Saturday, April 11, 2026

Liminal Space Horror

Exit 8 (2025) - Kawamura Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.52.23 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.53.03 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.53.26 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.53.53 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.55.51 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.56.28 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.57.35 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 8.59.42 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 9.01.59 AM Based on a video game of the same name, Genki Kawamura's Exit 8 could have been a primer 90s-early 2000s for Kiyoshi Kurosawa. It's got everything that resonated at the time - everyday salaryman liminal space horror - taking place mainly in fluorescent lit subway station corridors where a character can't find an exit. The repetition, a metaphor for a rat race trapped in the moebius strip - purgatory or hell of modern existence, is very well realized in the creepy, antiseptic, impersonal setting that permeates dread.

There are rules to follow - you will need to reach Exit 8 by going through a series of identical corridors and when you notice something is different than previous time, you must turn back, otherwise you are fated to repeat from the beginning. That means, counting every billboard on the wall, every locked utility door, vents, etc.

It begins with an unnamed man (Kazunari Ninomiya) is seen talking to his ex who might be pregnant with his child, in a crowded subway during rush hour. He also witnesses a salaryman screaming at a young woman who has a crying baby. No one does anything including him. After he gets out of the subway car, he finds Exit 8 sign, but the empty corridors don't lead you to the exit. It is endless, identical corridors with white tiles.

He sees a 'walking man' (Yamato Kochi) with a briefcase passing him by at every turn. The walking man sometimes stops to look at his phone and is completely unresponsive. Then strange things start to happen. The ads on the wall change, the walking man's creepy smile, a lost boy, the ceiling dripping blood...

Exit 8 has a potential to have millions of ways to explore the existential dread and be the creepiest, most effective modern horror film. But instead, Kawamura settles on the Spielbergian narrative. There are some effective creepy moments in the film. But I miss the late 90s, early 2000 J-horror haydays.

Elemental Desires

The Love That Remains (2025) - Pálmason Screen Shot 2026-04-09 at 8.59.42 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-09 at 8.46.25 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-09 at 8.36.18 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-09 at 8.25.15 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-11 at 6.52.31 AM Screen Shot 2026-04-09 at 9.04.15 AM With his last feature Godland, Icelandic director Hylnur Pálmason showed the insignificance of human existence against grand, awe inspiring landscapes of the volcanic island nation. The Love That Remains follows the same vein, albeit less grandiose, but just as beautiful landscapes. The gentle comedy of a modern family follows a family of 4 where parents Magnus and Anna have recently separated. There is a teen daughter, Ida and younger twin boys. Magnus is a fisherman working in a commercial fishing vessel and Anna is a struggling artist. They live in a rural farm where they engage in foraging, tending farm animals while Anna practices a large scale art made out of rusting geometrically cut iron sheets- she just lays out these iron pieces on a white canvas outside the elements until they rust and leave patterns on the sheets.

Magnus is still carrying the torch for Anna and wants to be included in the family. He lingers and makes advances at Anna, but she won't budge. The kids notice their predicaments and are generally sympathetic to the situation. It is important to note that three children playing the parts are Pálmason's own kids, pretty much playing themselves.

What differentiates The Love That Remains from other sad sack, middle-aged loser dad pity party movies is the contrast of the surroundings which the family lives on: the nature is consistent, solid, fluid, omnipresent, and forever beautiful- whereas humans are lustful, violent and idiotic at times. The plane goes down, hit by a flock of birds, kids shoot each other with arrows by accident, a man dreams of making out with Joan of Arc. If Godland contrasted nature's indifference to human existence, The Love That Remains emphasizes that we live with nature and all our incongruities are part of the elements, not separate entities, nothing more. Pálmason humbles you in different ways in the presence of nature.