One Missed Call Trilogy
(2003-2006)
One Missed Call Trilogy Blu-ray delivers great video and audio in this fan-pleasing Blu-ray release
See individual titles for their synopses.
For more about
One Missed Call Trilogy and the One Missed Call Trilogy Blu-ray release, see
One Missed Call Trilogy Blu-ray Review published by Jeffrey Kauffman on February 29, 2020 where this Blu-ray release scored
3.5 out of
5.
Directors:
Renpei Tsukamoto, Manabu Asô, Takashi Miike
Starring:
Renji Ishibashi, Maki Horikita, Kô Shibasaki, Mimura, Meisa Kuroki, Hisashi Yoshizawa
Producers:
Naoki Satô, Joon-hwan Choi, Fumio Inoue
This Blu-ray bundle includes the following titles, see individual titles for specs and details:
One Missed Call Trilogy Blu-ray Review
Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, February 29, 2020
Note: The technical scores above are averages. Please see the individual reviews, linked below, for more information.
The annals of so-called "J Horror" are filled with films where technology is not a boon to Mankind, but rather a kind of threatening curse. In that
regard,
it's perhaps only
slightly cheeky to suggest that the
One Missed Call "franchise" might have just as easily been called
Ringu (or at least its Americanized version
Ring), since a
sinister ringtone on cellphones becomes a harbinger of death. The fact that a joke can be made about interchangeable titles may point out,
however,
that as even commentator Tom Mes gets into with regard to the first film, there's a kind of "been there, done that" quality to
One Missed Call
in terms of technology run amok sprinkled liberally with what ultimately is a kinda sorta ghost story. While he only was responsible for the
first
film of the trilogy, it's perhaps instructive to note how Takashi Miike talks in a supplement included on this release about wanting to do more than
simply "scare people" with a horror film, and in fact (as Mes also mentions) there are elements in the first film in particular but also with regard to
the
entire franchise that may not be "jump out of your seat" fright-mare inducing, but which are decidedly angsty and may in fact have you
looking at your Caller ID a little more closely the next time
your cellphone rings.
For reviews of the three films in this set, please click on the following links:
One Missed Call Blu-ray review
One Missed Call 2 Blu-ray review
One Missed Call 3: Final Blu-ray review
One Missed Call Trilogy Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation
Miike fans will probably want to catch
One Missed Call if they haven't already, and it's probably inarguably the strongest effort in this set. All
three films have their spooky moments, though, even if the overarching premise seems awfully familiar. This is another Arrow release where a really
excellent supplemental package may be the ultimate calling card. For J Horror completists if for no one else
One Missed Call Trilogy comes
Recommended.