but with tempered expectations.

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Completed
Kamen Rider J
1 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 7.5
Story 6.5
Acting/Cast 6.5
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 8.5

The weaker of the Amemiya duology

Easily the weaker of Keita Amemiya's two Kamen Rider films, but J does many things that ZO doesn't. Kamen Rider J skips out on the backstory of its Rider and instead leaves the questions till later opting for the action-first approach. The creature designs are suitably Amemiya with the direction and music as great as they always are, I could have done without the annoying little sidekick as it felt like Amemiya was trying to draw in a younger crowd with it, given the costume design of Zu it feels like the exact opposite, she possesses considerable dommy energy.
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Completed
Kamen Rider ZO
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 10

Love a bit of Amemiya

Given that Shin Kamen Rider is coming out next year, I really needed to dive into another of the big three Tokusatsu shows and this was usually the one pointed to as one of the best entry points of the franchise, Kamen Rider ZO is another fantastic film by Keita Amemiya that I can check off my watchlist. ZO feels like the by-product of what would happen if you threw Sam Raimi and Shinya Tsukamoto into a blender together, it's kinetic filmmaking and highly disturbing design that would give even someone like Guillermo del Toro nightmares. Brilliantly shot, written, scored, staged and acted, this is one of the best 48-minute-long films I've ever seen and has me eager to explore more.

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Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 9.0

The missing link

Legend of the Stars feels like that missing link between Heisei Godzilla and Heisei Gamera, striking an otherworldly and transcendental balance in re-imagining Ultra Q for a whole new generation and who better to helm it than the franchise's most unique voice, Akio Jissoji. Legend of the Stars could realistically be considered the 2001 of the tokusatsu genre, mainly because this movie is pretty much a metaphysical examination of existence in a similar vein to Kubrick's film, just way more dialogue-heavy. It doesn't always hold together but Jissoji's visualisation is greater than the sum of its shakey parts, his direction and camera work are constantly engaging and ever-shifting with no two shots being the same. Combining aspects of Japanese mythology and a sci-fi mystery, Legend of the Stars is very much worthy of your attention even if you haven't seen the original show, it just drags its feet towards the end as if struggling to fill time and you'll have to put up with some substandard DVD mastering if you want to see it, it's crying out for an HD release. Come on Tsuburaya! Do it!

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Completed
Chohatsu Daikaiju Gehara
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 6.0
Story 5.5
Acting/Cast 6.5
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 5.0

So much hair

One of the better kaiju throwbacks I've seen in recent years, Geharha: The Dark and Long-Haired Monster owes a lot to the bigger name franchises containing a wealth of references and homages interspaced amidst its quirky camp. A short made-for-TV production by one of the more prolific modern Ultraman directors, Kiyotaka Taguchi, barely clocking in at 20 minutes in length, it's a fabulous little gem. The effects are a charming mix of old-school tokusatsu techniques and hilariously low-brow CGI which often add to the short's comedic value. While the stock library of music from the late Akira Ifukube fits quite nicely, Geharha is over just as it really starts to get going, leaving you wanting more and ripe for expansion in a feature-length presentation.

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Green Night
5 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 1
Overall 1.0
Story 1.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 1.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

unfortunately transmisogynist.

could have been good but it's unfortunately transmisogynist. the two mains tell a presumably closeted trans woman that she's in the wrong bathroom, they steal her wallet and hotel room key. they break into her hotel room and plunder her wardrobe. one of them says, "why does he want to be a woman? being a woman is boring." I missed this at first; it's a bit blink and you'll miss it if you don't know what to look for. but recognising the transmisogyny changed the entire context and it ruined the film for me.
on top of all this, one can argue that this film is also ableist by vilifying a deaf person...

see also: https://letterboxd.com/imuira/film/green-night/

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Touken Ranbu
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0

Rating

Similar enough to the anime, the movie adaption deals more with the swords past.

I rate the movie more as a 7.8 not lower and not higher.
The acting and plot was decent for a movie of this type but you don’t see anything about the anime in the movie that would rank the movie higher. You don’t see any of the sword summoning and the main character sword is the only high-grade sword that you actually see.

Besides this, the movie is actually pretty decent which is why I rate it at a 7.8. The effects are good and the plot fits and is new to Touken story line.

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Completed
Hello Ghost!
2 people found this review helpful
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 8.0

Remake well done

First off, I didn’t even know it was a remake of a Korean 2010 movie, but I can just imagine how the visual effects back then, 13 years ago, it might be a bit crude but in 2023 the effects are more fluid, so that’s a plus!

I watched this movie with the expectation that it would be another help-ghost-fulfill-wishes movie like Robert Downy’s Hearts and Souls, but to my surprise it was different. The twist at the ending makes the perfect sense. Not to mention, the acting is so good. The main lead seriously can switch from one character to another.
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Completed
Survival Family
2 people found this review helpful
by yoon
Jan 2, 2024
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.5

Fun light-hearted survival comedy

A fun comedy that I wasn't expecting to be this good. Refreshing to see a film on the post-apocalyptic world where everything doesn't immediately go to mayhem and last man standing type deal. They did really good at getting a balance between entertaining and heartwarming adventure given the circumstances of the world maybe ending. The scenery in this movie shows was really good showcasing the Japanese landscape, making the backdrop on their journey pleasant to see even during a global pandemic (which is kind of weird but keeps you attentive haha). The director's decision to keep the tone of the movie light-hearted was good thinking even with the more intense post-apocalyptic dramas where it's survival of the fittest and immediate chaos with trying to outlive the bad guys for the entire movie.

All in all Survival Family is a great watch that combines a family comedy with the urgency of survival, making it an entertaining and fun sit down when pandemic movies don't always ending up leading that way.

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