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HorrorMysteryThriller

Shutter

- The most terrifying images are the ones that are real.

A newly married couple discovers disturbing, ghostly images in photographs they develop after a tragic accident. Fearing the manifestations may be connected, they investigate and learn that some mysteries are better left unsolved.

Release Date : 2008-03-21

Language :EnglishJapanese

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Regency EnterprisesNew Regency PicturesVertigo EntertainmentOzla Pictures

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : Shutter

Cast

Joshua Jackson

Character Name : Benjamin Shaw

Original Name : Joshua Jackson

Gender : Male

Rachael Taylor

Character Name : Jane Shaw

Original Name : Rachael Taylor

Gender : Female

Megumi Okina

Character Name : Megumi Tanaka

Original Name : 奥菜恵

Gender : Female

David Denman

Character Name : Bruno

Original Name : David Denman

Gender : Male

Eri Otoguro

Character Name : Yoko

Original Name : 乙黒えり

Gender : Female

John Hensley

Character Name : Adam

Original Name : John Hensley

Gender : Male

Maya Hazen

Character Name : Seiko

Original Name : Maya Hazen

Gender : Female

James Kyson

Character Name : Ritsuo

Original Name : James Kyson

Gender : Male

Yoshiko Miyazaki

Character Name : Akiko

Original Name : 宮崎美子

Gender : Female

Kei Yamamoto

Character Name : Murase

Original Name : 山本圭

Gender : Male

Daisy Betts

Character Name : Natasha

Original Name : Daisy Betts

Gender : Female

Adrienne Pickering

Character Name : Megan

Original Name : Adrienne Pickering

Gender : Female

Pascal Morineau

Character Name : Wedding Photographer

Original Name : Pascal Morineau

Gender : Male

Masaki Ota

Character Name : Police Officer

Original Name : Masaki Ota

Gender : Male

Heideru Tatsuo

Character Name : Police Officer

Original Name : Heideru Tatsuo

Gender : Male

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

A heavy burden. American remakes of Asian horror films have mostly struggled to win grace and favour with horror fans. Shutter is no exception, it has been met with the usual howls of derision, claims of it being pointless, loosing the horror essence of the original and etc. But what for someone like me who hasn’t seen the original? I found Shutter to be much like how I found The Ring, the Naomi Watts starrer from 2002, a very effective chiller with a solid mystery to be unravelled at the core. The ghost is creepy – as are the various photographic links, the scares handled professionally by the makers, and the finale pays off with a startlingly chilling revelation that freaked me out; and I’m a middle aged man! It’s far from perfect, the pace is a bit haphazard, logic goes out the window often, and cast performances are only adequate in the absence of “A” list stars to propel the story onwards. While it’s tough to hang your hat on the two principal players since the emotional empathy hasn’t been earned by them, courtesy of the writing. Yet with no frame of reference to raise expectation levels – or down them as well, this is a safe and sturdy spooker that does its job well enough. 7/10

T

The Movie Diorama

@themoviediorama

2021-06-23

Shutter takes Polaroid remnants of the original without the stunning flash. This is a peculiar remake. During the towering heights of Hollywood westernising world-renowned Asian horrors, mostly from Japan and South Korea, Japanese director Ochiai opted to alter the story of Thailand’s arguably most famous eponymous horror with American actors, set in Japan. Western audiences apparently wouldn’t be spooked if the ghost haunting the main characters wasn’t a pasty white Japanese girl with luscious black hair and masses amount of eye liner. It’s a cluster of cultures, and whilst the end result isn’t exactly terrible, it’s far from being tolerably good. Because much like ‘The Grudge’, ‘One Missed Call’ and ‘Pulse’, the underlying sense of pointlessness becomes an overburden for everyone involved. A photographer and his new bride travel to Tokyo where they accidentally smash into a girl standing in the middle of the darkened misty road (bare foot, might I add!). And so, through the ominous power of spirit photography, they become haunted. Specks of mysterious white vapours and the glistening sunlight against the camera lenses, being interpreted as ghostly entities attempting to communicate with the living. “The dead latch onto the flesh”. Without changing the essence of the overall story too much, just minor details here and there, Ochiai manages to produce various suspenseful moments through the usage of anonymity. The ethereal cries of a haunting girl, the innocent humming of an eerie song and the most intense tonguing since Toad got struck by lightning back in ‘00. The supernatural elements work best when nothing is showed on screen. The dark room sequence when Megumi entered the room, although initially presumed to be Jane, was executed with enough slow-paced tension to become effective. Dropping a splinter of wood into a solution that causes a tsunami into the eyes? Ineffective. Electrocuting one’s self in a desperate attempt to rid the latched ghost? Well, I don’t need to tell you how stupid that is. Dawson’s script is less than impressive. Masses amount of exposition and one-dimensional development that forced characters to be nothing more than tourists and amateur photographers. Seriously, Jane is the worst tourist. Shouting in the faces of locals exclaiming “excuse me, where do I go!?”. Is she oblivious to native languages? Like, she failed to even attempt one word in Japanese. That’s not Taylor’s fault, who isn’t the most talented actress in existence, but managed to bring out some surprising emotionality towards the film’s conclusion. Jackson on the other hand? Ehhh. He’s the kind of guy you want to slap for acquiring no personality. Just bland. His character’s best friends are pointless and sadly resorted to expendable deaths that suffered from no build-up. The central mystery that powers the narrative does captivate, even if Ochiai’s direction made certain twists obvious due to extensive foreshadowing, and that’s the primary element for preventing this remake from venturing into the realms that we do not speak of. I’m looking at you ‘One Missed Call’ and ‘Pulse’! So yes, Shutter is fine. As a film, it functions by itself with enough flash for the uninitiated. However, for those who have watched the original, you’re bound to find disfigurement within the composition of this photographic remake.