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Bright Future Reviews
[Director Kiyoshi Kurosawa] embeds astute social commentary in narrative details, as he does exceptionally well in "Bright Future".
Full Review | Dec 30, 2020
Alienated youth is one of Kiyoshi Kurosawa's favorite themes. Bright Future is an alternately comic and macabre portrait of a deranged friendship.
Full Review | Sep 29, 2017
Kurosawa's weird look at the empty lives of modern youth is mysteriously eye-catching but nothing deeper.
Full Review | Original Score: B | Sep 17, 2009
a genre that's starting to get overplayed
Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Mar 8, 2005
Gradually establishes a sense of foreboding that is hard to shake, though it's not without its darkly humorous moments.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Jan 28, 2005
Kurosawa's mysterious film about Japan's disaffected and alienated youth.
Full Review | Original Score: B- | Jan 27, 2005
No stranger to the bizarro social metaphor, [Kurosawa] somehow paints the film's title as honestly optimistic, winkingly ironic, and completely doom-laden at the same time.
Full Review | Jan 27, 2005
The movie has a curious and cumulative power.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Jan 14, 2005
It's a haunting, spooky journey into a world that embraces trippy ambiguity.
Full Review | Original Score: A- | Dec 10, 2004
The most spellbinding aspect of Bright Future is that the surrealism sustains its own squiddish logic, concluding with one of the most breathtaking film finales of the year.
Full Review | Original Score: B+ | Nov 17, 2004
More high -- but strangely touching -- weirdness from acclaimed Japanese auteur Kiyoshi Kurosawa.
Full Review | Original Score: 3.5/5 | Nov 12, 2004
Pretty to look at, but it's a slow-moving, meandering work that isn't as complex or mysterious as it appears.
Full Review | Original Score: 2.5/4 | Nov 12, 2004
...an enchantingly cryptic, ethereally photographed slice of somber surrealism that should definitely appeal to fans of David Lynch and Luis Buuel.
Full Review | Original Score: 3.5/4 | Nov 12, 2004
Directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa, a prolific and sui generis talent from Japan, this quietly creepy film contains a hint of politics and a wealth of shivers.
Full Review | Original Score: 4/5 | Nov 11, 2004
The writer-director's story sense is far too distracted, clouding the film's themes and even its basic plotline and allowing only the most glancing insights into its characters.
Full Review | Nov 11, 2004
Bright Future can be off-putting -- neither of the two protagonists attempt to engage the camera, and more woe is expended on mourning Mamoru than considering his victims.
Full Review | Nov 9, 2004
That the film succeeds on the level of a thriller as well as of a philosophical reflection is a proof of Kurosawa as perhaps the best Japanese filmmaker of his generation.
Full Review | Oct 27, 2004
Though admirers of the director's eerie, elegant horror tales Pulse and Cure will find Bright Future rather more lugubrious, Kurosawa's latest turns out to have a surprising emotional pull and a truly transcendent final shot.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Jan 31, 2004
Kurosawa strains to find a parallel between jellyfish and his characters' disaffections.
Full Review | Original Score: 2.5/4 | Jan 30, 2004
A remarkable companion piece to Gus Van Sant's similarly haunted, lyrical, allegorical Elephant.
Full Review | Original Score: 3.5/4 | Oct 20, 2003
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