House of Sayuri
A family moves into a house but discovers that it is haunted by a murdered girl.
Turning their lifelong dream into something real, the Kamikis finally manage to buy a place in the countryside. What they don’t know is that it houses a supernatural terror in the form of the ghost of a murdered girl, and that they must uncover a dark truth to keep their perfect home.
Director Koji Shiraishi (“Noroi: The Curse”) continues to prove why he’s been at the forefront of J-Horror for decades with “House of Sayuri”, which sees him tackle the haunted house trope, blending humour and horror in the most effective of ways. Based on a manga by Rensuke Oshiriri, this brilliant and bold film delights in short footing the audience, constantly changing its tone and tactics in a frightening, playful tale that will appeal to all the horror fans who can appreciate a bit of humour and a subversive director on top of his game.

Kôji Shiraishi (1973)
Filmography:
Valik/Selected: Mizu no naka no hachigatsu (August in the Water, 1995), Violence Men (1997, co-dir), The Wind Shall Blow (1998, co-dir), Noroi (2005), Ura horâ (2008, co-dir), Karuto (2013), Sadako vs Kayako (2016), Safe Word (2022)