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      Inju: The Beast in the Shadow

      2008 1h 45m Mystery & Thriller List
      Reviews 23% Audience Score 250+ Ratings French novelist Alex Fayard meets a beautiful geisha and naively agrees to protect her from danger. Read More Read Less

      Critics Reviews

      View All (1) Critics Reviews
      Amie Simon Three Imaginary Girls Combining a heavy Film Noir influence and some S&M erotica, this film is fun despite its predictability with an equal number of laughs and excitement. Mar 12, 2019 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (27) audience reviews
      Audience Member Not bad. I guessed the twist half way through, though. Half Japanese language, half french. Quite an unusual mix. The scenes of Japan were lovely. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member The first half of the film does a great job of intriguing the watcher but the second half and the ending completely lets down. Hence, 2 stars out of 5. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/02/23 Full Review Audience Member Great japanese-french thriller with an interesting story with transgressive sex,violence,..Its kinda B-movie thriller mixed with japanese Nagisha Osima:In the realm of senses. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/02/23 Full Review Audience Member 2 Stars out of 4 From the past French films I’ve seen like last years Le Deuxième Souffle, it has become apparent that the French do have trouble capturing the Crime genre or at least finishing it in a satisfying way. With Inju The Beast in the Shadow, it has a terrific-suspenseful plot line. It is about a French writer that travels to Japan to learn about his rival author Shenai Oe, a man who has never shown his face, except for sketch of himself on the back of each novel he publishes. This man is known to have a perverse mind and could be hostile. Oe starts to threaten the French writer and strange events occur from there. However, somewhere along the way Inju just loses its momentum, despite it being quite entertaining. Barbet Schroeder who made the well-respected Terror’s Advocate which was shown at TIFF 07 last year, can definitely direct a film professionally and with a lot of thrills. And yes, Inju is quite entertaining. The beginning is deceiving, but from there, in terms of plot, it falls apart. You are acquainted with a Geisha haunted by her past and a TV host who guides the writer through the windy roads of Japan, and there is a Yakuza-related businessman who is way over the top and tasteless for this type of genre. Despite this, the way Schroeder conveys each character and their motives is perplexing is underwhelming, cornering Inju into a little hole, giving it no choice but to be devoured by the beast in front of it: predictability. It is well-shot, especially the scenes with the Geisha dancers and unusual dreams the French writer has that really don’t contribute a lot to the plot, but are still quite thrilling. In a nutshell, Inju is like a building with a beautiful interior, and a disorganized exterior. Or in the film’s context, it’s a book with a great cover, but with descriptions that would make a reader raise an eyebrow or two. Inju is a noble attempt at a raunchy, sexual, mysterious thriller about deceit and murder (there: I’ve probably already spoiled the plot in that one line) but it delivers on entertainment value. Whether Schroeder wanted to make a film that is profound in plot development or just for the pleasure value of seeing a B- mystery flick is definitely a question in the shadow. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review Audience Member byłby lepszy gdyby nie był taki przewidywalny i kliszowaty, a szkoda bo lubię takie historię. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/16/23 Full Review Audience Member Japanese crime novels are odd. Japanese-French thriller is just plain weird. Quite kinky though. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis French novelist Alex Fayard meets a beautiful geisha and naively agrees to protect her from danger.
      Director
      Barbet Schroeder
      Screenwriter
      Eitan Arrusi, Jean-Armand Bougrelle, Frédérique Henri, Barbet Schroeder
      Genre
      Mystery & Thriller
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (DVD)
      Aug 25, 2009
      Runtime
      1h 45m