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Koichi Irikura of Cinema Today included Noroi: The Curse in his list of the best "documentary-style" horror films, calling the screenplay "excellent". [7] Niina Doherty of HorrorNews.net called Noroi: The Curse "the best found footage film of the decade", referring to it as "well crafted, credible and most important of all, genuinely scary."
Kōji Shiraishi (白石 晃士, Shiraishi Kōji, born June 1, 1973) is a Japanese film director, screenwriter, and occasional actor.He is primarily known for directing Japanese horror films, including Noroi: The Curse (2005), Carved: The Slit-Mouthed Woman (2007), Occult, Teketeke (both 2009), Cult (2013), and Sadako vs. Kayako (2016).
Duke finishes the song but the only curse lifted is the ghost who moves on, having heard his song played perfectly. Duke learns about the suspension bridge effect from Viola and decides to scare Alice, but Duke becomes terrified instead when he nearly curses a flower Rob has been cultivating for 50 years.
"The Curse" (Clarke story), a 1953 short story by Arthur C. Clarke "The Curse" (Dubus story), a 1988 short story by Albert Dubus; The Curse, a 1977 novel by Charles L. Grant; The Curse, a 1913 novel by Fergus Hume; The Curse, a 1997 novel by Bill Myers, the seventh book of his fiction series Forbidden Doors; The Curse: Cubs Win! Cubs Win!
Keizo arrives, accompanied by a blind psychic girl, Tamao, who tells Yuri that she has unnecessarily cursed herself. The only way to expunge the curse is to pit Sadako against another vengeful spirit so both destroy each other. As Yuri hears that Natsumi has uploaded the cursed tape onto the Internet, Natsumi tries to commit suicide to escape ...
Haru's Curse (春の呪い, Haru no Noroi) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Asuka Konishi. It was serialized in Ichijinsha's Monthly Comic Zero Sum magazine from November 2015 to November 2016. A six-episode live-action television drama adaptation aired from May to June 2021.
In 2005, a man named Ken Matsuki killed two people and injured a third in a mass stabbing before jumping off a cliff; his body was never found. Three years later, a documentary film crew led by Koji Shiraishi began a project chronicling the aftermath of the incident and interviewing survivors.
Ju-On: The Final Curse (呪怨 -ザ・ファイナル-, Ju-on -Za Fainaru-) is a 2015 Japanese supernatural horror film and the eleventh installment of the Ju-on franchise. The film is a direct sequel to Ju-on: The Beginning of the End , set in that film's continuity and was marketed as the final film in the Ju-on franchise.