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Saimin (film)

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Director
  
Music director
  
Kuniaki Haishima

Country
  
Japan

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Fantasy, Horror, Thriller

Duration
  

Saimin (film) movie poster

Release date
  
1999 (1999)

Writer
  
Yasushi Fukuda, Keisuke Matsuoka (novel), Masayuki Ochiai

Screenplay
  
Masayuki Ochiai, Yasushi Fukuda

Cast
  
Gorô Inagaki
(Toshiya Saga), (Yuka Irie), (Jissoji), (Sakurai),
Yuki Watanabe
(Mitsui),
Shigemitsu Ogi
(Kuraishi)

Similar movies
  
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Hypnosis saimin 1999


Saimin (Hypnosis in English, released as The Hypnotist in United States on DVD) is a 1999 Japanese horror film. The film is directed by Masayuki Ochiai and is based on a novel by Keisuke Matsuoka. A string of suicides prove to be linked. The death of a young athlete, a groom at his wedding and an elderly man celebrating his wife's birthday. All three of these males have mentioned a "green monkey" before their death. The psychologist Saga, played by Goro Inagaki investigates this case. A young psychiatrist teams up with him to formulate the theory that includes the element of hypnosis.

Contents

Saimin (film) movie scenes

Saimin enkelit traileri


Cast

  • Goro Inagaki as Toshiya Saga
  • Miho Kanno as Yuka Irie
  • Takeshi Masu as Jissoji
  • Ken Utsui as Sakurai
  • Yuki Watanabe as Mitsui
  • Shigemitsu Ogi as Kuraishi
  • Production

    Saimin is based on a novel by Keisuke Matsuoka. It was part of a series of novels written by Matsuoka, that were inspired by the attacks of Aum Shinrikyo in Japan.

    Release and aftermath

    Saimin was released in Japan on June 5, 1999 where it was distributed by Toho. Saimin was released under the title The Hypnotist on August 4, 2001 by ADV Films. It was released in the United Kingdom under the title Hypnosis by Artsmagic on DVD in 2003.

    The film was followed with a television series in Japan in 2000, which had Goro Inagaki reprising his role as Saga.

    Reception

    Jason Buchanan (AllMovie), stated that the film "ultimately succeeds thanks to its unusual ability to successfully pile on scare after scare." The review noted that although the story was not original, that the film stands out "when it comes to tone." Derek Elley (Variety) opined that the film was "a quality entry in the current spate of Japanese supernatural thrillers" and was "way superior to TV vet Ochiai's debut horrorfest, “Parasite Eve” (1997)."

    References

    Saimin (film) Wikipedia
    Saimin (film) IMDb Saimin (film) themoviedb.org