Genre:
Horror/Thriller
Director: Akio Yoshida
Starring: Mei Kurokawa, Mitsuru Fukikoshi
RunTime: 1 hr 33 mins
Released By: Festive Films & GV
Rating: PG
Opening
Day: 21 September 2006
Synopsis
:
Aimi
and her father move into an old, apartment building and learn
quickly that things are not normal here. The landlord warns
them of the rules. Those brave enough to break the rules are
unmercifully killed or tortured by mysterious undead spirits.
Aimi begins to see visions of a girl that residents say doesn't
exist. She learns of a girl named Ai who lived here 30 years
ago before she vanished one day on her way home from school.
As Aimi is driven to find out more, she learns that Ai wasn't
abducted, but in fact came back to the building the day she
disappeared. Can Aimi learn the horrible truth of what happened
to Ai? And what is the dark, disturbing secret that the two
girls share?
Movie
Review:
You
know what you’ll be getting with “The Haunted
Apartments”. Poltergeist activities in homes with cameos
by longhaired waifs with sinister intentions drifting past
the periphery of the eye while disappearing into the walls
and reappearing at the nearest reflection on a mirror or window.
The ever popular premise of a young protagonist (usually female)
with a chequered past, along with a widowed (sometimes divorced)
parent who is usually distracted by work obligations, that
end up having to face these vengeful spirits against all odds.
And that is basically what this film is all about.
A young
high school student, Aimi (Mei Kurokawa) and her writer father
(Mitsuru Fukikoshi) move to an old apartment complex where
they find that they have become practically enslaved to the
spirits that preside over its tenants because of rules that
cannot be broken. Sounds familiar? These hallowed rules also
played a large part in the recently released “Forbidden
Siren” along with the same sorts of characters as well
but without the mythos that “Forbidden Siren”
offered along the lines of its forerunning videogame.
But to
give credit where it’s due, the film infuses bouts of
humour in its usually stringent genre and run-of-the-mill
set-ups. Striking the right poise between comedy and terror
would be task for any script to handle but with its keen eye
for the supporting characters, it actually comes quite close
in many instances but is still prone to the clanging, self-important
harangues by individual performers. These characters are also
let down by a paper-thin storyline that is barely held together
by the strands of ghostly girl hair.
Part of
the popular “Tales of Terror” television anthology
series in Japan, “The Haunted Apartments” is its
first feature-length incarnation. It might possibly explain
the harried and extremely dated plot and the uninspired art
direction by the largely television oriented director in Akio
Yoshida. It uses rudimentary techniques, and in its case a
lackadaisical awareness to cliché-ridden angles and
dialogue. These techniques when used well can be unsettlingly
effective for these sorts of static films that depend largely
on shadows, lighting and sound. Unfortunately, it doesn’t
quite seem like the extra mile was taken to build the sort
of atmospheric quality that eludes many ambitious, like-minded
films.
A
very shoddy plot papers over the holes that don’t explicate
or leave any credible insinuations about the goings on. There’s
an uninteresting mystery that holds together the film and
the tenants with Aimi right in the middle of it all. A palpable
and unfortunately underused sense of camaraderie is wrought
among the abused tenants, kind of like the characters in “Lady
in the Water”. It’s no wonder that the performances
are mostly decent when they play off each other, with a slight
comedic tinge rather when the film starts to take itself seriously
in between revelations. If the cards were played right, this
could have been an effective satire against the middling horror
films that Japan have made into unfortunately viable product
imports. But alas, it just merely became one of them.
Movie
Rating:
(Enough
with the droopy eyed, longhaired ghost girls already!)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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