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Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Re/Member’ on Netflix, A Redundant Teen Time Loop Horror Flick

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Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Re/Member’ on Netflix, A Redundant Teen Time Loop Horror Flick

Who mentioned teen movies on Netflix had been solely like The Kissing Sales space or To All The Boys I’ve Beloved Earlier than? The streaming service is also house to the brand new authentic Re/Member, a horror flick featuring Japanese teenagers caught in a time loop sport. Adolescent bonding and lesson studying positive take a distinct tenor, although, whenever you’re being chased by an eyeless pink creature day-after-day till you possibly can remedy a thriller!

RE/MEMBER: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?

The Gist: What does the disappearance of a younger Russian lady within the Forties should do with a bunch of latest Japanese adolescents? The chilly opening of Re/Member might sound a bit discombobulated, nevertheless it units up the ghost story and homicide thriller on the coronary heart of the movie. Asuka (Kanna Hashimoto) sees the sufferer and learns that she should discover and reassemble the eight parts of her physique which are strewn throughout her college, all whereas evading the terrifying eyeless monster referred to as the Crimson Particular person. This sport of “Physique Search” just isn’t a solitary battle for Asuka, although, as 5 different classmates get trapped in a time loop together with her till they will remedy the puzzle by finding the physique components collectively. The sport brings out a cooperative spirit (to not point out some shocking pleasure) as all of them put together to get murdered day-after-day. However simply as they get near the end line, the foundations of the sport start to vary … throwing all the things into doubt.

What Films Will It Remind You Of?: It’s Closing Vacation spot meets Fringe of Tomorrow in a Japanese highschool.

Efficiency Price Watching: Kanna Hashimoto because the movie’s central character Asuka is certainly the standout of the ensemble forged. She actually does discover the stability between being a quiet, introverted character by nature with out turning into fully a recessive presence.

Re/Member movie poster
Picture: Netflix

Memorable Dialogue: “May life get any higher than this?” one of many time loop members Rumiko exclaims in one in every of their transient moments of reverie between the video games. “If solely we didn’t should get murdered each night time,” the once-bullied Shota wryly replies.

Intercourse and Pores and skin: Maybe shocking provided that it’s a teen film, however Re/Member doesn’t contain any overt sexuality.

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Our Take: Re/Member has a genuinely attention-grabbing and thrilling idea, to not point out a villain that’s straight out of your worst nightmares. (The creature design with no eyes within the sockets, chilling!) However this teen flick falters on the base degree of drama because it doesn’t give us practically sufficient time with the characters themselves. They don’t map neatly to teen archetypes in a method that offers us a simple shorthand to know them, nor have they got sufficient particular person characterization to make them compelling simply as individuals. There are sufficient spectacle and lighthearted moments on this manga adaptation to paper over a few of these weaknesses for an entertaining watch. When it comes time for the climactic showdown, nonetheless, that lack of funding on a private degree makes a distinction in how a lot (or little, somewhat) to lean ahead into the film.

Our Name: SKIP IT. Re/Member doesn’t convey something new to the time loop idea, nor does it notably fulfill as a teen film outdoors its plot gambit. The weather are there for one thing promising. However by sketching its characters so thinly, it limits simply how a lot an viewers can hook up with their race towards the clock.

Marshall Shaffer is a New York-based freelance movie journalist. Along with Decider, his work has additionally appeared on Slashfilm, Slant, Little White Lies and lots of different shops. Some day quickly, everybody will understand how proper he’s about Spring Breakers.

Watch Re/Member on Netflix

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Movie Reviews

Film Review: Kingdom: Return of the General by Shinsuke Sato

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Film Review: Kingdom: Return of the General by Shinsuke Sato

“Kingdom: Return of the General” continues in the same, rather high quality of the previous movies, while intensifying the drama

The fourth installment in what has come to be one of the best and most successful anime/manga adaptations is as epic as the previous parts, in the movie that concludes the first season of the anime (there are 5 by the way). 

The last chapter of the first season is actually the most dramatic one, with the focus changing, after a point, from Shin and his crew towards Ohki, in a rather well-deserved, as much as successful approach. The drama, however, starts essentially from the beginning of the film, with the appearance of Pang Nuan, aka God of War, who attacks the group out of the blue. Shin seems to pose no threat to him at all, while Qiang Lei, who does her best to counter him, soon realizes that she is no match either. The group suffers tremendous losses, with a number of Shin’s men dying and the rest barely making it out. 

Soon, and as flashbacks reveal Ohki’s tragic past, it becomes evident that Pang Nuan actually aims at him, as a fighter who seems to stand on equal level as the field leader of the country of Zhao. While he poses a threat to Ohki as a fighter, Li Mu, Zhao’s main general, does the same to him as a strategist, with Qin’s army eventually finding themselves in a tremendous binge. 

Up until now, the good guys were going from victory to victory, with Shin and his crew growing exponentially with each success, and the same applying to the Kingdom of Qin. This time, however, all the protagonists seem to find their matches, with the consequences being dire. In that fashion, the dramatic aspect of the movie, which has taken the place of the political one, is quite intense, essentially on par with the action. Ohki’s past adds even more to this sense, while the ending of the movie is probably the most tragic in the four parts. Add to that the loss of some of Shin’s comrades that have been following him since he left his village, and you have the backbone of the drama here. 

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Considering the focus is also intensely on Ohki, Takao Osawa, who reprises his role from the previous installments, gets to shine even more, in another impressive performance that has his theatricality being even more imposing. Furthermore, he is also the protagonist of the most impressive fight in the movie, with his rather prolonged one-on-one with the God of War being a wonder to watch. Even more so, since the two armies around them also continue to clash, with neither stripping anything from the impact of the other. This rather prolonged sequence is a testament to both Shinsuke Sato’s direction and the overall editing, with the succession between the two settings being truly astonishing. 

The same quality applies to the rather fast pace here, which, despite the 145 minutes of the movie, does not seem to lag at all, as it has enough story, characters and events to carry it fully. The cinematography and the SFX are also on a very high level, with the filmmakers taking full advantage of the different settings, forest, mountain, desert-like in order to present images of true epicness. 

Kento Yamazaki as Xin plays his character with an excessiveness that goes too far on occasion but actually mirrors the original. Kanna Hashimoto as He Liao Diao is quite good in the exact opposite style, with the same applying to Shun Oguri as Li Mu, who steals the show even if his role is brief. 

“Kingdom: Return of the General” continues in the same, rather high quality of the previous movies, while has enough elements, particularly regarding the permeating drama, to make it  stand out. 

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Movie Reviews

Immaculate Movie Review: Sydney Sweeney salvages this uninventive horror flick

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Immaculate Movie Review: Sydney Sweeney salvages this uninventive horror flick

Immaculate stands out from other films of this sub-genre with regards to the invincibility of the devil. But there is nothing to cheer about it, as it is a byproduct of a lazily written antagonist.

Part of the reason why Sydney Sweeney’s Cecilia works is that the other characters are peripheral and operate in a mechanical manner. Alvaro Morte’s Sal Tedeschi and Dora Romano’s Mother Superior are hugely disappointing for their lack of depth.

The visceral gore scenes partly make up for the lack of certain obligatory horror elements in the film. The repulsion that such scenes evoke testifies to the sublime craft in play, even though director Mohan milks the genre beyond acceptability. The film offers great ideas to ponder, too. There are scenes where we are told women choose nunhood not out of free will but rather because of the ill treatment they suffer at the hands of men outside. Another captivating idea is the choice of weapons in the stunt sequences; Cecilia uses a crucifix and nail, believed to be from Jesus’ crucifixion, to attack those who terrify people using faith and demand unquestioning submission.

Immaculate is a film with some moments that make you want to exceedingly adore it, but also others that border on trashy. Cecilia stands against her religion’s leaders in deciding whether she wants to have a child or not, demanding noninterference of the state in a woman’s bodily autonomy over pregnancy. Such exceptional writing is marred by other poor choices, forcing us to form a love-hate relationship with the film.

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Movie Reviews

Bad Accent Video Review: Pierce

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Bad Accent Video Review: Pierce

Pierce by Nelicia Low is screening at New York Asian Film Festival.

On the occasion of Nelicia Low’s debut, Pierce, screening at New York Asian Film Festival, Panos Kotzathanasis talks about the film, Low’s background and its connection with the movie, the way she approached the story, the relationship of the two brothers among them and with their mother, acting cinematography and editing, in one of the best movies of the year.

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