If you loved El fantasma de yotsuya, try Jigoku
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 Nobuo Nakagawa, and they both carry the dread, gut punch mood tags, and they sit in Horror territory. If that's the register that drew you to El fantasma de yotsuya, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What Jigoku is
Towering clouds of sulphur overwhelm a flaming gate. Ghosts in bloodied kimono shuffle past a gong that never stops tolling. Seven living souls arrive too late, each bearing a corpse’s weight of guilt. One by one their sins unspool—murderers, cuckolds, betrayed lovers—all led by the tolling gong toward a lake of boiling heads. Nakagawa’s spectral parade leaves the land of the quick looking like a gentle dream.

