Image Gallery Now Loading... Previous Next Close

Ghost Train (Japan Version) DVD Region 2

Our Price: US$44.99
Availability: Usually ships within 7 - 14 days
Important information about purchasing this product:
  • This product cannot be cancelled or returned after the order has been placed unless the product is defective (see details).
  • This product will not be shipped to Hong Kong.
Ghost Train (Japan Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Something strange is happening in the Tokyo subway. First there is a train accident; then people keep disappearing at the station, including the little sister of high school student Nana (Sawajiri Erika). Along with her friend Kanae (Wakatsuki Chinatsu), Nana investigates the mysterious disappearances in search of her little sister. They discover that all the people went missing after picking up a train ticket, and every time someone disappears, there is a mysterious woman in black on the platform. Meanwhile, subway conductor Toshikazu (Oguri Shun) gets transferred to Lost and Found after he reports a ghostly encounter on the tracks. At Lost and Found, he notices that the same train ticket keeps showing up on the list...

Japan's latest entry into the genre it does best, Ghost Train (a.k.a. Otoshimono) takes horror to the tracks. Though Ghost Train is Furusawa Takeshi's debut film, the rookie director is no stranger to the genre. Furusawa is horror master Shimizu Takashi's classmate and he previously assisted on Kurosawa Kiyoshi's horror films Kairo and Barren Illusion. Ghost Train features rising stars Sawajiri Erika (Shinobi and 1 Liter no Namida), Oguri Shun (Hana yori Dango and Neighbor No. 13), and Wakatsuki Chinatsu.

© 2007-2009 YesAsia.com Ltd. All rights reserved. This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Technical Information

Product Title: Ghost Train (Japan Version) 鐵道凶靈 (日本版) 铁道凶灵 (日本版) オトシモノ Ghost Train (Japan Version)
Artist Name(s): Sawajiri Erika | Wakatsuki Chinatsu | Oguri Shun | Sugimoto Aya | Itao Itsuji | Asada Miyoko 澤尻英龍華 | 若槻千夏 | 小栗旬 | 杉本彩 | 板尾創路 | 淺田美代子 泽尻英龙华 | 若槻千夏 | 小栗旬 | 杉本彩 | 板尾创路 | 浅田美代子 沢尻エリカ | 若槻千夏 | 小栗旬 | 杉本彩 | 板尾創路 | 浅田美代子 Sawajiri Erika | Wakatsuki Chinatsu | Oguri Shun | Sugimoto Aya | Itao Itsuji | Asada Miyoko
Director: Furusawa Takeshi 古澤健 Furusawa Takeshi 古沢健 Furusawa Takeshi
 Manage My Personalized Product Alerts 
Release Date: 2007-02-23
Publisher Product Code: ASBY-3706
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: Japanese
Country of Origin: Japan
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it?
Publisher: Amuse soft Entertainment
Other Information: DVD
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1004576912

Product Information

タイトル:オトシモノ
出演:沢尻エリカ/若槻千夏/小栗旬/杉本彩/板尾創路/浅田美代子
監督:古澤健

沢尻エリカ初主演映画!駅を舞台に、新機軸のホラー・ストーリーが繰り広げられていく。

駅で"オトシモノの定期券"を拾った者たちが、次々と行方不明になるという事件が起こった。そんななか、女子高生の木村奈々は、オトシモノを拾ったため、行方不明になってしまった妹を捜し続けていた。やがて奈々は、自分と同じようにオトシモノの呪いに翻弄されていたクラスメイト・藤田香苗と共に、謎の解明に乗り出す。一方、鉄道会社に勤務する久我俊一は、かつて行われたトンネル工事の作業中に、"禍々しい何か"が掘り起こされたことを知り…。
誰にとっても身近な電車と駅を舞台に、忌まわしい"オトシモノ"の呪いに翻弄されてく若者たちの姿を追った、新機軸のホラー映画。得体の知れない恐怖と共に、どこにでもいるティーンエイジャーたちの、命がけの友情も描いていく。主演は、TVドラマ「1リットルの涙」のヒロイン役で注目を集め、本作がに映画初主演作となった沢尻エリカ。若槻千夏や小栗旬、杉本彩など、共演陣にも豪華な顔ぶれが揃っている。

■映像特典(予定):メイキング映像「オトシモノのオトシドコロ」/イベント試写会/初日舞台挨拶/劇場予告編/韓国公開版劇場予告編/TVスポット

テクニカル・インフォメーション
:カラー
画面:16:9/4:3(LB)
言語/音声:日本語:DD(5.1chサラウンド)

その他の情報
製作年:2006
著作権:(C)2006 「オトシモノ」フィルムパートナーズ
日本小売価格:¥3800

Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

Other Versions of "Ghost Train (Japan Version)"

Customers who bought "Ghost Train (Japan Version)" also bought

Customers who bought videos directed by Furusawa Takeshi also bought videos by these directors:

YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Ghost Train (Japan Version)"

June 14, 2007

This professional review refers to Ghost Train (DVD) (Hong Kong Version)
A child picks up a rail pass on an empty train platform and incurs the wrath of an angry long-haired ghost, who demands it back. The child freaks out, but keeps the pass anyway. Soon, the child is taken away by the ghost and its giant batch of hair, never to be seen again. But before he embarks on his last train ride, the child manages to tell his friend Noriko and her older sister Nana about the pass. Actually, I can't blame the ghost for being mad at the kid; those passes are really expensive.

That's the setup for Ghost Train, the latest entry in the Japanese horror genre. Erika Sawajiri (who, including this film, has acted in five films and one television drama in 2006) stars as Nana, a goody-two-shoes who has a sick mother in the hospital and is not very popular at school despite being the class president. One day, Noriko picks up another rail pass and brings it home with her. Next thing you know, she sees the missing boy on the train platform on her way to see Nana's mother the next day.

Noriko tries to follow him and also disappears without a trace. Nana begins to investigate, but when a video camera captures Noriko walking in an empty train station at 2 in the morning, the police inexplicably take it as a good sign that she is still alive and well. At the station, Nana crosses paths with Shunichi (Oguri Shun), a station agent demoted from conductor because he keeps reporting something on the tracks, and delays the trains by stopping to investigate. However, even though he was demoted for his paranoia, Shunichi refuses to help Nana because believing her would cost him his job.

Meanwhile, Nana's class rival, bad girl Kanae (Wakatsuki Chinatsu), is given a bracelet by her boyfriend, who picked it up on a train seat. It turns out that the bracelet belongs to the ghost as well, and Kanae accidentally pushes her boyfriend down onto the train tracks when his possessed body tries to kill her. But before he gets run over by a train, he warns Kanae to beware someone named Yaeko. Soon, Nana, Shunichi, and Kanae form an unlikely alliance to investigate the mysterious Yaeko before she comes after Kanae, and Noriko disappears for good.

As a typical J-horror flick, Ghost Train offers much of the same: a complicated backstory, cheesy jump scares elicited by music, a female ghost with long hair, and a child ghost in pale makeup. Director Takeshi Furusawa has reportedly watched a lot of horror movies, which likely contributes to Ghost Train's generic feel. However, Furusawa's feel for horror probably enhanced his skills as an assistant director under Kiyoshi Kurosawa. The skills show; Ghost Train does have a few effectively scary moments, particularly a sequence where the camera builds tension by focusing purely on Nana in a dark apartment while the audience is aware that a ghost is lurking nearby. Editing is also used creatively during one scene where Kanae's possessed boyfriend appears to be standing far away, only to appear right next to her when the angle switches. These types of creative techniques help the filmmaking team hide the film's obvious lack of budget.

Still, despite those inspired moments, Ghost Train is mostly business as usual. Contrivances build up, and the backstory gets increasingly complicated as the film nears its end. Before you know it, the film has spiraled downwards, resulting in an over-the-top ending highlighted by a huge plot hole and bad computer graphics. Meanwhile, Furusawa and co-writer Erika Tanaka take the plot so seriously that they seem to be intentionally trying to drain all the fun out of the film. However, the finale is so exaggerated (including a rather cartoonish sequence where some ghosts get run over by a train) that it's not hard to let out a laugh or two.

Actually, the screenplay does have one pretty big surprise. The film's central human storyline, Kanae and Nana's friendship, is actually surprisingly affecting. Setting them up as adversaries in the beginning may make their sudden bonding seem convenient, but Chinatsu and Sawajiri make a cute team of ghost hunters, and that likability makes them easier to connect to, even if their acting skills are lacking.

There isn't much in Ghost Train that makes it unique from the dozens of horror movies that come out of Japan every year. If it were really good, then it would be filled with unbearable tension, and yet still be great fun. If it were really bad, it would still be fun in that unintentional laugh-inspiring kind of way. Instead, Ghost Train is average, delivering a reasonably affecting plotline, a few effective scare moments, and a product indistinguishable from other films in its genre. Mediocrity may be Ghost Train's biggest offense.

By Kevin Ma

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Browse Other Related Categories

Annual Clearance The Blue Bird Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children Complete Goemon The Triumphant General Rouge 20th Century Boys: Chapter 2 - The Last Hope Blood: The Last Vampire (2009)
  • Region & Language: No Region Selected - English
  • *Reference Currency: No Reference Currency
 Change Preferences 
Please enable cookies in your browser to experience all the features of our site, including the ability to make a purchase.
Close