Gaki No Kisetsu

Gaki No Kisetsu

Release date : January 1, 1997
Runtime : 2h 6m
Countries of origin : Japan /
Original Language : Japanese /
Director : Akira Matsuda /
Writers : Akira Matsuda /
Production companies :
January 1, 1997 2h 6m Japan Japanese More
0
User Score

Overview

The camera sometimes runs with him, sometimes captures him from a bird's eye view, sometimes stirs him up, and sometimes gives him a live feel that is as intense as the protagonist's tension. The high degree of freedom of the camera eloquently captures the protagonist's inability, to be honest. The use of a hand-held camera to capture the scene of the mountain disaster is also effective and memorable.
More »

Top Billed Cast

More

Images

View All Images

Recommendations

More
The Crow
Action Fantasy Horror
Inside Out 2
Animation Family Adventure Comedy Fantasy
Rebel Ridge
Crime Action Thriller
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
Comedy Horror Fantasy
Uglies
Science Fiction Adventure Action
Blink Twice
Mystery Thriller
Deadpool & Wolverine
Action Comedy Science Fiction
Trap
Thriller Crime Horror
Transformers One
Animation Science Fiction Adventure Family
Borderlands
Action Science Fiction Comedy Adventure Thriller
Despicable Me 4
Animation Family Comedy Action
Longlegs
Crime Horror Thriller
Alien: Romulus
Horror Science Fiction Action
Afraid
Horror Science Fiction Thriller
Officer Black Belt
Action Comedy Crime
Speak No Evil
Horror Thriller
The Substance
Drama Horror Science Fiction
Twisters
Action Adventure Thriller
Subservience
Science Fiction Thriller Horror
Beetlejuice
Fantasy Comedy
  • title:Gaki No Kisetsu
  • status:Released
  • Release date: 1997
  • Runtime:2h 6m
  • Genres:
  • Countries of origin: Japan ·
  • Original Language: Japanese ·
  • Director: Akira Matsuda /
  • Writers: Akira Matsuda ·
  • Production companies:
  • Overview:The camera sometimes runs with him, sometimes captures him from a bird's eye view, sometimes stirs him up, and sometimes gives him a live feel that is as intense as the protagonist's tension. The high degree of freedom of the camera eloquently captures the protagonist's inability, to be honest. The use of a hand-held camera to capture the scene of the mountain disaster is also effective and memorable.
Search history
delete
Popular search