: Director Hiroshi Harada spent five years hand-drawing and self-financing the film after being rejected by every major studio due to its extreme content.
For the curious: Have a safety plan. Watch it with a friend. This film will sit in your bones for a week.
What follows is a relentless 47-minute assault on the senses and the spirit. Midori is subjected to unimaginable abuse—physical, psychological, and sexual—at the hands of the show’s deformed members, including a mummified man, a lecherous giant, and a snake woman. The film has been described as a "surrealist nightmare" that explores themes of profound isolation, despair, and the exploitation of innocence. The only glimmer of hope comes with the arrival of a mysterious dwarf magician named Wonder Masamitsu, but he too becomes a source of twisted obsession and abuse. The film's bleakness is unyielding, leaving audiences to grapple with a vision of humanity at its absolute worst.
: Director Hiroshi Harada spent five years hand-drawing and self-financing the film after being rejected by every major studio due to its extreme content.
For the curious: Have a safety plan. Watch it with a friend. This film will sit in your bones for a week.
What follows is a relentless 47-minute assault on the senses and the spirit. Midori is subjected to unimaginable abuse—physical, psychological, and sexual—at the hands of the show’s deformed members, including a mummified man, a lecherous giant, and a snake woman. The film has been described as a "surrealist nightmare" that explores themes of profound isolation, despair, and the exploitation of innocence. The only glimmer of hope comes with the arrival of a mysterious dwarf magician named Wonder Masamitsu, but he too becomes a source of twisted obsession and abuse. The film's bleakness is unyielding, leaving audiences to grapple with a vision of humanity at its absolute worst.