Reincarnation (2006) on DVD
June 9th, 2008Originally published: September 7, 2007 @ 3:09pm MST (Arizona)

We’ll stay together forever. - Spoken in Reincarnation (2006)
Reincarnation is a bit of a trouble subject for some people. Some church-goers believe that once you pass on, that’s it, you move on to your eternal reward (or punishment), with no second chances. Others believe that when you die, you get reborn, either as another type of creature or another person. My personal beliefs are that we reincarnate. I don’t know if I’ve had any past lives, but I know that my uncle believes he has. He told me that his first word was "Fire", not "Mama" or "Daddy" and that some of his earliest memories are dreaming of being in an airplane cockpit, looking out the window and seeing a flaming wing with an insignia on it… the Japanese flag. When he was stationed in Japan (he’s ex-Army), he was engaged to a Japanese girl whose father had some important contacts and offered to find out who he was, but my uncle turned him down. From what I understand, he believes he’s always been a warrior from one life to another.
This movie was one of the first I saw on the shelf when they started selling the HorrorFest movies at Wal-Mart and the first thing that drew me to it was the fact that Takashi Shimizu directed it. I believe I expressed my admiration for Shimizu’s work in my reviews of the Ju-On/Grudge (my review / other review) movies, as well as in the segment he directed for Dark Tales of Japan (my review), but I’ll say it again: he is one of my favorite directors, anywhere. As a result, this was the first of the HorrorFest movies that I paid for myself.

The film starts off showing a group of three girls playing around with a program on a cell phone that would tell what a person’s past life would be (one girl’s was a penguin). The third girl tries the program and she sees an older man’s reflection in the phone, but when she turns, she sees nothing. Next, we meet an office worker who’s heading into a crowded elevator. As everyone gets out on a different floor he continues up, but bumps into someone very tall standing behind him that wasn’t there before. The doors open, but he doesn’t step out… instead, as we see inside the elevator car, he seems to be in a trance as the doors close again. Our last excursion takes us to a man washing his face in a public washroom where he sees his facial features shift slightly in a mirror. Later on, as he’s driving his truck down the road, he’s fiddling the radio and doesn’t see a man in an old bellhop’s outfit standing in the road. Unable to stop in time, he hits the man. Getting out to see, he kneels down and looks under the car, only to be confronted with the face that he saw in the mirror earlier. Turning, he sees more faces looking on him from the darkness. Unable to start the truck again, he hides in the sleeper section of his truck. This doesn’t help, however, as the last we see of him, several ghostly faces are gazing on him from the forward cab.
One last scene shows a man working on a computer. His answering machine picks up a call: his agent asking how his script is coming along and telling him that an audition has been set up. As he works, we see a red ball bouncing behind him. The camera follows the ball as it bounces up a hallway, bouncing off the door to a room… a very loosely closed door, as it opens to reveal a ruin. An old, dusty doll is laying in the closet of the room and as we watch, its eye deteriorates in front of us… we leave it with the words quoted above in a hoarse voice… "We’ll stay together forever."
From here, we move to the audition. A girl, Yuka, is telling how she would be a good murder victim in a film due to her being a murder victim in a past life. As she’s speaking, though, the director keeps looking in the direction of another young actress, Nagisa. After the audition is over (with director and aspiring actresses having thanked each other), Nagisa heads to the subway where she sees a little girl with a strange doll looking at her on the train. At the stop she sees the girl again, stepping off the train, then seeming to fall on the tracks. Nagisa tries to get them to stop the train, but sees the girl glaring up at her with the doll from below the platform as the train takes off.
Later, Nagisa gets a call about having been accepted for the movie. After she gets the script and reads a little of it, she dreams of a strange, abandoned hotel. Arriving the studio, she finds out that the movie is going to be about a murder spree at an old hotel that happened in the 70s and that her character is that of a little girl that died there. She sees a model of the hotel and it matches the one in her dream… the picture of her character matches the little girl that she saw on the subway.
I was very impressed with this movie. I enjoyed it thoroughly and thought it was one of the better Japanese ghost movies I’ve seen in a while. The acting was really well-done. Nagisa, our main star, was played by Yûka. This girl was very pretty and boy could she scream! Yayoi Kinoshita was played by our second single-named star, Karina. She didn’t have to do quite so much screaming, but her part was vital in the long run of the story. Kippei Shiina plays the director of the movie within the movie, Ikuo Matsumura. I’m not too familiar with directing, personally, but he seems to play the part well. Miki Sanjo plays the only survivor of the hotel massacre and she brings a lot of feeling to the role. She also played in Toho’s 1954 sci-fi film Tomei Ningen (translated as The Invisible Man). Mao Sasaki plays Chisato Omori, the little girl, and she definitely gives a good sense of creepiness. She also played in The Great Yokai War, which I highly recommend (and will cover someday soon). Finally, in a smaller part than what we usually see of her, Takako Fuji plays a maid, one of the many victims of the madman. She is best known, of course, as Kayako in the Grudge and Ju-On series of movies.
Another excellent movie, another 5 out of 5 rating. I stand by my earlier statement… if you can only watch one of the HorrorFest movies, I still suggest Gravedancers (my review). However, if you can see two, then by all means, I highly recommend Reincarnation. If you want a good scare, excellent spooky atmosphere, and a nice mystery or two, you’ll like this one. As always, until next time, this is Red Hawk signing out!
-- by Red Hawk of http://www.happyhorror.com
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