#ryuhei kitamura
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danishexmachina · 9 months ago
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LoveDeath (2006, dir. Ryuhei Kitamura) poster by Shintaro Kago
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dare-g · 1 year ago
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Alive (2002)
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brokehorrorfan · 2 years ago
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The Price We Pay will be released on Blu-ray and DVD on February 21 via Lionsgate. The 2022 action-thriller will also be available on VOD on January 10 and in select theaters on January 13.
Ryûhei Kitamura (The Midnight Meat Train, Godzilla: Final Wars) directs from a script by Christopher Jolley. Emile Hirsch and Stephen Dorff star with Gigi Zumbado, Tyler Sanders, Erika Ervin, Jesse Kinser, Sabina Mach, and Vernon Wells.
Special features are not listed. Check out the trailer below.
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After an intense holdup at a pawnshop, Grace is taken hostage by the thieves. Forced to take refuge at a remote farmhouse late at night, they discover a secret dungeon with evidence of sadistic violence—and when "Grandfather" comes home, all hell breaks loose. Can Grace muster the courage to escape the gut-wrenching fates that befall her criminal companions?
Pre-order The Price We Pay.
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alephskoteinos · 11 months ago
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I remember seeing Ryuhei Kitamura's Aragami years ago, and I just did it again, but all that time I didn't realise that fucking Paul Gilbert from motherfucking Racer X did the ending credits track for that movie!
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I went wild realising that!
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spielkritik · 1 year ago
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Lesenswert: Game Awards, Oneechanbara-Movies, Godmode-Roman, Moonwalker, Perfect Dark Zero, MGS: The Twin Snakes
Da hat’s direkt mal wieder eine Woche länger gedauert, aber das mit voller Absicht. Letzten Mittwoch stand nämlich der erste Beitrag unserer neuen GASTSPIELER-Staffel an, und der Freitag war auch schon der letzte Freitag des Monats – und damit Quest-Log-Zeit. Um den Beiträgen nicht die Luft zum Atmen zu nehmen, wollte ich nicht auch noch Lesenswert dazwischen einzwängen. Bevor in gut einer Woche…
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skeletonfumes · 1 year ago
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carcosahouseparty · 1 year ago
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Absolute same energy..
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single funniest line in all of anime
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don-lichterman · 2 years ago
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The Price We Pay (2023 Movie) Official Trailer - Stephen Dorff, Emile Hirsch, Gigi Zumbado
The Price We Pay (2023 Movie) Official Trailer – Stephen Dorff, Emile Hirsch, Gigi Zumbado
The Price We Pay – in select theaters, on digital and on demand 1/13/23! Starring Stephen Dorff (Cody), Emile Hirsch (Alex), Gigi Zumbado (Grace), Tyler Sanders (Danny), Erika Ervin (Jodi), Jesse Kinser (John), Sabina Mach (Carly), and Vernon Wells (The Doctor).   Subscribe to the LIONSGATE: YouTube Channel for the latest movie trailers, clips, and…
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gebo4482 · 2 years ago
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The Price We Pay (2023 Movie) Official Trailer
Dir: Ryûhei Kitamura Star: Stephen Dorff / Emile Hirsch / Gigi Zumbado
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lupincentral · 1 year ago
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Have you heard the news?
Lupin III is diving into the world of live action once again, with Jigen Daisuke ‐ a spin-off film releasing “worldwide” on October 13th, 2023, exclusively on Amazon Prime Video!
Tetsuji Tamayama, who previously portrayed the character in the 2014 released feature film, will be returning to the role of Jigen.
Yoshimasa Akamatsu (BD ~Akechi Tantei Jimusho, Corpse Party: Book of Shadows) has produced the script for the film, and Hajime Hashimoto (The Detective Is in the Bar franchise, AIBOU: Tokyo Detective Duo, Shimauma, Signal) is directing.
In preparation for his reprising of the role, Tamayama states in an interview with Natalie that he has watched the Lupin the IIIRD spin-off film Jigen’s Gravestone, and hopes to bring this cooler, more mature version of the character to television screens come October.
Details on the plot are currently scarce - however, the Natalie article mentions that it involves Jigen searching Japan for the world’s greatest gunsmith, after his trusty combat magnum is in need of some TLC (and said gunsmith just happens to run a rather curious watch shop)…
More details on the film are to be revealed closer to its release date. For now, you can check out the films first trailer embedded below, and its announcement over at website Natalie.
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After Lupin ZERO wrapping up at the end of last year, and VS. Cat’s Eye releasing in January, a live action Jigen spin-off is not where I expected TMS to go next with the Lupin franchise. It is, however, in my opinion, a welcome diversion from the norm.
I would be lying if I did not first meet the announcement with some scepticism, though, mostly due to the series’ less than stellar track record of live action adaptations (the amazing 2017 Inspector Zenigata spin-off drama aside). Taking a moment to think back, I quickly realised that while the live action film directed by Ryuhei Kitamura did not win the hearts of fans back in 2014, it did do one thing right - the casting.
Shun Oguri as Lupin III and Tadanobu Asano as Inspector Zenigata were big gets for the film, and both appeared to take their appearance throughout it seriously. Meisa Kuroki played a gorgeous, cunning Fujiko, with Go Ayano trying his best to bring the stoic samurai Goemon to life. It was Tetsuji Tamayama, however, that best looked the part. Fans on social media were swooning over his Jigen as soon as the character portraits were revealed, with some saying he was made for the role.
Despite issues with pacing and its overall narrative, all of the main cast members represented their anime / manga counterparts well, and if there is one positive to take away from that film, it would be their performances.
This gives me hope for Jigen Daisuke - with fresh writing staff and a keen new director to the franchise on board, with an actor we already know can do the character justice, both Amazon and TMS may be on to something special, here. Now slightly older and more experienced, I have full confidence Tamayama will exceed that of his already good performance as Jigen from 2014.
I’m looking forward to finding out how this comes together. Keep an eye out for a full review of the film come October, which I will aim to post up on lupincentral.com a few days after its release.
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astoundingbeyondbelief · 1 year ago
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Kaiju Weeks in Review (September 10-30, 2023)
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I adore Godzilla Final Wars, but it's a movie with an identity crisis, unsure whether it wants to be headlining a Toho Champion Festival or mesmerizing American teenagers at a mid-aughts multiplex. @spacehunter-m's Final Wars 2004: The Year We Make Corn-Tack gives it a strong tug in the first direction, whittling the runtime down to 77 minutes and replacing most of the music and sound effects. She was inspired by Space Warriors 2000, of all things; as she put it, both films are "largely comprised of nonstop, monotonous action." As in that bizarro Ultraman compilation film, the kaiju trash-talk each other. It makes you wonder why Ryuhei Kitamura didn't at least bring back the speech bubbles from Godzilla vs. Gigan. Kaiju fan edits are rare, and this is in a class all by itself. Download it here.
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Shigeru Kayama's novelizations of Godzilla (1954) and Godzilla Raids Again are out—hopefully the first of many to come. My copy only arrived on Saturday, so I haven't had the chance to read the whole thing yet, but I've made it through Godzilla. It's interesting to see Kayama, who wrote the initial treatment, take another swing at the story after the film was finished. He puts back moments like Godzilla eating a cow and attacking a lighthouse, and is also more overt with the wartime allusions. There's an incredible moment where Dr. Yamane muses that studying Godzilla and learning his secrets could be Japan's way of redeeming itself after "caus[ing] a great deal of trouble to people throughout the world." Note that these are novella-length, so much less in-depth than the novelizations of American Godzilla films you might be used to (Godzilla Raids Again is less than 80 pages). The book ends with an afterword by translator Jeffrey Angles contextualizing the tales.
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Godzilla: War for Humanity continues to be a standout IDW miniseries. There's a new and very weird monster in the second issue, plus a no-nonsense Mothra (she tries to recruit Godzilla to fight Zoospora by shooting him in the back of the head and dragging him into the ocean in front of Minilla).
I've also got to mention the solicitation for another Godzilla Rivals installment, due December 20. Nola Pfau is writing, Megan Huang is illustrating.
Jen Onça is not excited to start her new, fast-paced fast-food career at Minilla Burger, but she'd much prefer a mundane day to the sudden return of Megalon! The monster brings destruction, trapping Jen in a forgotten lab deep beneath the restaurant with only the half-built form of Jet Jaguar to help her get out! She must repair the robotic defender to save herself and the city, but first she needs to escape the rubble trapping her in this tense adventure!
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Yuzo the Biggest Battle in Tokyo, Yoshikazu Ishii's follow-up to Attack of the Giant Teacher, has also been picked up by SRS Cinema. No release details yet. I can't really speak to the film either, since it screened at the same time as Yumiko Shaku's panel at G-Fest, but as you can see from the poster, it's set during the pandemic.
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The GAMERA -Rebirth- Gyaos has joined Godzilla Battle Line as an unusual sort of swarm unit. Your first summon of the match calls forth two sub-adults, and by the fifth summon you're sending out two sub-adults and three adults, still for four energy. They're probably the best swarm in the game, though still highly vulnerable to AOE units like Godzilla '01. I'm having fun with them in the Challenge Battles.
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Notzilla, one of the sharpest kaiju comedies out there, is unexpectedly getting the graphic novel treatment. Mitch Teemley is adapting his own screenplay, with art by Zumart Putra. The comic is already finished, although I'm not clear on how folks who didn't back the Kickstarter (which wrapped on September 11) will get it. Useless trivia: the terrific cover above (one of four) is by Ben Dunn, who wrote the How to Draw Manga book I poured over in middle school.
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After Troll shattered Netflix streaming records (according to Netflix), it's not super surprising that the company wants a sequel. Priority one: coming up with a title that's not Troll 2. Screenwriter Espen Aukan and director Roar Uthaug will both return.
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Toy highlights of the past few weeks:
After confusing everyone by teasing its silhouette the day before April Fools', Tamashii has fully unveiled an S.H.Monsterarts Godzilla '72, a rare Showa figure from the line. It comes with two heads, one of them bloodied (see above). Due at the end of February.
After finally running out of ways to repaint their mold of Hedorah's Perfect Stage, Bandai is making a Movie Monster Series figure of the kaiju's Landing Stage. A Godzilla Store exclusive, it'll be released October 25.
After over two years, Funko is releasing a trio of Godzilla Singular Point Pops. Hopefully they go all-out with this show—it's not like there's any other plausible way for a Satomi Kanahara figure to exist.
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romanceyourdemons · 5 months ago
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no one lives (2017), when compared to director ryuhei kitamura’s hollywood debut the midnight meat train (2008), is a much stronger production around the same stylistic lines. combining the slick and psychological sensibilities of kiyoshi kurosawa and takashi miike with the gore-fest sensibilities of wes craven and sam raimi, the film presents the “victim becomes the hunter” premise of last house on the left (1972) and i spit on your grave (1978) through the lens of the hyper-slick, hyper-capable, hyper-charismatic psychopath serial killer paradigm. i personally found the combination to be somewhat trite, considering that the appeal of the precedent films lies in the unexpected transformation of the genuinely wretched figure into the unexpectedly vicious, and the survival horror atmosphere clashes somewhat with the jigsaw-like utter control the serial killer is purported to have over his victims. more than that, the “killer in love with his victim, whom he seeks to transform into something inhuman like him” subplot merely telegraphs itself to the audience, rather than presenting any character moments the audience can get their teeth into—exactly the point of greatest weakness in the midnight meat train (2008). but this film learns from that one’s weaknesses: it does not make unsupported philosophical pretensions, and it keeps its plot streamlined and driving in pace, relying more on moment-to-moment suspense than plot-long mysteries. the overall product is cohesive and compelling, albeit with a somewhat factory-made feel. no one lives (2017) shows a director much more comfortable in his work, and for that i congratulate him
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monsterasia-zero · 4 months ago
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The Summer Of Godzilla continues, counting down Monsterasia Zero top Goji films every Wednesday and Saturday! This Saturday it’s Godzilla Final Wars, directed by Ryuhei Kitamura
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hardcore-gaming-101 · 2 years ago
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Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes
Remakes and remasters may feel like all the rage right now but in the early 2000’s, they were just as popular, especially on Nintendo systems. Metroid got its NES game remade for the GBA with Zero Mission and Capcom revamped Resident Evil for the Nintendo Gamecube. Not to be outdone, Konami remade Metal Gear Solid, also for the Gamecube, in 2004. Developer Silicon Knights were brought on to update the game, fresh off their critically acclaimed work on psychological horror game Eternal Darkness. New cutscenes were directed by Ryuhei Kitamura, lending a boisterous flair to the proceedings. Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes is a slick looking remake, and it shows just how much the technological leap there was between two console generations. But this remake also creates tension in the ways in which it adapts the classic game with these new innovations and polish.
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mattydemise · 11 months ago
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Please tell us what is your favourite Japanese Horror film, Mr. Aussie Horror?!
‘Versus’ from the year 2000, written and directed by Ryuhei Kitamura. Don’t research or spoil it for yourself, just watch it. It’ll blow your mind.
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outlawvernofficial · 2 years ago
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Ruby Rose double feature: The Doorman / Vanquish
Today I have a double feature of Ruby Rose action vehicle reviews for all you Rose Bros: Ryûhei Kitamura's THE DOORMAN (2020) and George Gallo's VANQUISH (2021). One of them is a fun time and one of them is a serious challenge to get through.
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