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Many of the storylines of these traditional plays have inspired modern horror depictions, and these stories have been used as source material for Japanese horror films. [5] In fact, Kabuki was a major subject of early Japanese films, and Kabuki gradually was woven into the framework of the modern horror films seen today. [5]
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; Ghost of Chibusa Enoki; Ghost of Saga Mansion; The Ghost of Yotsuya (Shintoho film) Ghost Stories of Wanderer at Honjo; Ghost Theater; Ghost Train (2006 film) Ghost-Cat of Arima Palace ...
Dark Tales of Japan (日本のこわい夜, Nihon no Kowai Yoru) is a 2004 made-for-TV film anthology of five short horror stories, directed by five notable Japanese film directors, which are told through a mysterious old lady in kimono on a late-night bus travelling on a long isolated mountain road.
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Creepy, False Neighbours) is a 2016 Japanese thriller film directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa, [4] starring Hidetoshi Nishijima, Yūko Takeuchi, Teruyuki Kagawa, Haruna Kawaguchi, and Masahiro Higashide. Based on the 2012 novel by Yutaka Maekawa, it is about a married couple uncovering the secrets of their new, mysterious neighbor.
Kwaidan (Japanese: 怪談, Hepburn: Kaidan, lit. ' Ghost Stories ') is a 1964 Japanese anthology horror film directed by Masaki Kobayashi.It is based on stories from Lafcadio Hearn's collections of Japanese folk tales, mainly Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things (1904), for which it is named.