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)
Just what the fans of “Japanese Troma” expect and want. It never ceases to surprise me. ()
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. ()