Masters of Horror – Dream Cruise
This is an installment from season 2 of Masters of Awe. An American living in Tokyo is having an affair with his client’s handsome wife. When the husband finds out he takes them in his yacht to confront them on the originate sea. But restless spirits return to search for vengeance from beyond the grave.
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I bear this is the second prove of the series to be helmed by a Japanese director and filmed on-location in Japan, the first being last season’s controversial ‘Imprint.’ Compared to that ‘Dream Cruise’ is a distinguished more ragged terror experience, though detached an effective one. If you’ve ever seen other Asian alarm films you know how creepy vengeful spirits can be, and there’s some friendly scares and nerve-wracking tension here. It helps that all the players are linked to the same sin, and that each has an equal chance of falling to the spirit’s wrath. And if death by drowning doesn’t sound wonderful to you, there’s even more to be timid about.
Whereas other MoH installments have played up the camp, gore, and sex in lieu of dependable scares, Dream Wing contains little-to-none of the above but did sustain me in decent suspense till the destroy (where admittedly, the ending gets predictable) . There’s no current ground broken here, but there’s a satisfying evening rental and a possible situation in your scare library.
Despite the listing here on Amazon and the box shroud, Dream Sail is actually the 87-minute version. When it aired on ShowTime it was chop to 60-minutes, but the DVD is actually the recent 87-minute lop despite the listing here and the wait on of the box stating 60-minutes.
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Going into Dream Skim I wasn’t positive what to request. Over the last couple of years the Asian ghost account has really hasten out of steam. Asia has a lot more to offer the scare genre, but these films are common there and the rest of the world. It’s sort of like the American slasher movie. They seemed to dominate the early to mid 80s. While there were plenty of non slasher movies it really did seem like, that’s all that was out there. Filmmakers found something that worked and milked it for everything it was worth and now that has happened to the Asian ghost account.
The last few Asian ghost movies I have seen after it was over I honest felt like so what? It’s the same account over and over again and it really has gotten to the point to where you can’t even verbalize these films a fraction, but unlike the American slasher movie, I do feel as if the Asian ghost sage can collected work.
Let’s face it Dream Sail doesn’t really offer anything we haven’t seen before. If you’re well schooled on these movies you should know how this one will play out. But it’s about how you remove these clichés and work it. And the makers of Dream Skim are able to engage a clichéd memoir and sort of form it work.
Jack played by Daniel Gillies is an American businessman working in Japan; he’s also having an affair with Yuri Saito played by Yoshino Kimura who’s married to Eiji Saito played by the very cold Ryo Ishibashi who happens to be a client to Jack. Eiji takes Jack and Yuri on a coast that turns out to be the ultimate dread.
Like most Asian panic flicks, Dream Glide does hurry at a insensible, but genuine slump. In many ways the movie starts off as a drama. Eiji knows his wife his cheating on him with Jack and they both know as well, but Eiji drops itsy-bitsy hints that he knows and doesn’t advance upright out and say it. Those scenes actually play out quite well and to be objective might be the strongest scenes of the movie.
Dream Sail is based off a fable by Koji Suzuki who has been dubbed the Japanese Stephen King. Koji wrote the original Ringu so this guy is one of the Icons of Japanese awe. The screenplay was written by Naoya Takayama & Norio Tsuruta. And overall the script is quite well done. While it doesn’t offer anything we haven’t seen before it does work well as do the characters.
Norio Tsuruta also served as director and is able to sustain Dream Flit running at a dull, but exact scoot. While Tsuruta doesn’t really offer us anything we haven’t seen done before he does create the best of everything and is able to originate an overall solid movie. The first half has some decent tension with Eiji brilliant about the affair, but after that the tension does lack at times.
The fact I have seen so many of these movies I say it’s kinda hard for me to really feel the suspense and tension and even though Tsuruta does a solid job, I can’t benefit, but feel I have already seen this before and seen it done a bit better. The last act though does feature some solid tension even if it never reaches the greatness some other movies like this did it does play out rather well.
The actors all do a solid job unlike Heed from season 1; most of the Japanese actors in Designate spoke no English or very exiguous. So you have to understand it’s not easy for the actors to verbalize their lines in English and sound great. Dream Flit though the Japanese actors do a solid job; Yoshino Kimura lived in America therefore her English was very wonderful and Ryo Ishibashi who is best known to panic fans from Audition also does a solid job. I don’t know how well he knows English, but regardless he provides an honorable and very creepy performance.
When the Japanese actors talk to each other they mostly deliver in Japanese, which was something I was gratified with. I detest movies that feature characters from a non-English speaking country, but yet they state to one another in English. So I was gay that the Japanese actors actually spoke to each other in mostly Japanese.
Dream Coast despite the clichés actually plays out rather well while it does lack the suspense and tension for the most allotment it peaceful works well and the final act does have some solid tension. Dream Sail isn’t the best Asian ghost flick I have ever seen, but it does work and was able to have my interest despite the clichés.
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