agmtw logo
search
New Religion (2022)

New Religion (2022)

A neon-lit, surreal, though frustratingly inscrutable, Japanese arthouse drama about loss

6.7

Movie

Japan
Japanese
Drama, Horror
2022
KEISHI KONDO
Daiki Nunami, Kaho Seto, Ryuseigun Saionji
100 min

TLDR

This won’t be entertainingly scary, or mindbendingly intriguing, but it’s still fun to try and interpret this slightly inscrutable film.

What it's about

Miyabi’s life is forever changed after her daughter’s death. Now divorced and a call girl, Miyabi meets an unsettling photographer that might allow her to reach her daughter’s spirit.

The take

Loss can be straightforwardly heartwrenching, but it could also be bewildering, cryptic, and too sudden to even process. New Religion depicts a grieving mother, whose loss of her daughter, and her meet up with an eccentric photographer, causes her to behave strangely. The film goes through the events in a surreal, existential haze, with a skin-crawling scene that reveals the photographer’s nefarious reasons, but the sequences remain inscrutable and the themes and certain characters don’t mesh as well as they could have. New Religion might befuddle viewers just looking for a casual watch, but it’s definitely a thought provoking and promising debut from Keishi Kondo.

What stands out

New Religion clearly has interesting themes: loss, specifically the loss of a child, coping mechanisms, and denial. There’s something intriguing about how the women in New Religion, Miyabi and Akari, have gone through loss, and their loss is then taken advantage of by a photographer, whose photos make them essentially relive a life with the people they’ve lost– it feels like a reflection on the possible retraumatization of depicting loss, of the horrifying prospect of breathing new life, and of loss picking again at old wounds. That being said, the way the events are introduced feel cryptic but not scary or intriguing enough to make the story feel experiential. The only scary scene seems to be the one in the last 30 minutes, which would have felt utterly terrifying instead of just gross if the previous scenes were able to create, keep, and sustain any tension.

Comments

Add a comment

Your name

Your comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

Mononoke the Movie: The Phantom in the Rain (2024)

A spirit lingers within the palace chambers in this psychedelic horror mystery

7.8

Exhuma (2024)

A team of exorcists uncover long hidden terrors in this ambitious folk horror film

7.6

2046 (2004)

The inventive sequel to In the Mood for Love

7.7

Rohan at the Louvre (2023)

A riveting supernatural mystery contemplating Japanese art in relation to the world

7.1

Lust, Caution (2007)

A wartime spy falls for a collaborator in this erotic espionage drama

7.3

Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy (2021)

Three separate stories intertwined with themes of love and fate

8.9

One Cut of the Dead (2017)

A one-of-a-kind Japanese zombie comedy that takes the genre to another dimension

7.8

Night on the Galactic Railroad (1985)

Two cats take a train to the stars in the surreal rendition of the beloved children’s novel

7.3

Asako I & II (2018)

A quietly surreal meditation on love and the people it transforms us into

8.0

Why Don’t You Play in Hell? (2013)

A ragtag crew makes the film of their dreams with a former child star and the yakuza in this ode to old-school gritty action films

7.2

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.