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#keiko takahashi
ladamarossa · 4 months
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Door (1988)
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lightofthedeep · 5 months
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Happy Protector’s Will Day !!
Here’s a Keiko illust for my new business card :’)
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ogradyfilm · 7 months
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Recently Viewed: Door
[The following review contains SPOILERS; YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!]
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When I first discovered the existence of Banmei Takahashi’s Door earlier this year (via various clips shared by fan accounts on Twitter), it was love at first sight. Luckily, while the movie currently lacks official distribution in the United States, I didn’t need to wait very long at all to see it (compared to Angel’s Egg, A Page of Madness, and Samurai Wolf, anyway) thanks to the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, which screened it just before midnight on Friday, October 13th—basically the ideal context in which to experience its unique brand of madness.
The premise is as brilliant as it is straightforward: an ordinary housewife—already fed up with cold callers and their seemingly unlimited access to her family’s personal information—aggressively turns away an especially persistent salesman, slamming the door on his fingers after he ignores her repeated protests and attempts to force his way into her apartment. Unfortunately, this moment of instinctive panic has severe repercussions, resulting in an excruciatingly tense game of cat-and-mouse as the slighted pamphlet pusher’s vengeful wrath gradually evolves into perverse sexual obsession.
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It’s a captivatingly mundane flavor of terror, twisting a familiar, relatable scenario into an inescapable nightmare. There’s nothing particularly memorable or remarkable about the central villain. He has no elaborate costume or mask, no supernatural abilities or distinguishing features; unlike Jason Voorhees, Michael Myers, and Leatherface, he doesn’t even wield a signature weapon (though he is quite handy with the absurdly convenient electric chainsaw that he scavenges from the protagonist’s collection of otherwise run-of-the-mill home appliances). This anonymity is absolutely chilling; he effortlessly blends in with the crowd—average, unassuming, invisible. Indeed, his façade of superficial “normalcy” is far more insidious than any explicit display of insanity; he taunts his prey with idle banter, seamlessly transitioning between casual flirtation and thinly veiled threats.
The director’s visual style perfectly complements the suspenseful tone of the narrative. Early scenes almost resemble a slice-of-life domestic drama, characterized by flat compositions and lighting. As the conflict escalates, however, the warm, inviting interiors slowly warp and distort, becoming cramped, claustrophobic, hostile. Foreground elements (potted plants, sculptures, windows, doorways) isolate our heroine within the frame, emphasizing her vulnerability. Voyeuristic point-of-view shots serve a similar purpose, subliminally insinuating that true “safety” is an illusion: the sinister stalker could be lurking around any shadowy corner. The increasingly maximalist cinematography culminates in the film’s most iconic sequence: a prolonged overhead angle that follows the now totally unhinged maniac as he relentlessly pursues his quarry from room to room, utterly demolishing every obstacle in his path—splintering wood, shattering glass, and reducing drywall to dust.
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Yet some of the movie’s most haunting images are significantly less spectacular than this climactic set piece. Takahashi understands the inherent value of patience, frequently locking down the camera and lingering on long, uninterrupted closeups of his lead actress simply reacting to suspicious offscreen noises—the echo of footsteps in the corridor, for example, or the telltale rattle of the deadbolt being tested. Keiko Takahashi’s face is breathtakingly expressive; her turbulent emotions are palpable, a violent maelstrom of anxiety, desperation, and paralyzing fear clearly evident in every twitch of her eye, every crease in her brow, every tear staining her cheek.
How thematically appropriate that Door—a story that explores such everyday horrors as rampant commercialism, predatory marketing, and the erosion of privacy—should be at its scariest when it embraces naturalism, minimalism, and subtlety.
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moviesandmania · 4 days
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DOOR Japanese '80s stalker horror thriller - free on Tubi
Door is a 1988 horror thriller about a housewife who is terrorised by a visiting salesman. Directed by Banmei Takahashi from a screenplay co-written with Ataru Oikawa. Produced by Kôsuke Kuri. Executive produced by Fumio Takahashi. The Agent 21-Directors Company co-production stars Keiko Takahashi, Daijirô Tsutsumi, Shirô Shimomoto, Takuto Yonezu, Masao Ishida, Hiroshi Noguchi and Yoshihiro…
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intimidatingsqueak · 6 months
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smapxsmap: 1996.9.24
variation of 5th gif because Takahashiii:
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anhed-nia · 6 months
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BLOGTOBER 10/15/2023: DOOR (1988)
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I saw a new restoration of this movie at a midnight show that was part of the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival. It seems to have been enjoyed as a classic of its type in Japan but was rarely seen elsewhere, and it deserves a MUCH more thorough and thoughtful write-up than I'm about to give it--but please take this remark as a sign that you should see it if you can! Filmmaker Banmei Takahashi and his actress wife Keiko both broke out of the pink film demimonde and into the mainstream in the early 1980s, and in DOOR one sees shades of their past--it's a lean, efficient thriller starring an imperiled female and a perverted maniac--and also their superior talents. Frankly, I just enjoyed everything about this movie, from its eye-catching location to its infectious music to the excellent set that was tailor-made for Keiko Takahashi and her co-star Daijiro Tsutsumi to chase each other around without the action ever becoming repetitive or implausible. And on top of all that, the script is so sharp that it feels fresh and relevant even 35 years later.
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Takahasi plays a housewife whose husband is nearly invisible due to his high-pressure tech career. They live in an apartment complex where her only company, besides her young son (Takuto Yonezu, who is just as good as anybody else in this movie), is an army of intrusive telemarketers. She struggles to maintain the sanctity of her home, shutting down cold callers with increasing vigor until she pushes one of them over the edge. For the frustrated, futureless Daijiro Tsutsumi, being rejected by Takahashi shreds the final thread of his sanity, and he wages a campaign of terror that begins on the phone and transforms into a home invasion. The plot makes sense in the context of the hyper-capitalized Japan of the 1980s, but its themes of eroded privacy, escalating greed, and the dehumanizing effects of wage slavery make DOOR feel like a film that could have come out yesterday. Takahashi makes a wonderful heroine, as attractive and stylish as she is intelligent and independent; at every turn she does exactly what anyone would do to protect herself and her family, never "asking for" what happens to her, and yet it all happens anyway--just like it's happening to us all as our information is bought and sold, rightfully-earned possessions are converted into subscription services, and data-based products like movies and music are practically on loan to us by the corporations we pay to own them. DOOR definitely foresees our modern world, in which advertisements pop up even on pause screens, and telemarketers from other countries can call us all day long with impunity. See it if you can! The real horror is in how relatable it is.
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randomrichards · 3 months
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THE BOY AND THE HERON:
Boy stewing in grief
Enters a world of life and death
Learning how to live
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lingyunxiang · 7 months
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Brazilian artist Franci Shimomaebara is also the wife of music master Kitaro
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genkinahito · 6 months
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DOOR ドア (1988) Remaster Director: Banmei Takahashi
Happy Halloween! This is the time of year when people celebrate the supernatural and ghoulish aspects of popular culture and national myths. I do my part by highlighting horror movies on Halloween night. So far I have reviewed Nightmare Detective, Strange Circus, Shokuzai, POV: A Cursed Film Charisma, Don’t Look Up, Snow Woman (2017) Snow Woman (1968)  Fate/Stay Night Heaven’s Feel, Gemini, John…
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brickme · 8 months
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"All-star seal" -- Ribon Original spring 1986
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ladamarossa · 4 months
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Door (1988)
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yyh4ever · 1 year
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30th Anniversary "Yu Yu Hakusho 25th Anniversary Single Record Box" Encore Press [Color Record]
To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the "Yu Yu Hakusho" anime series, the very popular and sold out limited edition of the "Yu Yu Hakusho 25th Anniversary Single Record Box", released in 2017, will be re-released in response to the fans requests.
The design remains the same, but the black vinyl from 2017 have been changed to colored vinyl. The box contains eight 7-inch colored singles with 16 songs in total, such as anime theme songs and character songs.
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In addition, the duet tracks of Kurama and Hiei (WILD WIND), and Yusuke and Keiko (Omoide wo Tsubasa Shite), which you could only obtain by ordering the box set straight from the Pony Canyon website in 2017, are now included in Disc 8.
Price: ¥13,200 (tax included)
Release: February 18, 2023, in "ANISON on VINYL" (analog record event sponsored by Toyokasei)
Pre-oder: PONY CANYON RECORD SHOP
Benefit: A4 Clear File
If in 2017 the DISC 8 was a bonus disc, this time, those who purchase the box set on PONY CANYON RECORD SHOP will receive a clear file with the 30th anniversary logo and CD jackets as benefit.
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Tracks:
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Disc 1 [Matsuko Mawatari]
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A: Smile Bomb (Hohoemi no Bakudan)
B: Homework Never Ends (Homework ga Owaranai)
Disc 2 [Hiro Takahashi]
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A: Unbalanced Kiss (Anbaransu na Kiss wo Shite)
B: When the Sun Shines Again (Taiyō ga mata kagayaku toki)
Disc 3 [Matsuko Mawatari]
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A: Sayonara Bye Bye
B: Daydream Generation
Disc 4 [Yusuke Urameshi]
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A: FIRE!
B: Join Your Hearts (Kokoro wo Tsunaide)
Disc 5 [Kazuma Kuwabara]
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A: Disposition of a Man (Otoko no Junjō)
B: DACHI
Disc 6 [Kurama]
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A: Red Rose in the Darkness ~Romantic Soldier~ (Kurayami ni Akai Bara ~Romantic Soldier~)
B: Embracing the Ice Knife (Kōri no Naifu wo Daite)
Disc 7 [Hiei]
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A: Turn Your Back to the Twilight (Tasogare ni se wo Mukete)
B: I Hear a Whistle (Kuchibue ga Kikoeru)
Disc 8 [Duets]
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[Kurama and Hiei]
A: WILD WIND ~Like the Wind in the Wilderness~ (WILD WIND ~ Yasei no Kazenoyōni)
[Yusuke and Keiko]
B: Turning Memories into Wings (Omoide wo Tsubasa ni Shite)
A good site to check the lyrics and translations of the songs is animelyrics.
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lightofthedeep · 6 months
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quick colored keiko sketch bc i know i'm never going to canonically draw her chapter 1 outfit again
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lilithsaga · 4 months
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Even during our investigation, school always comes first. We join the music program and help for the upcoming festival.
Do people notice Ayumi Suzume's absence?
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jdramablr · 1 year
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intimidatingsqueak · 6 months
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smapxsmap: 1996.9.23
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