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  1. Apr 7, 2006 · Imprint: Directed by Takashi Miike. With Billy Drago, Shihô Harumi, Michié, Magy. In the 1800s, an American returns to Japan to find the prostitute he fell in love with, but instead learns of the physical and existential horror that befell her after he left.

    • (7.6K)
    • Horror
    • Takashi Miike
    • 2006-04-07
  2. Jul 19, 2021 · You see, while I did write those words first on Twitter, what actually got me to truly look at Imprint, beyond my visceral reaction, was the following I wrote afterwards on Facebook: which goes into more detail: I just watched Masters of Horror‘s Imprint. I don’t say this lightly, you understand, but Takashi Miike, you suck. You suck so much.

  3. Recap /. Masters of Horror S1E13 "Imprint". Directed by Takashi Miike and based on a novel by Shimako Iwai. In 19th century Japan, the American journalist Christopher ( Billy Drago) arrives at a remote island looking for Komomo (Michie), a woman he loves but who was sold to a brothel by her adoptive family. While in there he finds a disfigured ...

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  5. Sep 13, 2010 · An American journalist returns to Japan to find his long lost love. His journey leads him to a deformed prostitute who holds the key to discovering his beloved’s fate. REVIEW: Director: Takashi Miike. Cast: Billy Drago, Michie Ito, Youki Kudoh. Examination: A Hole that leads to Hell. Yes, and I mean that one.

  6. Jun 8, 2008 · Takashi Miike's hour long entry in Showtime's "Masters of Horror" TV series was the rather controversial "Imprint". Even though they are a cable network, Showtime turned it down and never aired it as part of the series. It survives uncut however on DVD. Up front, I credit Miike for making a film that almost no one else could or would.

  7. First, Imprint could be interpreted as a horror satire exposing the unspoken phallocentric politics underlying Japanese cinema’s most revered masterpiece, Rashomon (1950), directed by Japanese cinema’s most revered master director, Akira Kurosawa.

  8. The macabre "Imprint" is another disturbing and brutal movie of Takashi Miike. Using magnificent camera-work and impressive make-up in an awesome atmosphere, "Imprint" approaches gruesome and gore theme like abortion, fetus, incest, torture, perversions and abuse along 63 minutes running time of pure and sick horror with many twists.

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