Some horror movies are terrifying because of what they show you. Others are terrifying because of what they imply. Marebito (2004), on the other hand, is terrifying because it forces you to sit through 90 minutes of a man wandering around tunnels like a lost tourist who misplaced his Lonely Planet guidebook. Directed by Takashi Shimizu—the guy who gave us The Grudge and apparently decided he’d rather punish audiences than scare them—this movie is a descent into madness, sure, but mostly it’s a descent into boredom.
The Premise: Fear, Blood, and Daddy Issues
Our protagonist is Masuoka, a freelance cameraman who films literally everything. He’s obsessed with fear after watching a man jab a knife into his own eye—something we can all relate to after watching this movie. Convinced that true fear lurks in the bowels of Tokyo, Masuoka heads underground to explore a labyrinth of tunnels that makes the Paris catacombs look like Disneyland.
Down there, he finds:
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Deros, humanoid sewer goblins who crawl on all fours and whimper like puppies left out in the rain.
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A homeless man who rambles about conspiracies.
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A naked feral woman chained to a wall, whom Masuoka decides to bring home like he’s just won a prize at a carnival.
This is the setup. And instead of getting the horror of cosmic dread or demonic possession, we basically watch a man play Tamagotchi with a mute, possibly inhuman woman who only eats blood.
The Characters: Nihilism with a Side of Creepy
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Masuoka (Shinya Tsukamoto): Our hero(?). He’s less of a character and more of a PSA about why you should never trust men with handheld cameras. His descent into madness is supposed to be chilling but just makes him look like the world’s worst pet owner.
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F (Tomomi Miyashita): The chained woman Masuoka rescues. She doesn’t eat, doesn’t talk, and only drinks blood—basically, the goth girlfriend TikTok warned you about.
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The Woman in the Trench Coat: Claims F is actually her daughter. Masuoka handles this like any reasonable person would—by stabbing her to death on camera.
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The Man in Black: Appears, disappears, delivers ominous warnings, and generally exists to pad the runtime.
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Kuroki: The eye-stabber from the beginning, who pops up later to philosophize about fear. Because nothing says horror like a TED Talk in a sewer.
The Horror: All Bark, No Bite
What’s supposed to be scary:
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The creepy underworld beneath Tokyo.
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The whimpering deros.
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Masuoka feeding blood to his chained roommate like she’s a baby bird.
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The increasingly blurred line between reality and hallucination.
What’s actually scary:
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The fact that the movie has the audacity to think it’s profound.
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The baby-bottle blood-feeding scenes, which look like rejected commercials for Red Cross donations.
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The realization that this was directed by the same guy who gave us Ju-On, proving no career is safe from implosion.
Pacing: The Real Horror
Marebito is 90 minutes, but it feels like three hours in dog years. Entire stretches consist of Masuoka silently wandering tunnels, filming shadows, and breathing heavily into his microphone. The film mistakes “slow burn” for “no burn.” It’s like watching your uncle’s shaky vacation footage, except instead of beaches and cocktails, it’s corpses, deranged monologues, and a guy cutting his tongue out to feed his pet sewer fairy.
Symbolism (a.k.a. Pretentious Wallpaper)
The movie desperately wants to say something deep about fear, obsession, and human nature. Instead, it ends up looking like an undergrad film project written by someone who just discovered Nietzsche and horror manga in the same week.
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The underground labyrinth is clearly a metaphor for the subconscious. But when your subconscious looks like the Tokyo Metro at rush hour, it’s hard to be scared.
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F is supposed to represent Masuoka’s repressed desires, or maybe his daughter, or maybe a vampire Pokémon. The film never really decides.
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The camera represents his need to control reality. Or it represents a very bad way to make a living.
The symbolism is so heavy-handed you half-expect Masuoka to turn to the screen and say, “Get it? GET IT? This is a metaphor!”
The Violence: A Buffet of Stupidity
Masuoka quickly learns F drinks blood. Naturally, instead of calling a doctor, scientist, or literally anyone sane, he starts cutting himself to feed her. Then he escalates to killing strangers. Because nothing says “dedicated pet owner” like stabbing your neighbor to death so your cryptid girlfriend won’t go hungry.
The murder scenes are meant to be shocking, but they’re so badly staged they just look awkward. Watching Masuoka lure a high school girl into the park by pretending to film porn is less terrifying and more like Exhibit A in a court case.
The Ending: Fear Found (and Patience Lost)
After all the murders, hallucinations, and wandering, Masuoka finally cuts his tongue out to feed F directly. It’s the kind of finale that’s supposed to leave you shaken, but instead, you’re left thinking: “This man needed therapy, not an underground wife.”
The final image is Masuoka being led back underground, where F films him—because apparently, poetic justice means making him the subject of his own shaky cam nonsense. By this point, the audience isn’t scared. We’re just relieved it’s over.
Dark Humor Observations
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This is less Visitor from Afar and more Visitor from WTF.
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F doesn’t eat, drink, or talk. So basically, she’s every man’s fantasy until she starts demanding blood.
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The deros look like rejected extras from a low-budget Silent Hill fan film.
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Watching Masuoka cut his tongue out is gross, but still not as painful as sitting through the movie.
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If the moral is “fear is part of the human condition,” the real takeaway is “fear is what you feel when you realize there are two more reels left.”
The Verdict: Pretentious Sewer Horror
Marebito wants to be a chilling meditation on fear and human depravity. What it delivers is a confusing slog of shaky cam footage, half-baked philosophy, and a protagonist who makes Charles Manson look well-adjusted. It’s horror without scares, philosophy without insight, and plot without payoff.
If you want real terror, just imagine Takashi Shimizu pitching this movie to investors with a straight face.


