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Friday 14 October 2011

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Dream Cruise (2007) **1/2

In years past, Catfreek and JSP and JPX have occasionally reviewed these hour long "Master of Horror" films, and I've always silently judged the lot of you for padding stats. Then on the opening weekend of this year's thon, I saw that Chiller was running a marathon of them, so I decided to switch sides and join the padders.

This one is pretty much straight up J-horror with the slightly cool twist that it all takes place in a 40 foot yacht out at sea. An American guy living in Japan is having an affair with his Japanese boss' wife. The boss invites the two of them out for a cruise, with plans on killing them. But, Dexter-like, he stupidly plans to dump their bodies in the exact same place he dumped his first wife's body years before. She's been waiting for just such a screw up, haunting that little patch of ocean.

So she ends up possessing the boss and then taking on her own ghostly form, chasing the young couple around the boat, and ultimately into the sea. There's lots of stock J-horror images here, to the point that I wasn't as scared as I really expected to be. Octo has been writing a bit lately about how some of these national horror subgenres maybe overuse certain formal tropes, and I tend to agree. This is probably only the 4th or 5th J-horror flick I've seen, and I can already tell that the novelty is wearing off.

The messed up hair covering the face. The angular choppy crawling. The glowing greenish hue of the ghost. It was funny, at one point when the couple gets trapped upfront in the cabin, they bust through the floor to crawl underneath towards the back of the boat. As they're crawling, I was thinking, "Oh, in 20 seconds I know EXACTLY what I'm going to be looking at." And I could predict it down to every detail: the lighting, the staging, the editing...I easily could have taken over as assistant director that day.




Anyway, I suppose this was pretty much exactly what I would have expected from the MOH flicks. Fairly stock, but decent production values and some genuine chills.

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