Keswick Film Festival

Sunday 2nd November 5:00 PM - Alhambra

Cloud

Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa Country: Japan
Cert: 15 Year: 2024 Length: 124 minsLanguage: Japanese
Autumn 2025
Cloud

Audience Reaction

Score: 53.7% Attendance: 56

Reviews

Links

Kiyoshi Kurosawa had several award-winning films early this century, including the horror movie 'Pulse', where he portrayed the internet as the home of evil spirits. He is back now with another film portraying the internet as dangerous, but this time it is human danger; is the main character who is an immoral 'reseller' of anything and everything for huge profits the baddy, or the people he sells to who decide enough is enough…? A story of our time, then.

Ryosuke Yoshii has no qualms; he will try to buy anything if he can get it cheap enough. He will then resell it for as much as he can get, whether it works or not, whether he even knows what it is.

"While Ryosuke is deliberately blind to the flaws in his products, he's increasingly aware of a formless sense of unease that dogs his life in Tokyo. A new start, in a large house by a lake in the countryside, buys him a few days peace. But then the building is targeted in a seemingly random act of violence... All of which contributes to the slow build of tension…" - Wendy Ide, ScreenDaily.

"This is a story that takes place in a country and a world in which what people mean to each other is fraying apart at the seams, and it's wildly satisfying to discover what that means in the context of Kurosawa's characters. To say anything more specific about that would risk spoiling the fun, but there's a unique thrill to watching 'Cloud' shift from a sedate internet crime saga and into a frenetic manhunt (alternately funny and frightening), as the digital search for Yoshii is distilled into the cavernous guts of an abandoned factory" - David Ehrlich, IndieWire.

Critics

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This riveting and highly unusual shoot-em-up finds Kurosawa returning to his roots.
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David Ehrlich, IndieWire



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Playing like a slicker, more vicious riff on Ben Wheatley’s Mexican stand-off film, Free Fire, the climactic gunplay chaos is all the more chilling for the impotence ultimately behind so much of the rage being vented.
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Josh Slater-Williams, Little White Lies



Trailer





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