In
Japanese with English Subtitles
Genre: Horror/Thriller
Director: Yukihiko Tsutsumi
Starring: Yui Ichikawa; Reo Morimoto; Naoki
Tanaka; Hiroshi Abe
RunTime: -
Released By: Shaw & InnoForm Media
Rating: PG
Opening
Day: 7 September 2006
Synopsis
:
As
reported in 1976, the inhabitants of a solitary island of
Yamajima were once annihilated except for a crazy man who
shouted a mysterious warning: “When you hear the siren,
never go out.” Thirty years later, Yuki Amamoto goes
to the island with her father, a freelance reporter, and her
little brother who suffers from neurological disorders. Though
they are welcomed by a young doctor, Minamida, who shows them
the island, all the islanders look creepy and unfriendly to
Yuki.
The
house they live in has long been deserted, full of dust and
old blood stains. Her neighbour, staying next door, helps
her clean the house and gives her the same strange warning:
“When you hear the siren, never go out”. It is
the beginning of a series of mysterious incidents: A group
of dancers in fancy clothes, mysterious scribbles on the walls
of a ruined house, a suddenly deserted market, a pretty girl
in a red dress standing on the hill…
Gradually,
Yuki loses her trust in the people around her. She is determined
to protect her brother from the unknown peril that seems to
be surrounding them. Then one night, she hears the siren.
But her father goes to the forest to take pictures of the
nocturnal animals. When he returns, something is very wrong
with him, as he seems cold-blooded and behaves like a different
man.
As
the second siren sounds, Yuki and the doctor goes to a steel
tower on the hill which the villagers are scared of, because
the siren blares from the top of it. There she finds a notebook
of the survivor of the 1976 annihilation of villagers, containing
the truth of the incident. It describes how the murders took
place, but is cut halfway: “The third siren changed
the villagers into…”
At
the same time, the siren begins to roar the third time. The
severed bits of mystery begin to assemble together to reveal
the truth of the 1976 massacre, and it leads to the solution
of the mystery of the siren…
Movie
Review:
Yukihiko
Tsutsumi's "Forbidden Siren” is based on Sony’s
Forbidden Siren series for the Playstation2 and was released
in Japan to coincide with the launch of its sequel, the eponymic
“Siren 2”. The premise closely follows the very
footsteps laid by the game without digressing a whole lot.
Roughly resembling a disturbing bedtime story to keep rumbustious
children in check, it spans a generation of sinister, shadowy
events from 1976 to present day Japan. Set entirely in the
desolate island-village of Yamajima, it hides a dark and evil
history. The inhabitants of the island were terrorised and
eradicated, except for a solitary man who was driven to madness,
convinced that he has seen evil in its purest form.
Fast forward
30 years later and we see a whole new set of villagers taking
up the reins. A writer, Shinichi (Reo Morimoto) hopes a change
of surroundings will be beneficial to his family. So he optimistically
packs up and relocates his grown daughter, Yuki (Yui Ichikawa),
and his young and sickly son, Hideo (Jun Nishiyama) to Yamajima.
Yuki, fiercely protective of her brother, does not welcome
the change when she finds that her menacing neighbours do
not seem pleased with the foreign invasion. Aside from the
friendly Dr. Minamida (Naoki Tanaka), the new family does
not interact much with the people on the island. The story
truly kicks up when a neighbour warns Yuki to never leave
her house alone at night, never go up to the tower on the
hill and never under any circumstances, leave her house when
she hears the siren.
“Forbidden
Siren”, perhaps unsurprisingly, has the look and feel
of a horror videogame. It depends largely on its ghastly atmospheric
qualities, which excels in contrast to the rest of its production
values. With its very dark and uninviting environment, it
sets the stage to turn this remote island paradise right into
hell on earth just as easily as day turning into night. It
draws certain parallels with “Silent Hill”, another
game-based film translation that had more or less the same
team working on both the original Silent Hill game and the
first Forbidden Siren game. It combines a fair bit of the
recently revived and oft-used horror elements such as its
large baroque sets, themes of estrangement and pianissimo
hints of foreboding to the heart-pounding screeches of shock.
Giving credit to the director, there are some smidgens of
flair in its execution to bring across the claustrophobia
and xenophobia that could have just as easily been charted
with hackneyed chase scenarios that would have been par for
the course.
Even
with its perfunctory main performers, the film’s detracting
aspect would be the ghouls. While understandably working within
a budget and given the relative difficulty in interpreting
them for the big screen from the animations of a game, they
come across as harmless and terribly unthreatening. But they
hold the key to the mystery of the island, which the film
constantly clues us in on. Save for certain contrivances,
the mystery works well within its internal logic that could
have you hearing the wails of the siren even after leaving
the cinema.
Movie
Rating:
(Does not stray far from conventional Asian horror, but it
manages to offer up a different variety)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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