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Arrow Releasing Pulse

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  • Arrow Releasing Pulse

    NEW UK/US TITLE: Pulse Dual Format Blu-ray & DVD

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    One of the greatest and most terrifying achievements in modern Japanese horror


    Pre-order your UK Dual Format release here: http://bit.ly/2cIswlT


    North American Blu-ray pre-order link should be live soon!


    Award-winning filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa delivered one of the finest entries in the "J-Horror" cycle of films with this moody and spiritually terrifying film that delivers existential dread along with its frights. Setting his story in the burgeoning internet and social media scene in Japan, Kurosawa's dark and apocalyptic film foretells how technology will only serve to isolate us as it grows more important to our lives.


    A group of young people in Tokyo begin to experience strange phenomena involving missing co-workers and friends, technological breakdown, and a mysterious website which asks the compelling question, "Do you want to meet a ghost?" After the unexpected suicides of several friends, three strangers set out to explore a city which is growing more empty by the day, and to solve the mystery of what lies within a forbidden room in an abandoned construction site, mysteriously sealed shut with red packing tape.


    Featuring haunting cinematography by Junichiro Hayashi (Ring, Dark Water), a dark and unsettling tone which lingers long after the movie is over, and an ahead-of-its-time story which anticipates 21st century disconnection and social media malaise, Pulse is one of the greatest and most terrifying achievements in modern Japanese horror, and a dark mirror for our contemporary digital world.


    SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS:
    •High Definition digital transfer
    •High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations
    •Original 5.1 audio (DTS-HD on the Blu-ray)
    •New optional English subtitle translation
    •New interview with writer/director Kiyoshi Kurosawa
    •New interview with cinematographer Junichiro Hayashi
    •The Horror of Isolation: a new video appreciation featuring Adam Wingard & Simon Barrett (Blair Witch, You're Next)
    •Archive 'Making of' documentary, plus four archive behind-the-scenes featurettes
    •Premiere footage from the Cannes Film Festival
    •Cast and crew introductions from opening day screenings in Tokyo
    •Trailers and TV Spots
    •Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Tommy Pocket


    FIRST PRESSING ONLY:Illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film by critic Chuck Stephens
    Rock! Shock! Pop!

  • #2
    This is a really good film. Best announcement for today for me.

    Comment


    • #3
      This is now slated for July in the US and the UK.
      Rock! Shock! Pop!

      Comment


      • #4
        Watched this last night, full review with screen caps soon but those unimpressed with Arrow's Dark Waters transfer are going to be suitably unimpressed with their transfer on Pulse.
        Rock! Shock! Pop!

        Comment


        • #5
          Bummer. I guess mediocre should be the default expectation for Arrow's Japanese releases.

          If not to secure a better master, why this was delayed for 7 months?

          Comment


          • #6
            I guess to be fair, Pulse is a pretty drab looking film by nature, so it's never going to 'pop' the way some movies do, but it's still pretty flat looking. It's better than the DVD at least, but that's not saying much as the DVD looked pretty terrible.
            Rock! Shock! Pop!

            Comment


            • #7
              Yeah. I'm still going to pick it up as I never bought the DVD and Amazon has it for $16.xx. Hopefully the film holds up.

              Comment


              • #8
                Thoughtful AND Creepy. Two words not used in tandem to describe many recent domestic Horror films. One of the key secrets to the Asian Horror boom is that the films and the filmmakers take their subject seriously. Japanese Director Kiyoshi Kurosawa here delves into the very meaning of life and death.

                The early section is slow and somewhat meandering is setting up the situation. Still, once the situation is set up and the events go into motion it's a very creepy ride, fueled in large measure by the serious tone and even thoughtful discussion of WHY the ghosts are here, and what the meaning our lives today are. These ghosts are clearly symbolic. They force the "living" to examine their own lives. A world in which it is easier to communicate via a computer than it is with a co-worker in the same living, breathing workspace. As the film progresses it becomes more and more ambitious. AI and social media have only deepened the subtext of this fine chiller with sci-fi overtones.

                Not surprisingly, an American Remake came and went (it has an 11% RT score)

                The original PULSE is currently available to stream on Prime Video, Hoopla, Tubi and for rental.


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