dead sushi full movie online

FREE Shipping on orders over $49. Amy's Books & Stuff 12 used & new from Order now and we'll deliver when available. We'll e-mail you with an estimated delivery date as soon as we have more information. Your account will only be charged when we ship the item.DetailsHigh Kick Girl FREE Shipping on orders over . DetailsKunoichi FREE Shipping on orders over . Keiko, the daughter of a legendary sushi chef, runs away from home when his Karate-style regimen becomes too severe. Finding work at a rural hot springs inn, she is ridiculed by the eccentric staff and guests, including the employees of a pharmaceutical firm there on a work retreat. But little do they know that a disgruntled former researcher has also come to the inn with a plan for revenge, using a serum he developed that can awaken the murderous instincts of ordinary sushi, turning it into bloodthirsty monsters! Keiko must use both her sushi training and her martial arts skills to save the others and defeat the flying killers.

in Movies & TV > DVD > Horror So stupidly corny but that's exactly what I was expecting. Great silly splatter filled gore flik along the lines of the Tokyo gore genre greats.
free online sushi cat gameA touch heavier on the comedy side.
best sushi rice type Hilarious crazy funny Japanese gore/comedy film! Its beyond stupid and has mostly poor visual effects but, I liked it for some unknown reason. I LOVE THIS MOVIE SO MUCH !! A great import release. This film has the right combination of campy horror and silliness to be a very enjoyable experience. Movies & TV > Genre for Featured Categories > Foreign Films Movies & TV > Genre for Featured Categories > Horror Movies & TV > Movies Movies & TV > Science Fiction & Fantasy Wracked with guilt over the suicide of her bullied sister, young karate student Megumi accompanies four older friends on a trip into the woods: smart girl Aya, her druggie boyfriend Také, ...

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The former porn director achieved international success in 2008 with his splatter comedy Machine Girl and has continued to make films in much the same vein - RoboGeisha, Zombie Ass, Karate-Robo Zaborgar and so on - all ridiculous, loud, gaudy and cheap. They are also made with the overseas market very much in mind, delivering a form of exaggerated entertainment that both satirises and embraces the various stereotypes that exist about Japanese comedy. Dead Sushi is Iguchi's latest opus, and it very much sticks to the formula. Keiko (Rina Takeda) is the daughter of a legendary sushi chef, but doesn't have what it takes to meet his high standards of culinary expertise. She leaves home and gets a job as a hotel maid, a position she is equally inept at. But when the insane former employee of a pharmaceutical company turns up to take revenge on his ex-colleagues who are staying there, Keiko is forced to team up with chef-turned-handyman Sawada (Shigeru Matsuzaki) to fight an onslaught of flesh-eating flying sushi.

Despite the 18 certificate and Japan’s long tradition of transgressive, taboo-busting cinema, Dead Sushi is pretty harmless stuff. There’s a bit of sex and lots of gore but absolutely everything is played for laughs, from the naked girl getting ogled in the spa to the lascivious businessmen eating sushi from the bodies of two bikini-clad hostesses. The visual effects come in two varieties - rubbery prosthetics from veteran splatter master Yoshihiro Nishimura (also the director of the Iguchi-inspired Tokyo Gore Police) and some rather dodgy CG concoctions. The former work a lot better than the latter, allowing Nishimura the opportunity to showcase some inventive rubbery creations - the man slowly getting his face stretched apart by evil salmon rolls was a personal favourite. All of which works well enough for individual scenes - the many confrontations between man and sushi are often funny and surreal, with energetic direction from the well-practised Iguchi. But for 90 minutes?

With a pace that rarely slackens and a tone pitched just below hysterical for virtually the whole movie, Dead Sushi may prove just too relentlessly wacky for some, while the single location and limited cast ultimately works to its disadvantage. Iguchi tries to liven things up towards the end by introducing a fish-headed villain, floating roe battleship (don’t ask) and a bit of kung-fu, but the second half of the film does prove a bit of a crazed slog. Still, it feels a bit churlish to overly criticise a film so wilfully and proudly idiotic - this is after all a movie in which a character declares: “Things have reached the point where they no longer make any sense!” It’s not exactly a film for subtlety of performance, but Rina Takeda is an engaging lead, a mix of bumbling innocence and brave determination, and her real-life black belt in karate helps lift the film’s otherwise clunky martial arts sequences. If you’ve seen any of Iguchi’s previous films you’ll know exactly what to expect, and maybe that’s enough.