Monthly Archives: July 2025

Media watch: Former maiko reveals a dark side of traditional Japanese arts

One of the aspects of the Johnny & Associates sexual abuse scandal that made it even more disturbing was the notion that the media knew for years about the abuse and said nothing. It almost seemed as if most media … Continue reading

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Review: Until Dawn

Another video game adaptation, and this one really feels like one in the way it keeps returning to a starting point. The plot structure, however, is very contrived and not particularly original. A group of young friends drive into a … Continue reading

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Review: All We Imagine as Light

The title of Indian director Payal Kapadia’s Cannes-winning first fiction feature is explained near the end when a character talks about working in a dark place for days on end. It gets to the point, he says, where light is … Continue reading

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Review: When It Melts

Based on a novel, Veerle Baetens’ movie about a young woman who has never gotten over a teenage trauma has an unsettling allure at first, since the source of the trauma remains hidden. That’s not to say it can’t be … Continue reading

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Review: Elevation

Monster movies and so-called post-apocalyptic fiction are usually predicated on high-concept gimmicks. Sometimes the gimmick has a gloss of scientific credibility, such as the theory in The Last of Us that a killer fungus which has taken over the world … Continue reading

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Media watch: Sanseito’s draft constitution a blueprint for repression and control

The Upper House election campaign has been dominated by an unusual issue: foreign residents of Japan. The upstart Sanseito Party, whose motto is “Japanese People First,” has made it one of the planks of their platform, saying that foreign residents … Continue reading

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Review: Immaculate

It’s surprising that there hasn’t been more cinematic glosses on Rosemary’s Baby considering how irresistible is the notion of a child born of physical Satanic paternity, but this son-of-a-nun horror story isn’t much of an addition to the sub-genre. For … Continue reading

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Review: Strange Darling and Drop

Whiplash thrillers have become a kind of cottage industry in B-movie Hollywood, confounding critics who, in service to readers, have to circumvent crucial plot points so as to not spoil the intended effect. JT Mollner’s Strange Darling is more inventive … Continue reading

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Review: A Different Man

Though Aaron Schimberg’s 70s-styled black comedy seems to be about how we address disability as a society, it’s really about casting, and not just its own choice of actors. The main plot line has to do with a small Off-Broadway … Continue reading

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Media watch: Candidates won’t be talking about caregiving

Right now the issue gaining the most media attention leading up to the Upper House election later this month is the status of foreigners in Japan, owing mainly to controversial remarks made by the new opposition party Sanseito. It’s hard … Continue reading

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