The Incite Mill - 7 Days Death Game (Blu-ray + DVD) (Normal Edition) (Japan Version) Blu-ray Region A
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Ten people from all walks of life - including freelance worker Yuki (Fujiwara Tetsuya) - come together to take on a part-time job that promises to pay 112,000 yen an hour over seven days. Taken to a secluded facility, the ten are each given a weapon and are told that the game can end immediately when there are only two surviving members. Despite an initial agreement to work as a group, suspicions and paranoia arise when one of the players is found dead on the second morning. As alliances collapse and players begin to use their weapons, it's every player for themselves in this potentially deadly game.
Blu-ray and DVD Edition comes with the film on both Blu-ray and DVD. It also comes with cast interviews and messages, stage events, and various promotional materials.
Technical Information
Product Title: | The Incite Mill - 7 Days Death Game (Blu-ray + DVD) (Normal Edition) (Japan Version) 死神鬥室 (Blu-ray & DVD Set) (Blu-ray) (通常版) (日本版) 死神斗室 (Blu-ray & DVD Set) (Blu-ray) (通常版) (日本版) インシテミル 7日間のデス・ゲーム ブルーレイ&DVDセット 通常版 【Blu-rayDisc】 The Incite Mill - 7 Days Death Game (Blu-ray + DVD) (Normal Edition) (Japan Version) |
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Also known as: | The Incite Mill - Nanokakan no Death Game The Incite Mill - Nanokakan no Death Game The Incite Mill - Nanokakan no Death Game The Incite Mill - Nanokakan no Death Game The Incite Mill - Nanokakan no Death Game |
Artist Name(s): | Fujiwara Tatsuya | Ayase Haruka | Takeda Shinji | Ishihara Satomi | Hirayama Aya | Katahira Nagisa | Kitaoji Kinya | Abe Tsuyoshi | Ohno Takuro | Ishii Masanori 藤原龍也 | 綾瀨遙 | 武田真治 | 石原聰美 | 平山綾 | Katahira Nagisa | 北大路欣也 | 阿部力 | 大野拓朗 | 石井正則 藤原龙也 | 绫濑遥 | 武田真治 | 石原聪美 | 平山绫 | Katahira Nagisa | 北大路欣也 | 阿部力 | 大野拓朗 | 石井正则 藤原竜也 | 綾瀬はるか | 武田真治 | 石原さとみ | 平山綾 | 片平なぎさ | 北大路欣也 | アベ,ツヨシ | 大野拓朗 | 石井正則 Fujiwara Tatsuya | 아야세 하루카 | Takeda Shinji | Ishihara Satomi | Hirayama Aya | Katahira Nagisa | Kitaoji Kinya | Abe Tsuyoshi | Ohno Takuro | Ishii Masanori |
Director: | Nakata Hideo 中田秀夫 中田秀夫 中田秀夫 Nakata Hideo |
Blu-ray Region Code: | A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it? |
Release Date: | 2011-02-23 |
Publisher Product Code: | BWBA-F7216 |
Language: | Japanese |
Place of Origin: | Japan |
Disc Format(s): | Blu-ray |
Publisher: | Warner Entertainment Japan |
Other Information: | Blu-ray + 2DVDs |
Shipment Unit: | 2 What is it? |
YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1023855751 |
Product Information
時給11万2千円という求人広告につられ、男女計10人が「暗鬼館」に集まった。仕事内容は、「暗鬼館」での7日を24時間監視されるだけ。鍵のかからない10の個室と10の凶器が参加者に与えられる。何も起きなければ全員に1,600万円以上の大金が手に入るはずだった・・・。しかし、2日目に死者が出る。誰が何のために殺したのか?参加者は疑心暗鬼の深淵に落ちてゆく・・・。果たして、生き残りをかけた究極の心理ゲームは始まってしまうのか? 映像特典:オリジナル劇場予告編/綾瀬はるかグリーティング(NG編)/綾瀬はるかメッセージ/劇場版TVスポット/初日舞台挨拶映像/石原さとみメッセージ
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "The Incite Mill - 7 Days Death Game (Blu-ray + DVD) (Normal Edition) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to The Incite Mill - 7 Days Death Game (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Ringu director Nakata Hideo returns with The Incite Mill a gripping psychological thriller that sees him continuing to explore themes of paranoia and the darker side of human nature. Pitting ten strangers against each other in a do or die game with high financial rewards, the film was based upon a novel by Yonezawa Honobu, and is similar in tone to Nakata's recent English language outing Chatroom though with added detective mystery elements that help to add a little excitement. Being billed as the 50th anniversary production for Japanese talent agency Horipro, the film is an appropriately ensemble affair, with a top cast headlined by Fujiwara Tetsuya (Battle Royale, Death Note) and Ayase Haruka (The Magic Hour), with support from the likes of Ishihara Satomi (Zatoichi the Last) and Abe Tsuyoshi (Boys Over Flowers Final).
The film kicks off with Fujiwara Tetsuya as a shiftless young man hanging around in a convenience store, flipping through magazines and looking for a job. Fate comes calling in the form of a beautiful woman (Ayase Haruka), who invites him to join her in applying for a part time job that seems too good to be true, paying 112,000 yen an hour for a seven day psychological experiment. Jumping at the chance, he ends up with her and 8 others in a weird underground facility, where they are soon informed that they are part of a game revolving around crime and punishment, which can be brought to a close if only 2 people are left. With a robot guard patrolling the hallway and with the participants each being given a weapon, the stage is set for an escalating cycle of mistrust. Nakata is an expert at dealing with the essential ruthlessness and coldness humanity is capable of when pushed, and as such is a good choice for helming a paranoia piece like The Incite Mill. Although there have been a lot of Japanese films about last man standing style death contests, the film does have a different feel, mainly since it puts more focus on its characters and mystery, rather than simply notching up the body count. For all its trappings, at its heart the plot is basically a whodunit, a lock room murder puzzle with plenty of old school sleuthing, underlined by several Agatha Christie references, most obviously the ten little Indian figures which sit on a table and bark instructions. With the characters having access to a variety of weapons and with the action taking place in just a few rooms, the film also has an enjoyable Clue like feel, with the viewer being invited to work out the identity of the killer(s). This works pretty well, with a number of well timed revelations and twists along the way to keep things fun, even if seasoned viewers will probably see the end coming some ways off. The last act does bring things together in satisfactory fashion, and whilst there are a few throwaway moments that seem to suggest that the film might have been trimmed (most notably the completely unexplored fact that the game is being viewed around the world on the internet, a subplot relegated to a handful of shots of people watching on their phones, and some obscure references to the foundation running it all), the plot does hold the interest. Although the film is a fairly straightforward commercial thriller and not quite as bleak as his earlier works, Nakata does add a fair amount of substance, exploring some difficult and challenging moral ground. The game itself is entertainingly fiendish, offering incentives for both killing and solving murders, and with the changing weapons acting as deterrents as well as murder tools. As things progress and the issue of trust becomes ever more important, the film does get tense, and the character death order is somewhat unpredictable, at least until the final few scenes. The film also benefits from a few oddball moments, that do at times give it an almost science fiction feel, with the metallic underground complex being a strange, sinister location. Best of all is the robot guard, a clunky though marvellously cool creation that hangs from the ceiling and glides around the corridors, clacking its claws and generally acting threatening in best 1950s B-movie fashion. The scenes where it drags characters off to prison or death are amongst the film's best, even if they do add a weird injection of campness. In-keeping with such endearing daftness, the film's many death scenes are never particularly nasty or bloody, being mainly off-screen, and though somewhat gruesome, never push things into the realm of horror or real unpleasantness, keeping the viewer's attention firmly on the mystery. Though this does give the feel that with The Incite Mill Nakata is pulling his punches somewhat, it's a finely crafted thriller that's more entertaining than the po-faced Chatroom. Whilst perhaps inevitably not up to standards of Ringu, the film is certainly one of his better recent outings, and confirms that he is still very much a genre director worth watching. by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com |
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