-MONTHLY VHS & DVD REVIEW-
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Pulse
cast: Kumiko Aso, Harujiko Katô, Kurume Arisaka, Masatoshi Matsuo, and Koyuki
writer and director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa
119 minutes (15) 2001 widescreen ratio 16:9
Optimum Asia DVD Region 2 retail
RATING:
9/10
reviewed by Christopher Geary
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SPOILER ALERT!
"Would you like to meet a ghost?" Take note of the wording of that question
from this movie. In marked contrast to The Sixth Sense, this extraordinary Japanese
chiller is not concerned with seeing dead people, 'all the time'; it's about meeting them.
Furthermore, like John Carpenter's underrated
Prince Of Darkness,
this harks back to Nigel Kneale's Quatermass TV serials for its thematic inspiration
and varied genre references. Viewers requiring easily digestible rationalisations from screen
fiction are advised to look elsewhere for their home entertainment. Publicity for this British
DVD release makes a major play of the fact that Pulse (aka: Kairo) predates
acclaimed shockers, The
Grudge and The
Ring; but that's only true of the US remakes, not their Asian originals Ju-on
(TV movie, 2000) and Ringu.
None of that matters, however, because Pulse is actually superior to any of those
pictures.
The initial phase of this film's scenario is somewhat reminiscent of something out of British
cult-TV series Sapphire And Steel (1979-82), but without, of course, the prompt
appearance of detectives from a nameless paranormal 'agency' capable of solving the mystery
- and fixing whatever's gone tragically wrong. With unhurried pacing, moments of scary
delirium, and an instantly likeable young cast, Kiyoshi Kurosawa (no relation to Akira)
ensures Pulse intrigues and fascinates like all the best sci-fi horror. A solitary
IT man, Taguchi (Kenji Mizuhashi), overdue with the delivery of a computer disc, quickly
(and very quietly!) hangs himself - in the next room - when he's visited at home by worried
co-worker, Michi (Kumiko Aso). The CD-ROM rapidly spreads a bizarre 'virus' that causes a
spate of suicides. Shadowy figures lurk in public buildings or private residences. Normal
TV programmes are suddenly on the blink, mobile phones fail to work or only receive calls
from dead people, and haunted 'forbidden rooms' sealed with red tape (that serves multiple
symbolic functions throughout the narrative) are now found on every back street. As the
most hi-tech gadget-conscious, consumer culture on Earth, perhaps it's no big surprise
that Pulse's digital apocalypse starts in Japan, where the 'permanent' shadows of
Hiroshima suggest a powerful resonance for this supernatural movie's uncanny images.
Despite the plot's focus on technology, it's female intuition that leads some of the main
characters into shocking discoveries and mortal danger. Taguchi's colleague Yabe (Masatoshi
Matsuo) is next in line for a confrontation with an eerie spectre. He soon becomes withdrawn
and lethargic, and the increasingly familiar pattern of death wishful thinking dominates his
limited future. Avoiding computers offers no protection from the blitz of elemental chaos.
Economics student Kawashima (Haruhiko Katô,
Another Heaven)
hardly knows enough to connect a home PC to the Internet, safely, but his desktop link
has no immunity to the invasive psychic entropy. College undergraduate and IT-tutor Harue
(former model, Koyuki, from Zwick's The
Last Samurai) investigates the origins of creepy web-cam footage showing brooding
spectres in tireless-as-rust action replays, and reflects on the lack of genuine social
contact in an urban civilisation where TV lays claim to 'reality' (and elsewhere, a gardener
comments sagaciously on the insincerity of friendships in modern life). But, in spite of
her philosophical insights, Harue still ends up lonely and utterly distraught, reluctantly
acknowledging that "nothing changes... after death." She is cruelly overwhelmed
by something inexplicable that's "no longer a faint presence" in the everyday
human world, and she's not comforted by Kawashima's pragmatic optimism. It's particularly
sad to see the cheerful Junko (pretty Kurume Arisaka, making her film debut) succumb to
the prevailing sickness of 'zombified' wraith-dom, in one of this evocative drama's most
distressing scenes. Following the frightening disappearance of Junko, the despairing Michi
phones home. Her mother answers, but there's nobody there...
Kawashima finds the missing Harue's science lab abandoned and wrecked. In the sparkling
rainbow lights of a games' arcade, the virtually formless apparition of a wandering spirit
is truly unnerving but, adding to desperate survivors' continuing misery, sinister forces
come oozing from another realm into corporeality. Are you getting this message... or is
it just a trick of the light? The film's low-key CGI work is startlingly effective. There
are only a few 'spectaculars' (a burning city, a plane crash in the urban wasteland) during
the narrative's gripping climax, yet all such moments are always entirely relevant to the
story, never gratuitous special effects shots that undermine the plot's carefully wrought
tension. The occasionally shrill music and unearthly sound effects of early scares gives
way to melancholy strings, and the closing score is neatly wrapped by a westernised rock
theme song (Hane by Cocco) that's actually rather good.
Putting most Hollywood genre thrillers to shame, Pulse delivers a brilliant vision of the
end of the world that ingeniously avoids the usual pitfalls of cliché. As such, it
is highly recommended to fans of thought-provoking, fantastic cinema. DVD extras: just a
featurette and trailer.
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