japanese zombie movie

Danielle 2022-04-22 07:01:53




I heard that "Please call me a hero" has another name, called "Training to Mount Fuji".

I have never been interested in nausea and vomiting zombie movies, but this show is a bit different: the zombies in it not only like to eat people, but also do things they have been doing before, or things they like very much, or It's a helpless thing. It's still the consistent style of Japanese film and television - throwing reality cruelly in front of you and letting you reflect on yourself.

The commuters run the trams endlessly, the dead high jumper is still practicing, the shopaholics are knocking on the door of the store, the fat man keeps looking for food, the driver finally drives the car recklessly, the cartoonist has been urging the assistant to submit the manuscript, the salesman has been chanting "ever Love your care" - how morbid it all seems, it seems to suggest that there is a huge pressure to live in Japan, and everyone has mental distortions.

What's more chilling is the people who are still alive. A young man who took a picture with his cell phone after seeing someone being bitten by the ground, a long-haired man who wanted to molest a high school girl, a former boss Iura who played music to attract zombies and who tried to fuck with a man and a woman, a fat man who beat his boss with a super cool painter Assistant, this zombie movie is more like a reality movie that satirizes human nature.

Let’s elaborate on some character details:


A high school student played by Muraka:
It is said that in the original comics, this female high school student who slept for most of the movie has the ultimate skill - controlling zombies. It's terrible to think about it. Unfortunately, the movie is too short to restore the comics.


The scene of eating cat food, I guess, because after becoming a zombie, people will live in their previous memories. She threw away the saury, but liked to eat cat food, which might have something to do with her poor background, maybe she also raised a cat that depended on each other. (After watching the movie and then reading the comments, I realized that the two of them were eating cat food in the forest! It's really frustrating)



Oda Gong played by Masami Nagasawa:
Heroes and high school students came to an abandoned shopping mall in the mountains, and the first person they met was Shu. I think, she should be forced to be a trailblazer, just like Yipu later. As for the reason: it may be because he refused to give in and the boss Yipu. This group of survivors is also a terrible class group, and those who do not obey will either be the trailblazers, or they will be burned to black coal.



But after reading it, I just feel a little chilly about human nature, and there is no other.

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