If you loved Bio Hunter, try Demon City Shinjuku
Un puente entre una película que ya has visto y una que casi nadie ha cruzado. Esto es lo que comparten, y lo que la segunda hace que la primera no hace.
Lo que comparten
Both films are directed by Yoshiaki Kawajiri, and they both carry the body horror, neon soaked, unhinged mood tags, and they sit in Action / Animation / Horror territory. If that's the register that drew you to Bio Hunter, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What Demon City Shinjuku is
Fire escapes drip neon, Shinjuku summer. A sunset bathes skyscrapers in hellish gold while paper charms flutter like dying moths. Kyoya Izayoi inherits a sky-scraping debt of blood—his father’s corpse still warm on the sidewalk. Ten years of demonic squatters and now the city’s perimeter glows like an abattoir’s sign. Yoshiaki Kawajiri’s 1988 cyber-noir drenches every pixel in borrowed light.

