If you loved El Mundo de Rumiko 1: Viaje por el Fuego, 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
Theyboth carry the surreal mood tag, and they sit in Animation / Fantasy territory. If that's the register that drew you to El Mundo de Rumiko 1: Viaje por el Fuego, 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.

