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  1. Oct 2, 2018 · From the pages of the hit online manga published in Web Comic Gamma, the nightmare is about to begin! Hideo Jojo. Director, Screenplay. Ryô Kaihara. Screenplay. From the moment she and her fellow students arrive in the mountain village of Yasaka, Mikoto knows that there is something very wrong with this tiny town.

    • Cast & Crew

      Cast & Crew - Corpse Prison: Part 1 (2017) — The Movie...

    • Posters 3

      Posters 3 - Corpse Prison: Part 1 (2017) — The Movie...

    • What's This Movie About?
    • Is It Worth Watching?
    • What Are Some of The Memorable Moments?
    • What's Not So Hot?
    • Overall Impressions

    Four university students, their professor and his assistance head to a remote village to study their strange and undocumented rituals. They notice something odd – there are no women in the village. On their first night there they meet the village chief and his young son, as well as about a dozen rabid and sex-starved males of the village. It doesn’...

    If you are going to watch this, make sure you have both parts ready to go, as essentially this is one long 130-minute movie split into two 75-minute halves. In your head you are thinking “75 X 2 is 150 minutes!” well that’s right but they share the same end credits and the first ten minutes of the second movie is an annoying recap of the first movi...

    Not sure there are too many memorable moments between these two films, even when you consider the 130-minute running time. The ritual scenes are very short and not detailed, the history of the village is not given much backstory either, there’s just a lot of forest stalking scenes. That doesn’t mean this is a movie to avoid, it just means there is ...

    Given the low-budget, almost grindhouse, nature of the film, I didn’t expect fancy effects – but I was expecting something a little better than what was on display here. Blood splatters are similar to what you’d see in a student production – complete with the obvious fact that most of the time its coloured water. The actors, while doing an admirabl...

    Low budget horror films can be fun – and I watch a lot of them so I have a lot to compare with, and this comes very much at the below the middle of the pack – with a quite a few things working against it like the overly long running time that’s been split into two unnecessary parts. This could have worked easily as a 90 minute slasher. If you’re af...

    • 劇場版 屍囚獄 結ノ篇
    • Hideo Jojo
  2. Based on the popular horror comic book “Corpse Prison” is now a movie! For 50 years no girls were born in a small village deep in the mountains. Girls who visit the village is attacked by the men living in the village and also by the mysterious psycho killer. The closed desertedness makes it dreadful and sexy.

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Masaru_IbukaMasaru Ibuka - Wikipedia

    Masaru Ibuka was born on April 11, 1908, as the first son of Tasuku Ibuka, an architectural technologist and a student of Inazo Nitobe. [4] His ancestral family were chief retainers of the Aizu Domain, and his relatives include Yae Ibuka and Ibuka Kajinosuke. Masaru lost his father at the age of two and was taken over by his grandfather. [5]

    • 2 daughters, 1 son
    • Co-founder of Sony
  5. Oct 11, 1999 · On May 7, 1946, Masaru Ibuka and Akio Morita founded Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo K.K. (Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering Corp.), which later became Sony Corp. in 1958. At the time, Ibuka was 38 years old and Morita was 25. Their partnership fostered what was to become one of the most successful companies of the 20th century.

  6. Masaru Ibuka. As co-founder and longtime president of the Sony Corporation, Japanese executive Masaru Ibuka (1908-1997) conceived of and brought to fruition several of the most popular and fundamentally influential consumer electronics innovations of the twentieth century. The public face of Sony for decades was its chairman and marketing ...

  7. Dec 20, 1997 · Masaru Ibuka, a low-key engineer who co-founded one of Japan's greatest postwar successes, the Sony Corporation, died yesterday at his home in Tokyo. Mr. Ibuka, who was 89, died from heart failure ...

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