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Paranormal Activity 2: Tokyo Night was released onto rental DVD and Blu-ray on March 4, 2011. It was then released for home entertainment in Japan on April 5, 2011, [4] and internationally on-demand by AMC Theatres on September 13, 2022, as part of a bundle with the rest of the English language film series.
Kamogawa Yoshirō is a teenage Japanese virgin whose life is changed by a cosmic event. While fantasizing about his dream girl, Yoshirō receives a cosmic blast while masturbating. At school he finds himself able to read other people's thoughts and joins a group of psychic virgins in order to defend the world from evil psychics using his ...
Your Eyes Tell (Japanese: きみの瞳(め)が問いかけている, Hepburn: Kimino mega toikaketeiru) is a 2020 Japanese drama romance film, being a remake of the 2011 South Korean film Always. It is directed by Takahiro Miki and written by Yuichi Toyone.
Dark Water (Japanese: 仄暗い水の底から, Hepburn: Honogurai mizu no soko kara, lit. "From the Depths of Dark Water") is a 2002 Japanese supernatural horror film directed by Hideo Nakata and written by Yoshihiro Nakamura and Kenichi Suzuki, based on the short story collection by Koji Suzuki. [1]
Persona 3 The Movie: #2 Midsummer Knight's Dream (劇場版「ペルソナ3」第2章, Gekijōban Perusona 3 Dai Ni Shō) is a 2014 Japanese animated film and the second installment in a film series based on the Persona 3 video game by Atlus. The film is directed by Tomohisa Taguchi and written by Jun Kumagai.
All Night Long 2 (オールナイトロング2) is a 1995 Japanese original video horror film directed by Katsuya Matsumura. [1] It was released on February 10, 1995. [ 1 ]
Larisa Yefimovna Shepitko (Russian: Лари́са Ефи́мовна Шепи́тько, Ukrainian: Лариса Юхимівна Шепітько, romanized: Larysa Yukhymivna Shepitko; 6 January 1938 – 2 July 1979) [1] was a Soviet film director and screenwriter of Ukrainian origin. [2]
The American version only features 15 minutes of the original Japanese footage and does not credit any of the Toho crew. Ifukube's music was replaced with cues from The Amazing Colossal Man. [11] The American version runs at 70 minutes and was theatrically released on December 12, 1962 by Crown International, under the title Varan the Unbelievable.