![Cure (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51-TB3dJxZL.jpg)



Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s arresting international breakthrough established him as one of the leaders of an emerging new wave of Japanese horror while pushing the genre into uncharted realms of philosophical and existential exploration. A string of shocking, seemingly unmotivated murders—each committed by a different person yet all bearing the same grisly hallmarks—leads Detective Takabe (Koji Yakusho) into a labyrinthine investigation to discover what connects them, and into a disturbing game of cat and mouse with an enigmatic amnesiac (Masato Hagiwara) who may be evil incarnate. Awash in hushed, hypnotic dread, Cure is a tour de force of psychological tension and a hallucinatory journey into the darkest recesses of the human mind.BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES4K digital restoration, supervised by cinematographer Tokusho Kikumura, with uncompressed stereo soundtrackNew conversation between director Kiyoshi Kurosawa and filmmaker Ryusuke HamaguchiInterviews with actors Masato Hagiwara and Koji YakushoInterview from 2003 with KurosawaTrailers and teaserPLUS: An essay by critic Chris Fujiwara



S**6
Unsettling & Beautiful
Amazin film from Kiyoshi Kurosawa whose only other previous film I had seen was Kairo (aka Pulse) which is one of my favorites. Cure has the same unsettling atmosphere as Pulse and with just as good of if not better story. Highly recommended!
W**T
Mesmerizing, disturbing masterpiece.
Cure follows a Detective, Takabe, as he investigates a series of bizarre murders around Tokyo, perpetrated (but not really?) by Mamiya, a former psychology student. Mamiya is obsessed with mesmerism, a magnetic force he studied to get people to bend to his will. When Mamiya meets Takabe, tensions flare, and we start to see another side to Takabe and the entire case, a side the pushes this movie from a simple detective story into a broadscale, totally mesmerizing horror film. Mamiya’s “will” is no longer his, but something much bigger and more menacing.I don’t even know where to start with this movie. It was so well done – the pacing, foreshadowing, the way it gives us just enough information to figure out some things but not others, the choices the director made about where to focus the camera shots and how long to hold them – are all brilliant. I wasn’t sure I was going to like this movie until about halfway through, when the horror element of it became clear. And then, I was completely unsettled. I mean, I have not been unsettled like this since watching the Exorcist at home alone at the age of ten.Cure is a movie you become hypnotized by. Masato Hagiwara’s performance as our antagonist, Mamiya, is insanely good. Probably one of the best villain performances I’ve ever seen. It’s so muted and unexpected that we can’t turn away from him. We can’t turn away from the horror building in front of us, like a chain of dominos falling. And then the ending comes, and we are left trying to piece things together in the best way possible. I flew straight to Reddit to see what other reviewers thought of the ending and what it all meant. We all took something different from it, and we all could see where the others were coming from, which speaks to the brilliance of the movie, which has it all: excellent screenplay, enlightened directing, and solid, disturbing performances by all its leads. Cure will be at the top of my best list for many years to come.
A**.
Masterclass in Cerebral Horror
Every detail and aspect wind perfectly together to form one of the most coherent, captivating, and compelling pieces of horror I've seen. Gorgeous and grimy, but manages to deliver a serial killer film where fault is obscured and esoteric philosophy takes the forefront of blame. A carefully crafted take on the shadowcast obscure corners of human thought. Brilliant.
J**A
bluray disc
great item, i love it
J**E
Best movie ever
I went in completely blind and the minute the lighter clicked i knew what this was about but i did not see anything else coming. That was lightning in a bottle cinema and it cuts deep in your mind. Its just quiet enough and acted well enough to hear lines psychically delivered to each other in the silence.This is what Se7en or Hypnotic (2023) wishes it could be.
A**G
Excellent thriller
Hopefully this won’t be remade and dumbed down by Hollywood. It’s worth reading the subtitles sometimes. It does veer into some more unbelievable territory towards the end, but you’ll likely be so engrossed by everything that came before that you won’t mind. Highly recommended.
E**S
Unforgettable
This film is absolutely remarkable. It comes from a very distinct time and place without ever outdating itself - it is bleak and beautiful in that ephemeral way of a dream that leaves you waxing nostalgic for something you’re not sure ever existed. The quality of this transfer is superb, and in keeping with the Criterion Collection standard it has heaps of extra material to get lost in. This is essential viewing, and this is most certainly the edition to own.
N**X
Brilliance in Film like all from Criterion
I was unsure when purchasing but as always criterion picked up in amazingly brilliant film for their collection. I'm very glad I purchased it even though it's not necessarily a genre I love I absolutely love the film didn't know anything about it going in, now know and am incredibly happy with my purchase. It's very hard to go wrong with criterion even though they charge a little bit more it's well worth it and you're going to get a film of incredible caliber even if it's not your style.
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