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Confessions
A grieving mother turns into a cold-blooded avenger to pay back the people responsible for her daughter's death. What happens next is all-out psychological warfare waged against her students in an attempt to force them into confessing what she knows in her heart to be true: they are guilty and must be punished.
1 September 1981, Miyazaki, Japan
24 April 1985, Tokyo, Japan
12 January 1996, Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan
December 26, 1996 in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan
1936, Tokyo, Japan
10 April 1976, London, England, UK
February 14, 2011
A typically edgy Japanese schoolyard horror, with some serious - and uncomfortable - things to say.February 17, 2011
I have to say that, despite its effective opening premise and some interestingly spacey mood-alterations and tonal shifts, I found it overcooked and overwrought, and sometimes quite implausible...February 18, 2011
You'll need caffeine on an IV drip to survive it.February 16, 2011
Impressively directed and beautifully shot, this is a superbly written thriller with strong performances and a terrific soundtrack, though the relentless barrage of twists and turns is ultimately both confusing and overwhelming.February 17, 2011
An engaging and undeniably interesting slant on the source of vendetta and the psychology behind violence and cruelty.February 17, 2011
Nakashima's most accomplished film to date.October 07, 2015
"Confessions" was a bona fide cultural phenomenon that sent shockwaves through Japan's collective conscience before the tragic earthquakes and tsunami drove people further into soul-searching.February 17, 2011
An audacious exhibition of cinematic ingenuity and control.February 22, 2011
A difficult film to like, an impossible one not to grudgingly admire.February 18, 2011
A confusing and rather daft Japanese mystery/horror yarn...February 16, 2011
'Confessions' may be too grimly cynical to convince fully, but its combination of visual excess, dark wit, random violence, psychological insight and raw emotional intensity is intoxicating.February 17, 2011
The incredible first act boasts more horror, surprise and intrigue than most fully-formed features, and though the subsequent hour never feels as concise or gathered, this is a potent, almost unbearably visceral slice of confronting cinema.