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Tokyo Zombie (Japanese: 東京ゾンビ, Hepburn: Tōkyō Zonbi) is a heta-uma horror manga written in 1999 by Yusaku Hanakuma. It was subsequently made into a 2005 Japanese film written and directed by Sakichi Sato. The films stars Tadanobu Asano, Show Aikawa, and Erika Okuda.
In the first section of the film, the cast and crew of a low-budget zombie film called True Fear are shooting at an abandoned water filtration plant. Director Higurashi, desperate for film success due to mounting debts and frustrated at the actors' work, arranges for a blood pentagram to be painted to revive real zombies per the plant's haunted past.
After a meteor lands, the population of Tokyo transforms into flesh-eating zombies, and the military quarantines the city. A survivor, Keiko, fights her way through the city and attempts to defeat General Hugioka's evil mercenaries, who indiscriminately kill both humans and zombies.
Schoolgirl Apocalypse (セーラー服黙示録, Sērā-fuku mokushiroku, "Sailor suit Apocalypse") is a 2011 Japanese zombie film written and directed by John Cairns, as his first feature film. [1] The film screened at Bucheon International Fantastic Film Festival and the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan in 2011 and the Fantasia Film ...
G. School Ghost Stories; Gekijōban Zero; Gemini (1999 film) The Ghost Cat and the Mysterious Shamisen; The Ghost Cat of Otama Pond; Ghost Cat of Yonaki Swamp
10 Real-Life 'Zombie' Animals. Despite what many believe, zombies do not exclusively exist in the realm of science fiction, and our planet is currently home to a number of them.
Junk (Japanese: JUNK 死霊狩り, Hepburn: Junk Shiryōgari, lit."Junk Zombie Hunter") is a 2000 Japanese horror film written and directed by Atsushi Muroga.A blend of the yakuza and zombie film genres, Junk stars Kaori Shimamura as Saki, a member of a group of jewel thieves. [1]
There are numerous Japanese works of zombie fiction. One of the earliest Japanese zombie films with considerable gore and violence was Battle Girl: The Living Dead in Tokyo Bay (1991) directed by Kazuo Komizu. [24] However, Battle Girl failed to generate a significant national response at the Japanese box office. [25]