Kodoku or insect survival games The story follows seven strangers trapped in an abandoned school with cameras on every corner. The captives have no food, but they discover water, electricity and a meat knife, after which they realize that those who locked them in school want them to kill a friend until there is only one left. Due to stress and hunger, the prisoners go crazy and engage in a deadly game.
Kodoku is an ancient, cursed technique in which poisonous insects are pitted, in which the survivor gains superpower. The Japanese, time and again, do not cease to amaze with various interesting plot finds and twists in these stories. I don't know if Kodoku really exists, but she was talked about very convincingly. The Japanese simply brilliantly create tapes based on mass hysteria, psychosis and other psychological play of consciousness with reality and fiction.
The cast is represented by seven different characters 3 girls and 4 men, and each in the past has secrets that make even the strongest people go crazy. But of course, the film is interesting in that it is a subtle psychological game and the most interesting thing in this film is that the rules of the game were created by people themselves and embodied them in reality.
In the end, “Poison Insect” is pure Japanese thrash, not horrors, but a kind of psychological thriller where everyone could choose their own path, but instead went at the behest of another. Only fans of Japanese films who are used to seeing not only philosophical stories, touching dramas, but also thrash of pure water will like.
5 out of 10