Directed by:
Noboru IguchiScreenplay:
Jun TsugitaCinematography:
Yasutaka NaganoComposer:
Yasuhiko FukudaPlots(1)
Cult Japanese film director Noboru Iguchi, returns with this madcap and macabre comedy horror, filled with awesome special fx and full-on fight sequences. Keiko a cute female trainee sushi chef finds her kung fu skills are called upon when some infected flying sushi starts to bite back! As the flesh-hungry man-eating Sashimi spring to life with savage teeth, will Keiko be able to save a group of businessmen from the unrelenting terror of the killer fish dishes? (Monster Pictures)
(more)Reviews (2)
I'd say it's a successful film within the genre. Unfortunately, I'm a long way from getting into that genre, so I didn't enjoy it all that much. It's disgusting, funny, full of weird creations, sushi, and blood, a parody of Japanese movie stereotypes driven to the hellish heights, with good cinematography. The funniest part was that I watched it with friends I had been making sushi with before the movie. My rating is highly influenced by the setting in which I viewed the film. And most importantly: You don't understand the soul, egg sushi roll. ()
Just what the fans of “Japanese Troma” expect and want. It never ceases to surprise me. ()
Ads