Japanese movies review
By angelgie05
@angelgie05 (118)
Philippines
November 11, 2011 7:53pm CST
Have you watch a Japanese horror movie? Do you like their horror movies? What can you say to the Japanese horror films? Me, I'm also a fanatic of their horror films like The Ring. The grudge is also nice one but I'm a bit confused with story. What's your review to their horror films? What made their films scary? is it the sound effect?
5 responses
@greenline (14838)
• Canada
20 Nov 11
I have not seen the movies you mentioned. But, I do like watching foreign movies, including Japanese movies, horror, comedies, tragedies, history, and so on. They are fantastic, technically and culturally. Background music and sceneries are so beautiful too.
@rafiholmes (2896)
• Malaysia
15 Nov 11
when u said THE RING and THE GRUDGE did u actually mean RINGU and JUON or the hollywood version of japanese horror films?
@lady1993 (27224)
• Philippines
12 Nov 11
I love Japanese horror movies sine even though they can be a bit cliche, they are still very scary. The acting is god, the sound, the setting- everything. The grudge is about this house that has evil spirits of the murdered son and mother- when you enter it, you are bound to die..
@girl_thinking (1959)
• Philippines
14 Nov 11
Hello again angelgie~
I love Japanese horror movies. Their sound effects and visual presentations are really scary. They use parts of the body which seems normal on normal days but they somehow make them look frightening. Like long hair, scratching nails, feet, eyes.. etc. They can make them look really scary even without much dialogue.
Korean horror movies are good too :)
@ehleonkyrietales (452)
• Philippines
12 Nov 11
First off i never liked horror movies. Not that i'm afraid and trembling, though i laughed about it as I know how they did the effects. Call me unhumored person but I find it funny how they scare people like that. Now, japanese culture is a different thing for me as I'am half blooded myself - so the culture is something that I really respect. Not horrors but scary legends are what made japanese's sense of "horror-rity" (what the f is that word?) made me proud.