Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
(Top) 1 Highest-grossing horror films. 2 Highest-grossing horror film franchises and film series. ... Japanese series (1998–2019) $156,495,481 [a]
Highest-grossing Japanese films in Japan by distributor rentals up until 1996 Year Title Japanese box office (est.) Format Rentals Gross receipts Admissions Ref. 1950: The Munekata Sisters: ¥83,780,000: Unknown Unknown [72] Live-action 1951: The Tale of Genji: ¥141,050,000: Unknown Unknown 1952: The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice: ¥ ...
Japanese monster movies (2 C, 9 P) Japanese mystery horror films (6 P) N. Japanese natural horror films (8 P) P. ... Category: Japanese horror films. 32 languages ...
6. Godzilla vs. Hedorah, a.k.a. Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster (1971) Returning to the ecological-parable roots of Ishiro Honda’s 1954 original, Godzilla vs. Hedorah is a Trojan horse of a ...
The following table lists high-grossing films by the number of box office admissions, which refers to the number of cinema tickets sold at the Japanese box office. Only films that have sold at least 10 million tickets are listed. The list is not ranked, as the list is incomplete.
Screen Rant ranked the film at number 9 in their list of The 16 Best Japanese Horror Movies of All Time. [29] Bloody Disgusting included the film in The 20 All-Time Best Haunted House Horror Movies, stating that the film "takes the haunted house concept to wacky extremes". [34] Sarah Cleary for BFI commented that the film was "a fevered flight ...
Several other Asian countries have also remade Japanese horror films. For example, South Korea created their own version of the Japanese horror classic Ring , titled The Ring Virus . In 2007, Los Angeles –based writer-director Jason Cuadrado released the film Tales from the Dead , a horror film in four parts that Cuadrado filmed in the United ...
Seven Samurai (1954) topped the BBC poll of best foreign-language films as well as several Japanese polls.. Battleship Potemkin (1925) was ranked number 1 with 32 votes when the Festival Mondial du Film et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique asked 63 film professionals around the world, mostly directors, to vote for the best films of the half-century in 1951. [3]