Liverleaf (2018) Poster

(2018)

User Reviews

Review this title
13 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Japanese girls gone very, very bad
Groverdox9 March 2019
"Liverleaf" could have been a whole lot better. It just goes on for so much longer than it needs to that you completely lose interest, and the violence, which is probably the film's main draw, just gets tiresome.

The movie makes you wait quite a while for its first foray into amateur surgery, and it is truly shocking. But after a while it just becomes dull. Material that should pack more of a punch does not, because you get so used to the blood and guts that you stop taking it seriously.

The plot is about a girl who attends a small rural school in Japan, where she is sadistically bullied by the other girls. Even her father is assaulted by boys at the school when he meets with one of her teachers.

The movie COULD have been a kind of meditation on bullying and revenge, and at times it feels like it's trying for that. But it's far too long, and far too violent, to really take seriously, and whatever moments of seriousness are fleeting.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
MISUMISO: MANGA YOUNG PSYCHOTIC LOVING!
babyjaguar13 October 2018
"Liverleaf" (2018) directed by Eisuke Naitô based this story on a teen dystopian view on "bullying" and angst. The film is a cinematic interpretation of the manga comic, "Misumisô" by Rensuke Oshikiri. The main target of the bullying is focused on "Haruka Nozaki" (helmed by Anna Yamada) and her family in a nondescript small town.

Naitô stays true to the type of overtop violence found in Japanese graphic novels. Most of violence was filmed in a stylish manner, even to the clothing and injuries endured onto the teen characters.

"Liverleaf" or "Misumisô" refers to a beautiful purple flower that blooms in the winter landscapes, which why many outdoor scenes were in amidst the social snowy landscape. Nozaki's revenge on her bullies starts to toil when a snowstorm appears.

Teen actors were good at delivering psychotic behavior, like the character, "Rumi" played by Rena Ôtsuka. Aside from the celluloid teen assaults, it is a teen love story, or stories. As the film proceeds to a dwindling number of teen survivors, there are plot discovery of a triangle appears.

I had viewed it at an international film festival where most of the viewers were starting to laugh when the violent scenes came up. I feel that their laughing was to deal with the on-screen gore; I would think that Naitô would please to see these reactions.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Blood and snow
Der_Schnibbler23 January 2019
I haven't read the graphic novel on which this film is based so I am judging on its own.

The film contains the usual Japanese-style over-the-top bordering psychotically cruel bullying. Until one day the little cretins tormenting main character Nozaki cross the line and payback time comes around.

While the movie is graphic and gory enough to prevent a slip into boredom, viewers not used to Japanese cinema will have to really grit their teeth to stick with it, as the characters' reactions to violence and pain is characteristically Japanese: whether poked, prodded, or stabbed, they react with mute astonishment and passive inaction. Who stands and screams when they know they're next up on the chopping block? Answer: only people in Japanese movies. The only thing that saves it is the unrestrained gore.

But even the bloodbaths in the movie don't prevent it from testing your patience. At this running length, it really overstays its welcome. I had to repeatedly jump through snooze-inducing parts where a character is walking in the snow or reminiscing over good old times or just having a pointless conversation.
12 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Bullies, Revenge & Blood
Foutainoflife8 August 2020
A bullied girl seeks to avenge the deaths of her parents, grievous injury of her sister and the fire that destroyed their home.

This was a ...meh film for me. There was some effort put into most of the characters and that's always a big thing for me. The acting was decent but the pace was a bit slow.

I've seen some reviewer's commenting on the level of gore but I wasn't impressed. I watch a lot of horror though and I may be a bit desensitized from over exposure. It just wasn't as gory as I expected.

It's not awful so, I say check it out.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good VIsual Aesthetic, Not Great acting
wasno-5744321 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I rate this a 7/10 The acting can be quite bad at times but I'm sure that's more likely because the age of the actors. They look to be no older than teenagers themselves.

The Gore is plenty and Brutal but after the first few Attacks it becomes less bothersome do to many issues, being repetitive, bad prosthetics and Visual Editing (Blood for example is quite noticeably fake due to just the hue of it so that helps suspend the actual violence to be more manageable.

But the main draw is the Snow and blood Aesthetic which I won't lie looks great. And is what got me to watch the movie. The Vibrant nature of the blood on the snow is fantastic in some of the scenes.

And the Twist of Aiba at the end was nice, he wasn't just the stereotypical nice guy helping a bullied girl.

Overall I recommend to at least give it a try.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
gory teen revenge from Japan
A_Llama_Drama19 December 2021
Nozaki is a recent transfer at a junior high school in rural Japan. Most the other students are indifferent towards her, but some are beyond cruel. After her parents convince her to stay away from school until graduation, the bullies (Taeko, Rumi, Hide, Tsutomo, Risa and Kyoko) decide to ramp up their efforts and burn her house down, killing her family and gravely injuring her baby sister. Nozaki returns in silence some time after to exact revenge on all those who crossed her.

This is a by the numbers revenge thriller, similar to Kevin Bacon's "Death Sentence" or even "Leon," if Natalie Portman had been both Mathilda and Leon. Sadly, the plot has very little beyond watching the worst children ever be bloodily murdered. It does give us a little extra in seeing how most of the children live with their families, hinting at story that would have been explored more fully in the manga, but most of it is predictable (head bully Taeko has a rich but neglectful parent, the most violent female has an abusive alcoholic father, the crazy one has a nice, useless mum). In a moment of humour, the parents arrive at the school to harass the homeroom teacher, each day more and more of them appearing as more of their children disappear, all culminatin in one of the more bizarre deaths of the film.

The major fault, though, is the cinematography. Typical of Japan, the palettes and styling are all very clean and lovely to look at (blood on snow always is a winner, and Nozaki's red pea coat beneath her flowing hair as she stalks victims in the winter is quite the evocative image), but the director and photographers really struggle with everything else. The use of CGI is jarring because it does not blend well with the real footage, the special effects make up for some of the injuries goes beyond cartoonish to just plain poorly executed, and the actors react so confusingly to the violence (all done in an effort to show the cuts and wounds being inflicted). It looks amateurish and clumsy at times. The dialogue is beyond simple, as well.

With a runtime of just under 2 hours, it definitely outstays its welcome. However, with a penchant for severed achilles tendons and rusty spikes going into eyes, there's plenty of visceral carnage for gore lovers to enjoy.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A bloody revenge movie with a neighborhood twist
daryopeek13 June 2019
Japan horror movies never been associated as ordinary. They came with a sense of twisting mind and often involved violence in blood, graphic, and some others in stylized way. Liverleaf follows an easy narrative that has been implemented in numerous revenge horror movies, with some twists to give some depth unlike Hollywood movies in that subgenre (ex. The Last House on the left, I Spit on Your Grave).

Liverleaf told a revenge story from a bullied teenage girl named Nazomi when her family is burned alive in their house. The story takes simplest of premise you could take, but in 2 hours of the movie, this movie also give the characters a story, something that seldom happened to a revenge film. The humanization of the characters, including the homeroom teacher's odd behavior, the silence of a girl who just witnessed the bullying, and the backstory of some bulliers, reveal much about a life full of hardships in the small town. Some of them are quite petty, but the backstory gives a sense of reason to the plot. Honestly, some of them are quite forced, because at the same time it feels weird to know that the class is filled by corrupted minds. Who must take the blame? This question probably can't be answered correctly by us, or by the characters.

In a way, this movie gives a new fresh addition to a revenge story. Sometimes it is good to have a revenge movie that only involves blood, but I never expected that gives a prolonged sequence of background gives a reality and reason that I never know needed by the subgenre.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Bad acting
Ame52025 March 2021
The story is interesting. If the actresses and actors were better to act, I think I will give more points. However, they are not enough good and it was difficult to watch the movie because of the low acting. What a shame.
2 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Kick a** movie
reguizar24 April 2021
One of those movies that you are expecting a boring movie about teenagers been bullying but this was an existing one for all of those like me that enjoy Japanese manga incredible and unexpected.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Great visual horror
alexiuyu24 January 2021
I liked the progressively more violent and gore turn of this movie. The scenes are really pleasant and aesthetic and the plot itself it's interesting. It talks about bullying but takes it to an exponential level of caos, along with some nice unexpected turns.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Fantastic Movie!
lelitemaster12 November 2018
I dont know why this movie has such low rating. The amount of intense in this movie is overwhelming. You can feel the hatred from her throughout the movie.
7 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
an insanely good movie
willisgay10 February 2024
It's extremely upsetting to see how few people have reviewed this movie. I only recently watched it due to seeing a certain scene with a camera. I was extremely happy to see the depth this plot went to with juts shear violence

llike literally if you enjoy seeing blood gore and all that jazz like you literallly NEED to watch this movie. The lack of people reviewing this movie is kinda dissapointining though like ym yes like i wish more people like um reviewed it because like not enough of you are like review this film because it's user reviews are like TOO low for how good it is like wth are yall doinbng.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Revenge "horror" executed fantastically
theo00791 March 2023
Before the movie even gets 15 minutes in, it is already difficult not to feel bad for Haruka. The bullies are relentless, and the teachers do nothing to help as the school will be closing in one year, and they want to "maintain the peace".

Her parents are absolutely disgusted by this, and try to console her, and keep an eye out by going to look for her if she doesn't get home at her usual time. They even tell her she can quit attending the school as the burden has grown so intense. Haruko's parents are very loving, as is her sister who always keeps an eye out for her. When offered the opportunity to quit going to school, she accepts it, but this only ends up shifting the bullying to another person.

After a few days of being away from school, Haruko and Mitsuru, the only person who stands up for her at school, go out together. During which time, the person who has now fallen victim to the bullying sets her house on fire, killing her beloved parents, and injuring her sister greatly.

That is essentially the synopsis and beginning fleshed out, after that, the story truly begins. As you can imagine, the rest of the movie is a complete revenge flick once she truly snaps.

When she does snap, it is something that makes the viewer think, "you go Haruka!". The antagonists were written for us to hate them, for us to side with Haruka. Morals go out the window when you are dealing with things this intense, and that is probably why the writers wrote the antagonists to be such easy to hate characters.

While she was essentially a very caring, compassionate, and strong young woman prior to this all, once this happened she became a truly intense force with no intention of stopping until she has exacted her revenge.

There are a few surprises in the movie to say the least, despite how straightforward the plot is. One of the twists is a bit smaller, but still interesting and explains some things, and the other twist is much bigger. This twists ends up leading to an even more unexpected ending. These kinds of movies obviously don't have happy endings, so don't expect to be smiling after this is over!

Revenge horror films are not uncommon in any country. There are plenty of them made in many countries, but Japan can really take it to the next level with revenge flicks usually. I mean, realistically many J-Horror are revenge flicks in a sense given that even in ghost movies it is for revenge. Revenge and vengeful spirits plays a major role in Japanese horror and psychological movies.

Gore wise, it does get fairly gory at some parts, but nothing too intense like certain another movies...

As for the acting, most of the actors did pretty good.

Cinematography wise, the element of snow and blood went quite nicely together, but the snow in general made it more atmospheric.

There could have definitely been more atmospheric setup if some music was implemented...That part in particular is a let down, because some unsettling music would've really helped to make the atmosphere more intense. The music is very subtle and almost nonexistent. Honestly, I'd probably give this 9 stares if there had been a more of a soundtrack. Like I stated, it really has very little music, and none really serves to highlight the intensification of the story.

It is a good movie, but I'm not sure how soon I'll be re-watching it! As you can imagine, such films are ones you have to be in the mood for, or just checking out, or showing to someone else, etc. If I am ever in the revenge flick mood though, this will probably be on the list of what to watch!!
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed