Jaws in Japan

Jaws in Japan
Directed by John Hijiri
Produced by Kyôsuke Ueno
Rie Mikami
Written by Yasutoshi Murakawa
Bobby White
Starring Nomani Takizawa
Airi Nakajima
Megumi Haruno
Music by Takayoshi Tarui
Release dates
  • 21 August 2009 (2009-08-21)
Running time
70 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese

Jaws in Japan (also titled Psycho Shark) is a 2009 Japanese horror film directed by John Hijiri and written by Yasutoshi Murakawa, starring Nonami Takizawa, Airi Nakajima, and Megumi Haruno. The movie was named so in an attempt to market it as a sequel to the Steven Spielberg film Jaws, but it has no connection with the prior film in terms of either its plot or its production and has received extremely negative reviews.

Plot

On the coast off of a private beach on a tropical island, a huge shark is waiting for his prey. Beautiful young college students Miki and Mai arrive on the island but are unable to find a hotel in which to stay. Both the young women soon find out that something is seriously wrong after they find a hotel and spend some time there happily filming each other, using video cameras offered by the hotel to guests, yet Miki discovers material filmed by a previous occupant. Dream sequences and actual events become intermingled as Miki realizes that a human serial killer on the loose as well as finds herself and her friend attacked by a gigantic, almost whale-sized shark. Despite the movie's titles, the vast majority of the scenes consist of either the girls playing together in bikinis (depicted in a highly sexually suggestive manner, although no nudity is shown) or of them examining materials that's been recorded. Whether or not the killer shark actually exists or is a metaphorical device relating to the human serial killer discovered by Miki in the hotel room recording is left unexplained.

Release

The film was not rated by the Motion Picture Association of America. In both the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, it has a 12A certificate, meaning that it is not recommended that children under the age of twelve watch it unless they are accompanied by an adult. Despite the advertisement related to the film, no nudity and no sex between characters are shown; however, bloody violence occurs in brief scenes.

Controversy

The title's reference to the original Jaws film attracted legal attention, with the creators of the Japanese movie having failed to obtain any sort of permission to use that name. Despite the introduction of the Psycho Shark title later on, the original name appears to have gained some traction in popular culture and has stuck.

The exploitative nature of the movie attracted condemnation from a variety of publications, such as an article in Vanity Fair labeling the "rip-off" film worth being "forgotten".[1]

See also

References

  1. Vanity Fair. Jun 19, 2015.

External links

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