Discover
-
Genki Kawamura
Director -
Kentaro Hirase
Assistant Director -
Masaya Kitada
Sound Effects -
Minami Ichikawa
Producer -
Yoshihiro Furusawa
Producer -
Daisuke Iga
Costume Design -
Ryo Sugimoto
Production Design -
Toshie Tabata
Casting Director
-
Alunauwie
2/28/2026 4:34:20AM
Exit 8 adapts Kotake Create’s 2023 video game into a psychological loop that traps viewers in the same disorienting corridor as its protagonist, using shifting perspectives and symbolic typography to reflect inner guilt and trauma. While the repetitive structure and timeline inconsistencies may test patience, the film builds tension through the suffocating feeling of being stuck rather than through conventional scares. Ultimately, it delivers a reflective and immersive experience that favors emotional resonance over neat answers. Read the full review here: (Indonesian version : alunauwie.com) and (English version : uwiepuspita.com)
-
CinemaSerf
4/28/2026 10:15:45AM
When a rather asthmatic sounding young gent (Kazunari Ninomiya) gets off a subway train, he gets a call from his ex-girfriend telling him that she is in the hospital and that she is pregnant. What is he to do - especially as he has just witnessed a stroppy man on the packed train lose the plot with a mother and her young, screeching, babe-in arms and ignored it? He agrees to head to the hospital, and so heads for exit eight. Thing is, he never seems to get any nearer to it and after a while he starts to notice a sort of groundhog day scenario is occuring. He stops to read a safety notice on the wall which gives him a bit of a clue, and now he has to play a game of increasingly frustrating and quite ruthless spot the difference, whilst being distracted by a curious grinning man (Yamato Kochi), a mature-for-her-years high school student (Kotone Hanase) and the an observant young lad (the star of the show Naru Asanuma) who might be lost, or might be significant in an altogether unexpected fashion. Now barring one scene that might just fit the bill, this isn't so much an horror film as a psychological thriller with precious little dialogue and quite a lot of repetition. It does present us with a game we can all play, to an extent, but much of the characterisation is based on a very thin story that gives us little context in which to work. We are drip fed clues that seem designed more to spin the film out rather than to enrich the plot or make us think, and though there is certainly an element from our protagonist of seeing yourself as others see you, there was just too much missing from the thread to keep me interested. It reminded me of one of those television "Tales of the Unexpected" and had it been cut to forty minutes and tightened up, it might have worked better as a mystery with a message. It might make you think about walking next time, rather than getting the metro.
Nana Komatsu
The WomanKazunari Ninomiya
The Lost ManKotone Hanase
The SchoolgirlYamato Kochi
The Walking ManHirota Otsuka
Chief DetectiveNaru Asanuma
The BoyReo Soda
ChildTara Nakashima
High School Student