When Eun-soo gets lost in a country road, he meets a mysterious girl and is led to her fairytale ike house in the middle of the forest. There, Eun-soo is trapped with the girl and her siblings who never age. Eun-soo finally discovers a way out which is written on a fairy tale book. But the book tells a story of none other than himself! Click for the full review...
Just as its predecessor, this is about a bunch of elite high-school students who discover themselves the targets of a mysterious slasher while back in school during the holidays cramming for their college entrance exams. Of course, given the demise of most of the characters from the first movie, there is no relation- cast or character-wise- between the two films. Click for the full review...
Sion Sono is a poetic director, and while Exte: Hair Extensions captures a lot of established formulas that have been reminiscent in Asian Horror films, it doesn't make it any less effective as a Horror-Dark Fantasy hybrid. Click for the full review...
While both of these outings have their individual moments of spookiness, White Ghost is inarguably the stronger of the two films. Black Ghost is simply too familiar for its own good. How do they both stack up as a Japanese horror extravaganza? Click to read the full review...
It’s never a fun time when an older man with a past gets released from prison after 10 years to find his beloved married to another and a gaggle of pubescent teens at his doorstep. Will he gently turn their sweet dumpling faces away? Or has his time in prison created a man gone bad? Click to read the full review...
Rather than being a direct remake and/or re-imagining of the original Peli film, Tokyo Night is more of a spin-off in that the film takes place shortly after the events of the American film, but, with different characters, different storyline and a different country altogether. Click for the full review...
Ten people arrive at a building, having been promised a mysterious new job that pays $1,200/hr. They soon find themselves locked inside the building with two rules: All participants must return to their rooms by 10:00pm each night, and secondly, the ‘experiment’ will continue for seven days or until only two participants survive. Click for the full review...
Loft follows Reiko, a writer, who moves to a countryside villa to quietly work on her next novel. Her new environment turns out to be anything but peaceful though when she sights her next door neighbor moving a thousand-year-old mummified corpse into his university lab for research. Click for the full review...
JapanFlix presents Teke Teke, which extends director Koji Shiraishi's interest in adapting Japanese urban legends into film. This particular legend, often told by school children, tells of the ghost of a young woman split in half by a train. If low-budget horror is your cup of tea, you'll want a sip of this! Click for the full review...
Now available on DVD with English subtitles from our partner & distributor Well Go USA, is director Ten Shimoyama’s sensual vampire actioner BLOOD, starring 40-year-old Japanese sex symbol Aya Sugimoto. Is this one you'll want to add to your collection? Click to read the full review...