Shutter (2008 film)
Shutter | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Masayuki Ochiai |
Produced by |
Takashige Ichise Roy Lee Doug Davison |
Written by | Luke Dawson |
Starring |
Joshua Jackson Rachael Taylor |
Music by | Nathan Barr |
Cinematography | Katsumi Yanagijima |
Editing by |
Tim Alverson Michael Knue |
Studio |
Regency Enterprises New Regency Vertigo Entertainment |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release dates |
March 21, 2008 (USA) May 15, 2008 (Australia)[1] |
Running time |
Theatrical cut: 85 minutes Unrated cut: 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language |
English Japanese |
Budget | $8 million[2] |
Box office | $47,879,410 |
Shutter is a 2008 American remake of the 2004 Thai horror film of the same name. The remake was directed by Masayuki Ochiai, and was released on March 21, 2008.[3]
Plot
Ben Shaw (Joshua Jackson) and his new bride, Jane (Rachael Taylor), leave New York for Tokyo, Japan, where Ben has a job as a photographer. While traveling, Jane hits a girl wearing a thin dress in the middle of the wilderness (despite the cold and snow), running over her with both wheels and running into a ditch. After regaining consciousness, they find there was no body or even a trace of blood on either the car or the road, and they decide to leave, thinking the victim was all right. They later start to find mysterious lights in their photos, which are later identified as spirit photography by Ben's assistant, Seiko Nakamura (Maya Hazen). Jane begins to have eerie dreams and visions as if they are trying to tell her something, and senses a mysterious haunting presence stalking them. Ben begins to complain of severe shoulder pain, and his friends begin to comment he's looking bent and hunched over, though the doctor he goes to see can find no cause. Seiko takes Jane to her ex-boyfriend, Ritsuo (James Kyson Lee), whose career is to investigate paranormal activities, and he tells them that the lights are spirits, manifestations of intense emotions trying to communicate. At a subway station, Jane spots the ghostly presence of the girl she hit, causing her to believe that she killed the girl. Ben later also has a similar terrifying encounter in his dark room. They then go to a medium, Murase; however, Ben refuses to translate what Murase says, claiming he is a fraud.
Later on Jane decides to visit the office building in one of the photos. When she gets there, she goes to the floor where the light has gathered, and takes pictures in the empty office. She encounters the yūrei, and learns that the girl's name was Megumi Tanaka and that Ben knew her. When she confronts Ben about it, he admits that he and Megumi were once involved in a relationship, but that after the death of her father, she became very obsessive and clingy, and eventually he dumped her, with help from his two friends.
Ben's friends, Adam (John Hensley) and Bruno (David Denman), are killed by Megumi. Adam's eye is torn out while shooting pictures and he dies from shock. Bruno commits suicide by jumping from his apartment in a state of shock and undress, suggesting that he has been sexually violated. After watching Bruno jump from the building Ben and Jane go back to their apartment. Ben wants to leave but Jane says "We're not going anywhere" and hands Ben their wedding photo in which the right hand side shows a distorted picture of Megumi. They realize she's been with them the entire time and what happened on the road was meant for their attention. They go to Megumi's home, only to find her decayed body. She had committed suicide with potassium cyanide long before the car impact.
That night Ben is tortured by Megumi. She appears in different places around the room and climbs onto the bed, straddling Ben, taking off her dress, and throwing it on his face, revealing her inhuman body. She then proceeds to follow him around the room where she lets her tongue out (which is much longer than a normal human tongue) and forces it into Ben's mouth, kissing him, releasing a swarm of flies that almost choke him. Jane wakes up and screams at Megumi to leave Ben and her alone, after watching flies come out of his mouth. Megumi's shadow appears behind her against the fluttering window curtains and she is wrapped up in the curtains and pushed against the window where her head cracks the glass. Jane screams "He left you because he never loved you" which then breaks the hold and throws her back on the bed. Megumi stops with a brief sinister laugh, leaving Ben alive.
After Megumi's funeral, Ben and Jane return to New York, thinking it's all over. However, Jane finds some recent photos in an envelope which still show Megumi, who is crawling toward a picture of Jane hanging on the wall. Jane goes into the room behind the picture and finds a camera in a trunk. After uploading the memory card into the laptop Jane sees more photos taken by Ben, showing Adam and Bruno raping Megumi at her home before her suicide, while Ben does nothing but watch them doing the deed. After this discovery Ben returns home, where he tries to explain he felt it was the only way to drive Megumi away, as nothing else was working. They'd used some pills and had planned on using the pictures as blackmail against Megumi if she didn't leave him alone but it turned into rape. This explains why Ben didn't want to translate what the medium said earlier in the film and why Megumi murdered Adam and Bruno, as Ben knew this was about revenge against all three of them. Believing that Megumi was trying to warn her, and disgusted by Ben's past actions, Jane says that she doesn't want to spend her life with Ben and leaves. Ben tries to stop her, but Megumi locks the door and doesn't let him.
Driven mad by all the events related to Megumi, Ben begins photographing the apartment with his Polaroid camera, looking to confront her. After throwing the camera across the room, it takes a picture of him, showing Megumi sitting astride his shoulders. Remembering in the hospital where a nurse weighed Ben, showing a weight of 275 lbs, the weight of two people, as well as the mysterious shoulder pains, Ben realizes that Megumi has been with him all along since her suicide without his knowledge. Horrified, and in an effort to rid himself of her, he electrocutes himself. He is rendered completely catatonic and sent to a mental institution, where he is shown sitting slumped over on the edge of his bed. The last scene is a reflection of the glass from the door, showing Megumi still draped over his back.
Cast
- Joshua Jackson as Benjamin "Ben" Shaw
- Rachael Taylor as Jane Shaw
- Megumi Okina as Megumi Tanaka
- John Hensley as Adam
- David Denman as Bruno
- Maya Hazen as Seiko Nakamura
- James Kyson Lee as Ritsuo
- Yoshiko Miyazaki as Akiko
- Kei Yamamoto as Murase
- Daisy Betts as Natasha
Release
Critical reception
The film received generally negative reviews from critics. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 7% of critics gave the film positive reviews based on 51 reviews.[4] Metacritic reported the film had an average score of 37 out of 100, based on 12 reviews.
Commercial response
The film was released March 21, 2008 in the United States and Canada and grossed $10,447,559 in 2,753 theaters in its opening weekend, ranking #3 at the box office behind Horton Hears a Who!'s second weekend and Tyler Perry's Meet the Browns.[5] As of June 26, 2008, it has grossed a total of $47,879,410 worldwide – $25,928,550 in the United States and Canada and $21,950,860 in other territories.[6]
The film's $8 million budget and its almost $48 million worldwide grossing has secured the film as an extremely lucrative success.[7]
This was remade in Tamil as Sivi, which was a flop and again in Hindi as CLICK which proved to be a Bollywood box-office disaster.
Home release
Shutter was released on DVD on July 15, 2008 and the Unrated Edition included commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and an alternate ending. The theatrical version was made available for sale as well.
Soundtrack
Shutter: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | |
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Film score by Nathan Barr | |
Released | March 18, 2008 |
Label | Lakeshore Records |
Track listing
- "Welcome to Tokyo" – 1:55
- "We Hit a Girl!" – 2:58
- "TGK" – 1:37
- "Making Love" – 2:40
- "Alone in Tokyo" – 0:59
- "The Spirit Room" – 2:27
- "The Argument" – 3:05
- "Fly in the Eye" – 2:31
- "Visiting Murase" – 2:27
- "Jane Visits TGK" – 4:29
- "The Truth" – 1:54
- "I Saw Megumi" – 1:56
- "Driving to Megumi's" – 3:18
- "Rest in Peace" – 2:35
- "Flip Book" – 3:21
- "The Whole Truth" – 2:39
- "Psych Ward" – 1:02
- "Good to Me" (performed by Nathan Barr & Lesbeth Scott) – 3:23
- Commercial songs from film, but not on soundtrack
- "Falling" – Performed by Krysten Berg
- "Just the Tip" – Performed by Becca Styles
- "Come on Shake" – Performed by Shake
- "That Kinda Booty" – Performed by Dem Naughty Boyz
- "Sky Business" – Performed by Matt Pelling & Paul Williard
- "Nasty Funky Crazy" – Performed by Becca Styles
- "Fallout" – Performed by Brydon Stace
- "In a War" – Performed by Michael Popieluch
- "Underwater" – Performed by A.M. Pacific
- "Omo Cha No Cha Cha Cha" – Performed by Akiyuki Nosaka, Osamu Yosioka, and Nonuyoshi Koshibe
- "Do Something" – Performed by Shane Tsurugi for Rock Life
- "Seventy-Seven" – Performed by Dino Zisis
- "Oh, Joey" – Performed by Lucky 13
References
- ↑ Shutter – Village Cinemas
- ↑ "Shutter (2008)". Logline. Retrieved 2009-01-05.
- ↑ Thai horror remake Shutter gets release date, Film Junk; retrieved 2007-12-01
- ↑ "Shutter Movie Reviews, Pictures – Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2008-06-27.
- ↑ "Shutter (2008) – Weekend Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-05-12.
- ↑ "Shutter (2008)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-05-11.
- ↑ "Shutter (2008)". Logline. Retrieved 2009-01-05.
External links
- Shutter at the Internet Movie Database
- Shutter at allmovie
- Shutter at Box Office Mojo
- Shutter at Rotten Tomatoes
- Shutter at Metacritic
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